• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
The Leader

The Leader

Tipton County's Newspaper since 1886

  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Churches
    • Courts
    • Education
    • Election 2024
    • Events
    • Local Government
    • Local Politics
    • Military
    • Public Records
    • Public Safety
  • Sports
    • All
    • Baseball
    • Basketball
    • Cross Country
    • Fishing
    • Football
    • Golf
    • Soccer
    • Softball
    • Volleyball
    • Wrestling
  • E-Editions
  • Public Notices
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Contact Us
    • Submit News
    • Advertise With Us
  • Where to Buy

Munford senior Jonathan Ervin makes history with a 36 on the ACT

By The Leader on August 12, 2019

5c3775016b94e.image

During the 2017-18 school year, 1.9 million students in America took the ACT.

Just 3,741, or .195 percent, made a perfect score of 36.

The numbers aren’t available yet for the 2018-19 school year because students are still taking the test, but the stats figure to be similar.

Jonathan Ervin, a senior at Munford High School, will be part of that elite group. After posting three 35s he got the news in November that he scored a 36 when he took the test Oct. 27.

“I was in band and all the administrators came into the band room,” Ervin said. “They were all giggling, looking at me and pointing me out. I didn’t know what was going on. Mr. (Barry) Trobaugh announced there had been a lot of firsts in his years at the school and then said I got a 36.”

It’s the first time anybody at any of the three Tipton County high schools has ever posted a 36.

Ervin has taken the test once a year since the seventh grade, when he got a 27. He scored a 31 in the eighth grade before scoring three 35s.

Most high school students take an ACT prep course during their junior year. Ervin did not. Instead he studied on his own by reading books, watching videos and taking practice tests, beginning the process two to three months before each test. He said the Kahn Academy website was a resource he used a lot.

Ervin acknowledged such self-motivation is unusual.

“Yeah, I realize that,” he said. “My parents, my family pushed me a lot.”

Angela Huffman, the senior guidance counselor at Munford High School, said it’s obvious to her Ervin has a unique ability to get things done on his own.

“My first impression of him is always, always self-driven. Very self-driven,” she said. “He had a goal for himself. I don’t think it was always his parents pushing him to be that way. It was his own internal drive to be that way. He really wanted to achieve more than anybody at this school ever had before. I think he really wanted to do that and he has.”

“As far as motivation for learning, he’s one of the best I’ve ever seen,” said Warren Smith, a chemistry teacher at Munford. “It can be intimidating working with someone as intelligent as he is.”

Smith said Ervin’s parents have been very involved with his development and have asked him to keep pushing their son.

“Challenging him can be difficult,” Smith said, “but it’s fun when you have a kid who wants to learn. A lot of other kids you have to motivate. Not him.”

Ervin said he began thinking about the possibility of getting a 36 during his freshman year.

“It was a personal goal because I knew I could do it,” he said. “I knew it would be something good for the school and something I could say I did later on in life.”

He’s also a National Merit semifinalist and will find out next month if he is a finalist, something only about 15,000 students in the country achieve each year.

It’s been a monumental year for Ervin, who is 17. A few months ago he found out he and his girlfriend Jessie Young, who is also a senior at Munford, will be having a son. The baby, who will be named James, is due March 1.

He is fully aware there is a stereotype attached to people who become parents before high school graduation.

“It was nerve-wracking at first because, number one, telling my parents, and two, telling her parents,” he said. “I hadn’t even met a lot of her family before. At first, they definitely held on to that stereotype.”

Everything is fine now between the two families, Ervin said. Young has been accepted to Baptist Nursing School and he said they plan to move in together after he turns 18. Ervin plans to attend Christian Brothers University and major in mechanical engineering.

Ervin does not shy away from talking about becoming a father.

“Honestly, it’s kind of disheartening when people talk about what good I’m doing and they don’t want to talk about that at all,” he said.

Before he finally got his 36, his friends kidded him by calling him Mr. 35.

Now he has two new names: dad and Mr. 36.

MORE EDUCATION HEADLINES

Covington High FFA teams win state competition and will move on to nationals

Covington High FFA teams win state competition and will move on to nationals

Covington High FFA wins multiple awards

Covington High FFA wins multiple awards

More Stories »

Related Articles:

5d511a7eabc39.imageAn aging family member is struggling with their chronic condition — what can you do? Local sales tax revenues increased during quarantine Two local women, including 75-year-old, receive their GEDs Munford takes care of Harding with huge game vs. Brighton looming

Posted Under: Sports

Primary Sidebar

Search

Featured News

Former Covington, Munford basketball coach Tim Halford inducted into BCAT Hall of Fame

April 8, 2025 By Jeff Ireland

A man known in these … [Continue Reading...] about Former Covington, Munford basketball coach Tim Halford inducted into BCAT Hall of Fame

Brighton midfielder J Kiphut signs soccer scholarship with Dyersburg State

April 1, 2025 By Jeff Ireland

Brighton senior J … [Continue Reading...] about Brighton midfielder J Kiphut signs soccer scholarship with Dyersburg State

Brighton’s Pierce Meacham signs with Cumberland University

March 11, 2025 By Jeff Ireland

In this day and age, … [Continue Reading...] about Brighton’s Pierce Meacham signs with Cumberland University

Munford High School closed Thursday after teacher found deceased

March 6, 2025 By The Leader

Munford High School … [Continue Reading...] about Munford High School closed Thursday after teacher found deceased

Tags

auvic white black history braxton sharp brighton baseball brighton basketball brighton football brighton high school city of covington City of Munford coronavirus covid-19 covington Covington Baseball covington basketball Covington football covington high school Covington HS covington police covington police station Election 2020 events homicide J.R. Kirby Jalen Fayne Jamarion Dowell jeff huffman john edwards Jordan Bell JR Kirby Munford basketball munford football munford high school murder ronnie gorton sex crimes shooting Slade Calhoun tcso Tipton-Rosemark Academy Tipton County Museum tipton county schools tipton county sheriff's office town of atoka town of mason TRA basketball

Footer

The Leader is a weekly newspaper, published on Thursdays, serving Tipton County, Tenn. since 1886.

Contact us: news@covingtonleader.com

Editor’s Choice

Here’s how Home Depot and a team of volunteers helped make over CIAA

December 5, 2019 By Echo Day

Black History Month: Mason’s John W. Boyd went from slavery to the statehouse

February 7, 2020 By The Leader

Search

Copyright © 2025 · The Leader | Legacy Media · Log in