can you tell me if this sentence is correct with grammar and capital letters. Thank you. I think that its right

Graduated Magna Cum Laude from high school, Dare Role Model Award, Three Scholastic Achievement Awards, Congressional Student Leadership Award, Two Creative Communication's Young Writers Awards for publication of writings.

There is no subject to that sentence. Who graduated?

"magna cum laude" is not capitalized;
"three scholastic achievement awards" is not capitalized.

Is the title of the last award Creative Communication's Young Writers Awards? If so then the whole thing is capitalized. NOT the "two" It that is not the title, the only the title is capitalized.

Yes, the sentence you provided has correct grammar and capitalization. It is properly structured and formatted.

If you want to check the grammar and capitalization of a sentence, you can follow these steps:

1. Check for subject-verb agreement: Ensure that the subject and the verb in the sentence agree in number. For instance, in your sentence, "Graduated Magna Cum Laude" is a phrase and does not include a verb, so it doesn't affect the subject-verb agreement.

2. Evaluate punctuation: Ensure that the punctuation marks, such as commas, periods, and capitalization, are used correctly. In your sentence, the commas are used appropriately to separate the different achievements.

3. Check for proper capitalization: Capitalize the first letter of each sentence, proper nouns (like names or titles), and specific words according to capitalization rules (e.g., awards, publications). In your sentence, proper nouns like "Magna Cum Laude," "Dare Role Model Award," "Scholastic Achievement Awards," "Congressional Student Leadership Award," and "Creative Communication's Young Writers Awards" are capitalized correctly.

By analyzing each element of your sentence, you can determine if it follows the rules of grammar and capitalization.