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Elizabeth Hager

2,695

Bold Points

24x

Nominee

1x

Finalist

Bio

Hello! I am a Maryland high school senior who strives for success and happiness in my life. I wish to pursue a career in Architecture to fulfill my life goals of creating and designing. I love uplifting those around me and surrounding myself with positive people. I am passionate about spreading mental health awareness and well-being. My hobbies include painting, drawing, music, poetry and dance. Creative arts is what truly drives me and I have a very deep passion for it as a dedicated art student. At school, I am an honor rolls student with a 4.2 GPA. I am the president of the French Honors Society and the Secretary of Black Student Union. I am also a member of the National Honors Society and National Art Honors Society. I am so excited to begin my college journey in learning more about myself and exploring what the world has to offer me!

Education

Eleanor Roosevelt High School

High School
2017 - 2021
  • GPA:
    4

Miscellaneous

  • Desired degree level:

    Master's degree program

  • Majors of interest:

    • Architecture
  • Not planning to go to medical school
  • Career

    • Dream career field:

      Architecture & Planning

    • Dream career goals:

      Creative Director

    • Service Aid (Summer Intern)

      Prince George's County Maryland Government
      2018 – 20202 years

    Sports

    Step Team

    Junior Varsity
    2017 – 20192 years

    Cheerleading

    Intramural
    2016 – 20171 year

    Dancing

    Club
    2015 – 20205 years

    Research

    • Information Technology

      Prince George's County Maryland Government — Research Intern
      2018 – 2020

    Arts

    • C&C Dance Academy

      Dance
      2015 – 2018
    • Montpelier Arts Center

      Visual Arts
      Artists on the Rise Juried Teen Art Exhibition
      2020 – Present
    • Talent Hunt

      Visual Arts
      Virtual Stars
      2021 – Present
    • Greenbelt Student Art Exhibition

      Visual Arts
      2017 – 2018
    • Prince George's Community College

      Painting
      Through the Looking Glass Student Art Exhibition
      2021 – 2021
    • Creative Kids Camp

      Acting
      Hercules
      2016 – 2017

    Public services

    • Volunteering

      Football Game Concessions — Food packager and distributer
      2018 – 2019
    • Volunteering

      Lady Raiders Halloween Event — Painter, prop and poster maker
      2018 – 2018
    • Volunteering

      Black Student Union — Secretary
      2020 – 2021
    • Volunteering

      Dora Kennedy French Immersion — Summer Intern
      2017 – 2018

    Future Interests

    Volunteering

    Philanthropy

    Entrepreneurship

    Bubba Wallace Live to Be Different Scholarship
    Color fills up our lives like air. Just the same way we breathe in we perceive light as color and translate it into beautiful scenes we are gifted to witness everyday. As an artist, it is internally rewarding to be able to recreate these images on my own. Through creative emotion, I am able to transmit a message in a passionate language that cannot be truly understood through words. This is no easy task; I have to make sure everything is placed to perfection. Placement is everything. A brush stroke too far in one direction could set me off track for a long time. One day, I noticed that my hands had started to slip. The clouds above were slowly darkening, and I feared the canvas in front of me would no longer be my comfort, but my downfall. As this fear gnawed at me, I raised my head and noticed the scenery around me was slowly changing and that and I was standing in the middle of a dark, thick forest. I had been walking for so long that I no longer recognized my surroundings. Why is it so dark out here? What happened to the sign I saw just a few minutes ago? When I found myself lost in this way, it was incredibly cumbersome to find the will to turn towards the right direction. Fear took over me and suddenly all the light had vanished from my eyes. When I found myself walking off track, my colors were all out of place. The green was mixing in with the orange, the purple mixing in with the yellow. It was all a muddy mess I was scrambling to pull my shoes out of. Splatters of paint covered my hands and clothes, and suddenly I could not even remember what type of scene I was aiming to paint in the first place. I was slowly losing sight of where I began walking from as the fog grew thicker with every step I took. As I walked on, I started feeling a heavier weight on my mind than I did on my body. My headache pressure increased as the forest grew deeper and the trees grew taller. I was intently focused on where I placed my feet instead of where they were taking me. After all, placement is everything. I never seemed to look back to see what color my footprints left on the ground behind me. Grounding myself became a skill I had to learn in order to breathe. As the air opened my lungs, I noticed the lush green on the trees above me. I heard a butterfly pass by my ears. I could smell the rain that had recently hydrated the nature around me. In this deep inspiration my fingers grazed the earth beneath my feet, I picked up my paintbrush, and I began to recreate the scene around me. I was reviving myself like the paints I added water to, swirling my brush around the color wells, and the color returned to my eyes and my skin. I am creating a radiant picture of all the good I can find around me. This forest of was not trying to swallow me up whole. It was a reflection of the complexities I faced within myself. I was not supposed to escape it, I was supposed to explore it. Once my mind was exposed to new areas of perception and knowledge, new self-discoveries became available to me, helping me piece myself together with new colors. I was able to discover new realms of interest, reinvigorating my soul and challenging myself to locate a sense of identity and independence, diverging with my prior, self-contained tendencies. Growth could not occur until my comfort zone was eliminated, exceeding customary expectations I previously held for myself. I can tug and pull at the edges of my soul, the same way I pick out my afro to make it bigger. My ego and identity can expand just the same, forming me into the successful and joyful woman I have always wanted to be. I have the power to change my life at any given moment, and I am prepared to make decisions that will lead me in the right direction, no matter how many times I have to paint over a scene again. I realized that placement really isn’t everything. Neither is picking the right scene to paint. It's simply about how you paint it.
    Mirajur Rahman Self Expression Scholarship
    Creative Expression Scholarship