Current:Home > InvestA high school senior was caught studying during prom. Here's the story behind the photo. -StockHorizon
A high school senior was caught studying during prom. Here's the story behind the photo.
TrendPulse View
Date:2025-04-07 14:07:13
When high school senior Nathan Teaney appeared last week in a photograph taken by the local newspaper, his father suspected the scene had been staged as a prank.
“I think he planned it out as just kind of a joke with his friends,” Ron Teaney told the Peoria Journal Star, part of the USA TODAY Network. “Now, what he didn’t realize was that the media was going to be there.”
Nathan Teaney, 17, said the idea of taking textbooks to a prom began as a joke. But it did not take the senior at Illinois' East Peoria Community High School long to decide that studying for an upcoming Advanced Placement Computer Science test would be prudent.
A member of East Peoria's tennis team, Teaney has been juggling his athletic schedule with college placement tests and final exam preparation. With the schedule he is keeping, study time was at a premium.
“I feel it did help relieve some stress by knocking out test preparation and prom in the same night,” he said. “That ... morning and afternoon, I had been busy with a tennis tournament down in Springfield, so I was in quite a rush.”
Nathan Teaney has apparently been quite successful in balancing athletics with academic achievement. According to his father, Nathan was recently named a winner of a National Merit Scholarship. He plans to attend the University of Texas at Dallas and to major in Actuarial Science.
“Nathan is very fortunate to be in a class with a group of friends who are positively competitive and really supportive of each other,” Ron Teaney said. “They’re a really good group.”
Teaney attended the prom with a group of friends who help drive him toward academic excellence — which meant there was no date upset about being neglected for a computer science textbook. He said he is not usually in the habit of studying at social gatherings.
“I’d say that most of the people who saw me studying," Nathan Teaney said, "were amused, confused, or a mixture of both."
veryGood! (89413)
Related
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Endangered whale filmed swimming with beachgoers dies after stranding on sandbar
- Hiker rescued after falling 1,000 feet from Hawaii trail, surviving for 3 days
- Janet Yellen says the Trump administration’s China policies left the US more vulnerable
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Rooney Rule hasn't worked to improve coaching diversity. But this new NFL program might
- Incredible dolphin with 'thumbs' spotted by scientists in Gulf of Corinth
- Jonathan Majors' text messages, audio recordings to ex-girlfriend unsealed in assault trial: Reports
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Hungry, thirsty and humiliated: Israel’s mass arrest campaign sows fear in northern Gaza
Ranking
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- US Marine killed, 14 injured at Camp Pendleton after amphibious vehicle rolls over
- Albanian opposition disrupts parliament as migration deal with Italy taken off the agenda
- Finland to close again entire border with Russia as reopening of 2 crossing points lures migrants
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Will the American Geophysical Union Cut All Ties With the Fossil Fuel Industry?
- British teenager who went missing 6 years ago in Spain is found in southwest France, reports say
- Whoopi Goldberg receives standing ovation from 'The Color Purple' cast on 'The View': Watch
Recommendation
Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
Rising stock markets around the world in 2023 have investors shouting ‘Hai’ and ‘Buy’
A judge may rule on Wyoming’s abortion laws, including the first explicit US ban on abortion pills
US Marine killed, 14 injured at Camp Pendleton after amphibious vehicle rolls over
Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
Hungry, thirsty and humiliated: Israel’s mass arrest campaign sows fear in northern Gaza
Finland to close again entire border with Russia as reopening of 2 crossing points lures migrants
Carbon monoxide leak suspected of killing Washington state college student