Age
21
Hobbies and interests
African American Studies
Poetry
Photography and Photo Editing
Bass
History
Fashion
Health Sciences
Nursing
Reading
History
I read books daily
Blake Spencer
765
Bold Points2x
FinalistBlake Spencer
765
Bold Points2x
FinalistBio
I am currently a third-year nursing major from Flint, Michigan, attending Howard University. I reside in Washington D.C. as a full-time student. I am a creative and structured leader that demonstrates adept skills in developing ideas, strategies and furthering the boundaries within the workplace. I have a strong connection with marginalized communities and assisting those with immediate exigencies that must be addressed.
Education
Howard University
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing
GPA:
3.5
Miscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
Career
Dream career field:
Hospital & Health Care
Dream career goals:
Nurse Practitioner
Assistant Teacher
McMonagle Elementary School2020 – 20211 yearZoner
JCPenny2018 – 20191 yearAssistant Archivist
Moorland Spingarn Research Center2022 – Present2 years
Sports
Basketball
Club2012 – 20208 years
Arts
Freelance
Film Photography2020 – PresentNAACP ACT-SO
Slam Poetry2018 – 2020Brave New Voices
Slam Poetry2017 – 2020
Public services
Volunteering
Non-Perishable Food Pantry (Individual) — Creator2021 – PresentVolunteering
North End Soup Kitchen — Volunteer2018 – 2020Volunteering
Summer Youth Initiative — Volunteer2017 – 2020Volunteering
Ujamaa Food Pantry — Volunteer2021 – Present
Future Interests
Advocacy
Volunteering
Philanthropy
GTF Book Scholarship
The last book that I read was Grounding of My Brothers by Walter Rodney, a scholar and activist from Guyana. This book helped further my understanding of Pan-Africanism, communal love, and Black study. As someone who considers themselves a student of the disciplinary subject, Black studies, I was able to understand how important it is to have a connection outside of the academic gates when grounding those who are necessary for the progression of the African diaspora. Walter Rodney has an understanding of the nuances within the diaspora that allows his connection to reach Caribbean Africans, African Americans, and those still within Africa facing neo-colonization. Through this book, I learned more about Rodney's ideologies and how he uses these ideologies to learn from those who are outside of Western academia. One of the most prevalent themes within this book was the idea of being a student, constantly, regardless of any sort of juxtaposition that may occur due to opinion, educative differences, or epistemology differentiation. If Black academics and those who want to serve their community can adopt this purview, we can understand and educate rather than have pretentious quarrels that lead to a lack of continuity within our community. Ultimately, I was reminded that as someone who attends Howard University, resisting elitist petit-bourgeoise attitudes that come from Western academia and remaining connected to your community with learning and teaching should be emphasized as you matriculate through College.
Reading has allowed me to remain cognizant of my position within the world as a Black man from Flint, MI while helping to build an understanding of various theoretical frameworks that can apply to all of the African diaspora. As I continue to read through books made by great practitioners of Black study such as Frantz Fanon, Walter Rodney, C.L.R James and W.E.B DuBois, I can develop my own connection toward the progression of my community amongst the hands of neo-colonization and international imperialism. Through learning the history of pre-colonial Africa, or historiographies related to the development of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, I can pass that history to my community to help educate those who may not be as knowledgeable about our history beyond our throes under white supremacy and settler-colonial rule. As I progress and learn through reading about various topics and historical facts, I've been able to continue to destroy that mental blockade placed by institutional racism from studying in public schools in Flint, MI. In my beginning experiences with progressing mentally by reading, I did more unlearning concerning perspectives shared by discriminatory media sources than learning about intricacies and nuances within the African diaspora. Reading not only helps you progress your capacity of knowledge, but it also helps you reflect on archaic stances that are nothing short of paradoxical. As I continue to progress with reading, I hope to serve as an example and teacher to my community and family while also continuing to be a student of my surroundings, learning from the same community that I wish to teach.