Hobbies and interests
Russian
Foreign Languages
German
Linguistics
Art
History
Military Sciences
Health Sciences
Clinical Psychology
Politics and Political Science
Biochemistry
Biomedical Sciences
Calisthenics
Cinematography
Classics
Chess
Writing
Ethics
Criminology
English
Philosophy
Student Council or Student Government
Medicine
Graphic Design
Golf
Fishing
National Honor Society (NHS)
Learning
Physics
Psychiatry
Public Speaking
Reading
Research
Screenwriting
Studying
Speech and Debate
Videography
Reading
Academic
Art
Biography
Classics
Criticism
Cultural
Education
Gothic
Historical
Health
History
Horror
Humor
Leadership
Literature
Music
Philosophy
Politics
Psychology
Realistic Fiction
Religion
Science
Short Stories
True Story
Sociology
I read books daily
Ethan Sage
645
Bold Points1x
FinalistEthan Sage
645
Bold Points1x
FinalistBio
When schools were ordered to shut down in 2020, I could have never predicted its impact on my academic life. Nor could I have guessed that this radical shift was masquerading as a curse for over a year before revealing itself as a blessing. I advanced through my elementary and junior high years with relatively little resistance, but the struggle with online learning was more than I could take without having any resilience, and my grades plummeted in my first year of high school.
In an unexpected turn of events, I switched schools and, after facing failure head-on, unlocked the drive to commit myself to learning. I fell in love, as it were, with gaining knowledge. I began my next three years of school with the challenge to earn no less than perfect grades.
As I am nearing the end of my high school education, I can be proud to say that I have accomplished my goal while discovering so much more about what I am capable of. I have been awarded for my work in foreign language and global politics, contributions to the community, and my creative endeavors. In my junior year, my peers elected me to be student president, a lofty and challenging position I held as one of my proudest accomplishments.
I have faith in the power of financial support in academic pursuits. I am excited to see what happens next, and much of my future may be made possible through scholarships. Seeing what others have done with the awards they receive inspires me to take my goals even further, and I hope to follow in their footsteps.
Education
Flextech High School
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
Majors of interest:
- Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Other
- History and Political Science
- History and Language/Literature
- Medical Clinical Sciences/Graduate Medical Studies
- Clinical/Medical Laboratory Science/Research and Allied Professions
Career
Dream career field:
Medical Practice
Dream career goals:
Sports
Cross-Country Running
Varsity2018 – 20213 years
Research
Slavic Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, General
N/A — Language learner2021 – PresentForeign Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, Other
Washtenaw Community College — Researcher, author, presenter2024 – 2024History and Political Science
Flextech High School — Researcher, author, presenter2022 – 2023Science, Technology and Society
Flextech High School — Researcher, author, presenter2023 – 2023
Arts
Flextech High School
IllustrationStudio Art2021 – 2023Flextech High School
PrintmakingStudy of Printmaking2022 – 2023
Public services
Volunteering
242 Church — General2023 – 2023
Future Interests
Advocacy
Politics
Volunteering
Entrepreneurship
Scorenavigator Financial Literacy Scholarship
I come from a family of sunken ships. Growing up in a multi-generational household, the cycle of struggling to make ends meet in an unforgiving economy revealed the likelihood of my own future. My family taught me to view the world behind rose-tinted glass, a brief escape from the pattern. That I did. However, after considering the broader reality, I grew resistant to my fate following theirs. I concluded, despite my family’s best intentions, that I would surely fall into the same trap of an unfulfilling career. That my youth should not be spent idly waiting for what is to come.
I advanced through my early grade school years with relatively little resistance. My assignments were passed with good marks, but my achievement stopped there. I would burn out in the face of adversity. I capsized at last when schools shut down in 2020, and my education became an afterthought to my turbulent social life where friends had demanded time and attention. I prayed for luck instead of direction, but I now understand that luck does not come to those in no position to receive it. My aspirations were sparse as they were vague. I came up empty-handed for what I wanted, but I was also plagued by dropping grades that were so effortless before. By the end of the year, the sight of my report card sent chills down my spine. I had fallen so far from my standard that something finally broke. Not like a delicate vase, but an unforgiving barbed wire releasing.
Amidst my beloved textbooks, I remember myself with a younger face and missing assignments stacked as high as my current extracurricular readings. I was afraid to be passionate. I did not believe my work could produce good fruit. That was until I enrolled in a new school the next year, in which I coaxed the flame of self-willed determination not only to recover from my past mistakes but to settle for no less than perfect grades for each following year. I took control of my education and resurrected my repressed hunger to learn. Research into topics ranging from politics to entomology, combined with mastery-based learning and dual enrollment, furthered my motivation. In junior year, I gathered everything I learned about politics to present at a school event called Project Showcase, engaging my audience in thoughtful conversation, and was awarded praise by my teachers. I even ventured outside my school’s boundaries to compete in the Congressional Art Competition held by Elissa Slotkin. I have entered each year, and I will do so again this year.
As the acting student president, I felt out of place, for I found I hadn’t considered college. Like my freshman self, I returned to malnourished dreams. I dug deeper, then, and struck an underground spring. The world is an art form, and it fascinates me; I want to learn everything, draw all of its secrets out. I could take the obvious route, find a career of mild interest, get paid decently, but I care not for the commodity of modern life. I want the commitment that comes with pursuing a doctorate, something I would never have guessed three years ago. I want to find answers no other has before as a medical researcher. I look upon the world and marvel at its intricacies with colorful metaphors as an artist would the paintings of his idol. I have reconciled that my past cannot be altered, and the only way is forward with the easy road far behind me. Facing the storm is far more fulfilling than going down with the ship.