Hobbies and interests
Community Service And Volunteering
Coding And Computer Science
Gaming
Movies And Film
Adam Torres Encarnacion
1,595
Bold Points1x
FinalistAdam Torres Encarnacion
1,595
Bold Points1x
FinalistBio
“The greatest pleasure in life is doing what others say you cannot do” - Unknown
I’ve come a long way since spinning dreidels and playing with toy robots. In fact, seven-year-old me would’ve never imagined flying two-thousand miles north to Pennsylvania, and—to boot—would’ve never dreamed of how expansive America really was. During my scholarly journey, I’ve faced setbacks, slammed doors, and immeasurable bouts of disappointment, but with those challenges came an even greater sense of tenacity, and that resilience has ultimately molded me into the person I am today. As I begin to prepare for college education, Bold.org and its partnered scholarships will serve as a testament to my unbroken commitment in establishing a good-natured lifestyle for the future. Armed with the financial resources to prevail in college, I’ll be further enabled to enrich my community with the fixed mentality to persevere in the face of adversity―the mindset to prove others wrong.
Education
Pennsylvania State University-Main Campus
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Computer Science
Hazleton Area High School
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Bachelor's degree program
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- Computer Science
Career
Dream career field:
computer science
Dream career goals:
Entrepreneurship
Cashier, Translator, Inventory Management
San Jose Minimarket2021 – Present3 yearsMember
Book Club, Chess Club, Engineering Club, Math Club, PJAS, Key Club, SADD Club.2019 – Present5 yearsCo-founder - Online Business w/ 100k+ Members
Sleepcore.2020 – Present4 yearsStudent
ID Tech x MIT JavaScript Coding Bootcamp2022 – 2022Student
Carnegie Mellon University Computer Science Scholars Program2022 – 2022Student
Inspirit AI Python Machine Learning Virtual Bootcamp2022 – 2022
Arts
Personal
Creative Writing2019 – Present
Public services
Volunteering
National Honor Society — Member2022 – PresentVolunteering
Hazleton Integration Project — tutor, staff volunteer (300+hrs)2021 – PresentPublic Service (Politics)
Hazleton City Council — Junior Advisory Board2022 – Present
Future Interests
Volunteering
Entrepreneurship
Morgan Levine Dolan Community Service Scholarship
Seven-years-old in my black shorts. Back then, I would’ve loved nothing more than to spend a sweltering summer night furrowed under my blanket, all tucked in, mother asleep, doing nothing but kid things to placate my never-ending boredom at home. I was someone who, when given car toys, would drive them all around the house, collapsing into fits of laughter as I raced past furniture and into my parents’ bedroom. Maybe they didn’t like it as much as I, but that didn’t matter. As far as I could tell, I made the rules—not them.
In the eyes of a pompous child, it was easy to pretend we were happy.
More than anything else, it was convenient to profess that my parents were satisfied together—though, frankly, they were not. Despite being a tumbling boy of seven, even I knew that our time as a family would someday halt; that, no matter how much me or my brother pleaded, there was no mending my parents’ irreparable relationship.
One day, one night, they would tragically seek divorce.
When my mother made the most valorous decision of her life—a two-thousand mile move to America with her two twin boys—I changed. Time ebbed and flowed; months turned to years. No longer was I the mischievous, foolishly ignorant child that wanted things placed perfectly under his feet. As I was made aware of the many sacrifices my mother made, I instead became fixated on finding solutions. Ways I could improve myself. Ways I could enact change in others. Ways to do things right.
Because although I had an ill-entrenched childhood, who was I to take it from others?
Though not an exquisite adventure like my younger self would’ve dreamt, starting high school, I became truly fanatical about servicing my community. I joined school-wide volunteering projects. Reached out to local service groups. Even became staff volunteer at the Hazleton Integration Project—a place that, to this day, continues to influence my perception of the world.
In ways, tacking on such accomplishments meant self-growth; it meant sharing opportunities with those who, like me, came from stark backgrounds. Volunteering offered me a renewed sense of fulfillment, more refreshing than a clear bucket of late-summer water. Participating in drawn-out volunteering excursions made me ecstatic. Donating piles of canned food on Thanksgiving Eve felt just right. When I discovered community service, I, in part, unearthed wedges of myself—found lumps of me that, bluntly, I would’ve never known existed.
Now, seventeen-years-old, I realize I’ve triumphed many hardships. During my scholarly journey, many unchanging factors influenced my rationale. My mother’s taut, unbroken support throughout all of childhood; my wishful, well-anchored quest for voluntary service in high school—just to name some examples. But if not for the inconstancy, if not for those quaint, mercurial mishaps along the way, perhaps I would’ve turned out a different, less intellectually-roused student—someone not eager to learn as I am now.
Looking into the prospect of a college education, these are the many things that comprise all of who I am. These are the things that define me, inspire me to become someone truly passionate about my career. Armed with the financial means to persevere in university, I believe the Morgan Levine Dolan Community Service Scholarship will enable me to extend my service efforts on a broader, more effective scale than ever before. And while, of course, I may never know what the future has in store for me, I’ll know my college education has been fulfilling when it allows me to be me—someone who truly cares about his community.