Only people who are in your High School can answer that.
You have to have a high school diploma or a GED to enter college.
The cost varies and some "play days" may be free.
FBLA is a school "club" where members enter competitions against others in their area and if good enough, nationally. some of the competitions include manuscripts, business letters, business math, and PowerPoint projects done in small groups. They also do fundraisers and have meetings with others in their district to elect officers. this is just a summary of what FBLA does.
You need to have a talent of some sort and enter competitions for them to work your way up to fame, you have to be patient.
Usually you enter with a studio on a competitive team, although it is possible to register as an independent in some competitions. Registration is usually done online on the competition's website.
yes, high school junior scholarship rage from small, school-specific awards to national contests and competitions that give away major scholarship money like the American legion national high school oratorical contest for $18,000 and the Siemens competition for $100,000 and also they are providing large scholar ships for the students in some cases
I'm not sure about competitions specifically in Missouri, but there are some national competitions such as the US New Star Vocal Competition (http://usnsvc.org/) that you could enter from Missouri. That one is accepting submissions by DVD and online video file.
The age group for Math Olympiads typically ranges from elementary to high school students, often covering ages 8 to 19. Specific competitions may have different eligibility criteria, with some targeting younger students in grades 3-8 and others focused on high school students in grades 9-12. Additionally, some countries may organize separate competitions for different age brackets within this range.
it depends if you have a sponsorship, you can make some good money, but otherwise you'd have to enter and win competitions to get cash
High school students can engage in computer science research through programs like internships at universities or tech companies, participating in science fairs, joining coding clubs or competitions, and seeking out mentorship from professionals in the field.
That depends on the rodeo itself. Kids can be as young as five to enter some rodeo competitions like sheep-riding or wild-pony-catching. Junior rodeos allows contestants to be as young as ten or twelve to enter competitions. Non-junior rodeos allow for contestants to be at least 16 to 18 years of age to enter.
School- These may be middle school, high school, or college cheeleaders. Their main purpose it to support spots teams and create school spirit. They may compete in some competitions. They are typically more limited in the skills they can do. Rec. League/Association-These teams are backed by local sporting organizations (such as the YMCA.) They cheer sports teams from their same organization. They may go to some competitions, but their skills are more limited. All-Star- These cheerleaders are not backed by a school or sports league, but a private gym. Their sole purpose is to compete and build skill. Their skills are more complex, and onm high levels can be very extreme.