no
zero ... magna cum laude is an honor to designate college graduates, not high school
Summa cum Laude - with "Highest Honors" Magna cum Laude - with "great Honors" Cum Laude - with "Honors"
Helen Keller went to Perkins School for the Blind during her high school years. She went on to attend Radcliffe and graduated with a Bachelor's cum laude in 1904.
You should check with the Office of the Registrar at your school. Inquire about the exact GPA requirements for honors. I have seen some schools that have a cutoff as high as 3.85 GPA for Magna Cum Laude. Each school may have different GPA cutoffs. I am assuming they did give you at least Cum Laude.
I would say so she graduated salutatorian from her high school and Magna Cum-laude from northeastern state university with a B.S.
Sure.
Personally, I have never been made aware of such honors at a junior or senior high school level. In general, such honors are typically reserved for a college or university.
Ralph Bunche graduated high school at Jefferson High School in LA, and then went to UCLA on an athletic scholarship. In 1927 Bunche graduated summa cum laude as class valedictorian with a major in international relations.
The key difference between magna cum laude and summa cum laude honors is the level of academic achievement they represent. Magna cum laude signifies high academic achievement, typically falling below summa cum laude. Summa cum laude indicates the highest level of academic excellence, often requiring a near-perfect GPA and exceptional performance in coursework.
Uh.... Think about it, there is one graduation every year, which means there is one magna cum laude every year (if indeed there is only one) Harvard has been arouond for almost 300 years. Do the math. People should not answer questions when they know nothing about the subject. There are three Latin degrees indicating outstanding achievement: cum laude (with distinction), magna cum laude (with high distinction), and summa cum laude (with the highest distinction). At Harvard School of Law, only 10% of each graduating class graduates magna cum laude, and only one student graduates summa cum laude. Where President Obama is concerned, it is possible he graduated second in his class when he received his degree magna cum laude.
campaign for a candidate
Depends on schools. Ussually it is... Summa Cum Laude is 3.9 and better. Magna Cum Laude is 3.7 - 3.9 Cum laude is 3.5 - 3.7 There is also Egregia Cum Laude which holds the same GPA requirement as summa but is only given to the selected elite. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cum_laude