Perry Central Students Inducted Into National Honor Society This Week
Perry Central's National Honor Society welcomed new inductees Tuesday evening in Leopold, adding a class of student leaders bound to log service hours across Perry County this spring.

Perry Central Jr.-Sr. High School inducted a new class of students into its National Honor Society chapter Tuesday evening on the Leopold campus, formally recognizing juniors and seniors who earned membership by meeting the society's four-pillar standards of scholarship, leadership, service and character.
The school marked the occasion on its news feed at pccommodores.org, sharing ceremony images and congratulating the inductees in one of the district's most visible spring academic recognition events.
Membership is not automatic for high-achieving students. The National Honor Society sets a national minimum cumulative GPA of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale, but individual chapters are permitted to raise that floor, and many do. Beyond grades, candidates at Perry Central must demonstrate documented leadership roles, community service hours, and a character record evaluated by a faculty council appointed by the principal. Meeting the GPA threshold makes a student eligible to apply; the faculty council's review of leadership, service and character determines who is actually inducted.
For the newly inducted class, the honor comes with immediate responsibilities. NHS members are expected to begin planning service projects, mentoring peers, and supporting school events at once, meaning Perry County communities should see tangible activity from the chapter before the school year closes. That pipeline of organized volunteer hours represents one of the chapter's most direct contributions outside the building.
On the college application front, NHS membership is a recognized credential that signals sustained academic performance and civic commitment to admissions offices. The society's national network also connects members to scholarship opportunities beyond what individual schools can offer.
Families of underclassmen who want their students ready for next year's induction should encourage them to start tracking GPA, accumulating verifiable community service hours now, and pursuing leadership positions in school clubs, sports, or community organizations. Perry Central's NHS faculty adviser, reachable through the school, can outline the chapter's specific GPA cutoff and timeline for the next selection cycle.
The induction lands at the front of a full spring calendar for Perry Central that also includes college visits, blood drives, and athletics, underscoring the district's push to develop students across academic, service and career pathways simultaneously.
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