I am having the same issue. But Incase you didn't know, I'll post this anyway (it's not a complete answer but might get you started.)
You can highlight words by using:
int indexOfFoundKeyword = 1;
int lastIndexOfFoundKeyword = 12;
txtbox.SelectionStart = indexOfFoundKeyword;
txtbox.SelectionLength = lastIndexOfFoundKeyword;
If you place this inside a button click event and then type about 20 chars and click the button you'll see that you can highlight words in a Metro textbox. The problem that I'm having is getting the start and ending of the found keyword so that I know what values to assign to SelectionStart and SelectionLength and if I understand your question correctly, I think that's where you're stuck at, too.
Update
OK, this seems to be a little tempremental but works most of the time. (and accurate when it does work):
// find the word 'jason'.
string word = "jason";
int a, b;
a = genericBox.Text.IndexOf(word);
b = word.Length;
genericBox.SelectionStart = a;
genericBox.SelectionLength = b;
If all you are trying to do is find some text, then select it, then this proves that it can be done. Now I know this is not the best way but it's the only way I've been able to get something like this to work in a plain TextBox for metro apps.