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Emery Van Voorhis

3,625

Bold Points

5x

Nominee

1x

Finalist

Bio

Hi there! My name is Emery and I am hoping to one day pursue a career in pediatrics. I love science and working with children! My short term goals center around a club. Middle school is a tricky time for everyone, but in a small school, we can sometimes find ourselves stuck in cliques that prevent friendships with other girls. I founded Meet Me in the Middle to open relationships and community between eighth-grade and high school girls. My goal is to help create a smoother transition to high school by providing a safe space to learn about high school from other girls, have fun and laugh, share personal experiences, and pray for each other. In the spring of 2019, I discussed the logistics of the club with middle and high school teachers. After approval from the administration, I chose the Bible study, “We Saved You a Seat,” and planned out group activities for each monthly meeting, looking to what the Gospel has to say about friendship-related topics including encouragement, forgiveness, service, and vulnerability. I love the excitement middle school girls bring to the monthly meetings when they feel comfortable to talk, share, and hang out with the high school girls! To be honest, I started the group thinking that I would be helping the middle school girls, but I have found that the club has been rewarding to me and the other high school mentors as well in building relationships both in and across schools.

Education

Covenant Day School

High School
2012 - 2022

Miscellaneous

  • Desired degree level:

  • Majors of interest:

    • Public Health
    • International Relations and National Security Studies
    • Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Other
  • Planning to go to medical school
  • Career

    • Dream career field:

      Medicine

    • Dream career goals:

      Pediatrician

    • Intern

      Athena's Path
      2019 – Present5 years
    • Paid Intern

      College Admissions Strategies
      2021 – Present3 years
    • Student

      National Student Leadership Conference Medicine and Health Care
      2019 – 2019
    • Shadow Student

      Novant Health Symphony Park Pediatrics
      2018 – Present6 years

    Sports

    Volleyball

    Club
    2018 – 20202 years

    Awards

    • 2019 High School Gold Tournament Winner

    Volleyball

    Junior Varsity
    2018 – 20191 year

    Awards

    • MVP
    • Coaches Award

    Research

    • Medicine

      Wake Forest Summer Immersion Program — Student
      2020 – 2020

    Arts

    • Music Lessons at the CK School of Music & Arts

      Singing
      2019 – Present
    • North Carolina Music Educators Association All-State Choral Festival

      Choir
      North Carolina Music Educators Association All-State Choral Festival
      2019 – 2019
    • Covenant Day School A Cappella Club

      Choir
      Covenant Day Christmas Performance, Biltmore Christmas Show, Celebration of the Arts
      2018 – 2020
    • Covenant Day School Choir

      Choir
      Covenant Day Schristmas Concert, Biltmore Christmas Show, Ceebration of the Arts, Wingate Edudication
      2018 – 2020

    Public services

    • Volunteering

      Covenant Day Sustainability Club — Volunteer
      2018 – Present
    • Volunteering

