Hobbies and interests
Gymnastics
African American Studies
Movies And Film
Fashion
Makeup and Beauty
Reading
Realistic Fiction
Adult Fiction
Chick Lit
Psychology
Romance
I read books multiple times per month
Celine Nyatome
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FinalistCeline Nyatome
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FinalistBio
Hello! My name is Celine Nyatome, and I am a first generation Kenyan- Rwandan American. Growing up, I have always known that my purpose in life was the make an impact by helping people, inspired by the influence of my mother, who not only selflessly helps people everyday as a nurse, but left her country to help her future family gain a better life with more opportunities. I am passionate about improving the healthcare environment by creating awareness of health disparities imposed upon BIPOC. My ultimate goal is to become a doctor who works to create more visibility and knowledge of implicit bias and health disparity to combat and eradicate these issues in the field. Health equity, especially for BIPOC women, is especially important to me in the medical field, where they are often overlooked and unrepresented. To have the chance to create a better environment in the medical field as well as pave the way for others that look like me in the future is an opportunity I could never pass up.
Education
Spelman College
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Other
Hopkins School
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Other
Career
Dream career field:
Medicine
Dream career goals:
Dermatologist
Sports
Track & Field
Varsity2021 – 20243 years
Awards
- Top 20 in Hopkins School History
Artistic Gymnastics
Club2014 – 20217 years
Awards
- 19th Overall in Level 9 Eastern National Championships
- Super Seven Regional Team Member
- America's Top 100 on Bars Event
Arts
Hopkins School
Ceramics2023 – 2024
Public services
Advocacy
The BIPOC Women's Health Initiative — Founder and President2023 – PresentVolunteering
Girl Scouts of America- Camp AnSeOx — Volunteer Worker2024 – 2024Volunteering
Connecticut Food Share — Volunteer Worker2021 – 2024Volunteering
New Haven Children's Museum — Volunteer Worker2024 – 2024Volunteering
Habitat for Humanity — Volunteer Worker2022 – 2024
Future Interests
Advocacy
Volunteering
Philanthropy
Entrepreneurship
JJ Savaunt's Women In STEM Scholarship
There is an episode from one of my favorite TV shows, Young Sheldon, a show about the life of a child mathematical genius and future theoretical physicist. Everything in his mind is based on patterns, percentages, and results, and growing up in a religious household, he would always be opposed to the belief of God, saying that science is the only reasonable thing that can explain our universe’s function today. His mother, Mary Sheldon, was very devoted to convincing him to start believing, however he would never budge. In this particular episode, Mary starts to lose her faith in God, after hearing a sixteen year old girl in the congregation dies in an accident. Sheldon notices this after she does not say grace before eating her dinner, visibly emotional. Sheldon then has a long talk with her, explaining the perfection of gravity. “Did you know that if gravity were slightly more powerful, the universe would collapse into a ball? And if it were slightly less powerful the universe would fly apart and there would be no stars or planets? And if the electromagnetic force wasn’t 1%, life wouldn’t exist? So what are the odds that would happen all by itself?” Sheldon proceeded to use science to explain and help both himself and his mother to believe in God. Science is surrounded by perfect design; the reason why I love biology so much is because fathoming the billions of parts a living thing uses to emerge, reproduce, and sustain itself is beautifully daunting. Everything being perfectly structured and set into place is magic that only a higher power would have the ability to create.
The acknowledgement of my existence is also why I believe in God. God selected me to be born on this earth and have the chance to live in His creation, the probability of that being 1 in 400 trillion. God allowed my mother to escape a genocide that killed hundreds of thousands of people in a matter of a month and helped her safely travel to a different country to give her a better life. God allowed her the chance to have me and my brother and start our family. God saved my father and allowed him to survive a gunshot wound, allowing me to be with him for many more years to come. God gave me the intelligence to read at the age of 2, allowing me to carry this knowledge and get an acceptance to an esteemed private school to enrich my education. When I doubted my presence, having imposter syndrome at said school, He gave me the strength to put in the extra effort and hours into my schoolwork. In my senior year, when I received bad news from colleges, I was redirected by Him and got into one of my top choices, Spelman College, the #1 HBCU in the Country, now realizing he had led me on that college path 3 years ago. From being protected from harmful situations and surviving them to letting one door close and another open in my life, the patterns set in stone for us are because of God, because of a creator. With this, He affirms my belief in STEM and the development of it, because He guides us to improve his world as well as help others with the knowledge we obtain. Our reality is a fine balance, and the fact that it has been designed to perfection is evidence in itself that there is a creator and it is God. In Sheldon's words, “The precision of the universe makes it logical to conclude a creator.”