Kansas State horticulture student named Shinoda Scholar of the Year

Megan Haresnape has been honored with The Shinoda Foundation’s highest award.


The Shinoda Foundation is pleased to announce that Kansas State University’s Megan Haresnape is the 2018-19 Shinoda Scholar of the Year – the Foundation’s highest award.
 
“Megan’s drive and discipline stood out as exceptional among the talented aspiring horticulturists we reviewed,” says Bob Otsuka, president of the Shinoda Foundation. “As the first generation of her family to attend college, she also is a great example of how horticulture’s next generation is working to grow our industry.”
 
Haresnape is a 21-year-old senior from Lebanon, Kansas, majoring in Horticulture with a minor in Agribusiness. She is working toward a Bachelor of Science degree with a concentration in Greenhouse Production.
 
Her goal is to own and operate a production greenhouse. In a letter of recommendation, an employer wrote, “Megan is honest, conscientious, courteous, responsible, calm, reliable and pleasant. She is the first generation in her family to attend college and has worked hard to succeed.”
 
Haresnape works in the greenhouses at Kansas State University, is secretary for the Horticulture Club and serves as a Kansas State University First Scholars Program Mentor. She has received several scholarships including the Shinoda Scholarship last year, Perennial Plant Association Scholarship, American Floral Endowment Scholarship and the National Garden Clubs Scholarship.
 

The Shinoda Foundation Board of Trustees awarded eleven scholarships this year totaling $20,000 and provided grants to the winners’ colleges and universities. Since 1965, The Shinoda Foundation has awarded more than $867,000 in scholarships to 697 students.

Photo of Megan Haresnape courtesy of The Shinoda Foundation.