      Athena's Path — Intern
      2018 – Present
    • Volunteering

      Augustine Literacy Partnership — Tutor
      2020 – Present
    • Volunteering

      Classroom Central — Volunteer
      2020 – Present
    • Volunteering

      Meet Me in the Middle Club — Founder
      2020 – Present
    • Volunteering

      Beta Club — Team Leader
      2018 – Present

    Future Interests

    Advocacy

    Volunteering

    Philanthropy

    Entrepreneurship

    Bold Giving Scholarship
    The idea of crocheting first popped into my head when I saw a Pinterest ad from a company selling cancer caps for patients. Two days later, I crocheted my first cap with a lot of instruction from YouTube for my neighbor, Mrs. Hardy, who was battling cancer. With loose stitches and a droopy top, it was full of imperfections, but Mrs. Hardy was so excited by the hat that she asked me to make more to share with her friends. I practiced over and over again to make sure my caps looked just right. With just a few extra rows of stitches, my hats can fit an infant or an eighty-year-old. I could crochet every minute for the rest of my life, but I still wouldn't be able to make enough hats for everyone in need on my own. Every year since seventh grade, I have brought extra yarn and crochet hooks so anyone interested can learn to make a hat at school. As I show them a basic double crochet stitch, I have a chance to sit down and learn about their interests, goals, and hopes for their hats. Some of the friends I have taught over the years continue to make child-sized hats in extra-thick yarn for the homeless kids shivering all through the winter months, some bring hats to cancer patients, and a few like me make varying sizes of hats so that both groups of people can be better served. Handing out hats and teaching people to crochet shaped my career goals. With every stitch I crochet, I pray for the person whose head it will eventually rest on while promising to help future cancer patients through research in my own career in medicine to be able to have a greater impact on a larger community.
    Bold Community Activist Scholarship
    The idea of crocheting first popped into my head when I saw a Pinterest ad from a company selling cancer caps for patients. Two days later, I crocheted my first cap with a lot of instruction from YouTube for my neighbor, Mrs. Hardy, who was battling cancer. With loose stitches and a droopy top, it was full of imperfections, but Mrs. Hardy was so excited by the hat that she asked me to make more to share with her friends. I practiced over and over again to make sure my caps looked just right. With just a few extra rows of stitches, my hats can fit an infant or an eighty-year-old. I could crochet every minute for the rest of my life, but I still wouldn't be able to make enough hats for everyone in need on my own. Every year since seventh grade, I have brought extra yarn and crochet hooks so anyone interested can learn to make a hat at school. As I show them a basic double crochet stitch, I have a chance to sit down and learn about their interests, goals, and hopes for their hats. Some of the friends I have taught over the years continue to make child-sized hats in extra-thick yarn for the homeless kids shivering all through the winter months, some bring hats to cancer patients, and a few like me make varying sizes of hats so that both groups of people can be better served. Handing out hats and teaching people to crochet shaped my career goals. With every stitch I crochet, I pray for the person whose head it will eventually rest on while promising to help future cancer patients through research in my own career in medicine to be able to have a greater impact on a larger community.
    Charles R. Ullman & Associates Educational Support Scholarship
    Education is the only gift in the world that lasts a lifetime. Growing up, my mom and dad prioritized the education of my family. After grueling days at work, they would return home to build time to read to my brother and me before bed. I cherished these few minutes as it was often the only time I was able to spend with my father during the week. My brother and I would argue over which book we would have our parents read to us that night because we idolized them both and the books were a conduit for their time. This dedication to education and my future was not something I immediately recognized or valued. I naively assumed that every child received the opportunities that had become commonplace for me. I could not have been more mistaken about that sad reality; however, I grew to adore the words of the thick and glossy pages. I wanted to enjoy the worlds that books offered even when my parents were at work. In preschool, I would memorize the Fancy Nancy storybooks to pretend I could read for my teachers and anyone who could listen to me. Consequently, this memorization actually made my reading journey more difficult because I was memorizing word pronunciation and order instead of meaning. My kindergarten teacher at Sharon Elementary taught me to sound out words to make reading easier, and I soon spent all of my free time reading the Magic Tree House series. Given how much authorities in my life have poured into my reading ability, I was delighted with this chance to teach other students the gift of reading using the Orton-Gillingham multisensory explicit approach to reading through the Augustine Literacy Partnership. It is direct, unambiguous instruction. Novice or struggling learners learn much better with this approach. It is a continuum that leads children to discover on their own, and the design of the instruction means that the important content is broken down into pieces through demonstration, guided practice, and checking for understanding. There is abundant research to support deliberate practice, spaced over time, and to retrieve information in that practice. This delivery of instruction is interactive with feedback and has a perky pace. With Mrs. Lye and the Augustine Literacy Partnership, I have learned the values of phonemic awareness, phonics, vocabulary, fluency, and comprehension that will allow me to teach underprivileged students to read. While I hope to be able to continue tutoring in the future, I would like to serve my community through a career in medicine. When I was fourteen years old, medicine took on significantly greater importance. My mother was admitted to the hospital with a white blood cell count of over thirty thousand and hemoglobin of six. My babysitter picked me up from school only knowing that my mother was in the hospital. In retrospect, my mother had gradually changed from a 45-year-old with boundless energy and a ready laugh into a tired shell of her former self. Her skin had become pasty white and the laughter that lived in her bright blue eyes was gone. Her veins appeared to be breaking free from her body as they were covered in IVs and her small frame was draped in a hospital gown. The doctors completed blood tests, CT scans, and a bone marrow biopsy over four days in order to give a preliminary diagnosis. We went home and waited a week until the final results confirmed a rare form of Non-Hodgkins lymphoma. The entire week was a blur until we heard the words, “She has cancer.” All I remember is my father crying as he tried to explain what was going on in the parking lot of my middle school. In the weeks before she was diagnosed with Splenic Marginal Zone Lymphoma (Stage IV) at Duke University, I was researching all of the chromosomal abnormalities that would lead to blood cancers. My google search history would indicate then that I became heavily focused on bioscience. I wanted to understand the genetic causes of cancer. I wanted to know her chances of survival. As my mother began to regain her color and energy with ongoing Rituximab infusions, my interest in bioscience remained. I was fortunate to have an outstanding teacher for my freshman biology class and decided to take a closer look at a future dealing with bioscience as I enrolled in AP Biology at my school. I thought that this class would be an excellent opportunity to familiarize myself with bioscience. Little did I know that the news would soon be filled with non-stop bioscience. As I look at the world in 2021, it is impossible not to feel closer to our communities while a pandemic claims lives by the minute. A microscopic virus is so contagious and destructive that people are working from home and unable to attend school in person. Moreover, humankind is more vulnerable to the spread of disease, which is especially worrisome because the virus has a transmission rate nearly ten times higher than the seasonal influenza virus. While social events have remained in lockdown, the global scientific community has been more active than ever in discovering new mutations of the virus, advising politicians on public safety, and developing a new type of mRNA vaccine in less than a year. I would love to be able to say that these experiences and communities have changed me for the better, but I am not sure what my life would have looked like without them. Nevertheless, I am a more compassionate person because I know what it feels like to watch a loved one struggle to survive. I understand the pain of waiting for results that are all bad options. I would give anything to not know these things, but this is my reality. Therefore, I hope that this course in learning to think like a bioscientist will be an important step in my journey toward serving others through a career in medicine one day.