Hobbies and interests
Drawing And Illustration
Painting and Studio Art
Singing
Sewing
Community Service And Volunteering
HOSA
Key Club
Art
Baking
Cooking
Reading
Writing
National Honor Society (NHS)
Foreign Languages
Spanish
Reading
Fantasy
Science Fiction
Classics
Adventure
Book Club
Crafts
Cultural
Epic
Humor
Folk Tales
Folklore
Magical Realism
Mystery
Retellings
Psychology
Plays
Novels
I read books multiple times per month
Fenecia Shaiju
4,165
Bold Points3x
Nominee1x
FinalistFenecia Shaiju
4,165
Bold Points3x
Nominee1x
FinalistBio
I am an undergraduate sophomore at Rice University in Houston, TX. I am from the small South Indian state of Kerala, and I moved to the U.S. with my family at 5 years old. I am passionate about art, biological sciences, and mathematics. I am also interested in world cultures and languages. I speak two languages fluently, English and Malayalam, and I hope to master Spanish as well.
A timid person by character, I am not naturally inclined to lead, but I actively try to push myself to become a leader. My journey began in eighth grade at the NJHS induction ceremony when I gave a speech on citizenship as the NJHS secretary for our school. Now I have grown as far as to have had been selected to represent my school at the annual Hugh O'Brien Youth Leadership Conference the summer of 2021!
Through such experiences and my 4-year active participation in HOSA (Health Occupations Students of America), in which I have earned numerous awards and had the honor to compete in medical events at the international level, I hope to one day become a family medicine physician to help patients get diagnosed and treated quickly; as someone who struggled with getting a fast diagnosis and effective medical treatment for asthma as a child, I aspire to one day prevent patients from being trapped in the same cycle of endless doctors' appointments that I was caught in.
Education
Rice University
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Other
Minors:
- Romance Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, General
Barbers Hill H S
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Master's degree program
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- Public Health
- Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Other
- Medicine
- Allied Health Diagnostic, Intervention, and Treatment Professions
- Romance Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, General
Career
Dream career field:
Hospital & Health Care
Dream career goals:
Family Medicine Physician
Pharmacy Care Representative
HEB2023 – Present1 yearOn-Site Volunteer
Hearts and Hands of Baytown2021 – Present3 years
Sports
Karate
Intramural2015 – 20161 year
Research
History and Political Science
Academic University Interscholastic League — Research Essay Contestant2020 – PresentInternational/Globalization Studies
Houston Model United Nations — Delegate to the General Assembly2022 – 2022
Arts
Chambers County
IllustrationBHISD Fall Test T-Shirt 2018, BHISD Fall Fest T-Shirt 20212018 – 2021Barbers Hill ISD
Drawing2016 BHISD Christmas Card, 2018 BHISD Christmas Card, 2020 BHISD Christmas Card, 2022 BHISD Christmas Card2016 – 2022Barbers Hill Middle School North Art Club
Painting"Rapunzel" - sold for $365 at auction2018 – 2019Texas Art Education Agency
Painting"Amma's Hands"2020 – 2021Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo: School Art
Mixed Media Drawing"Dazed Debonair"2020 – 2021Texas Art Education Agency
Pen & Ink"The Quilt That I Am"2019 – 2020Texas Art Education Agency
Painting"Shattered"2019 – 2020
Public services
Advocacy
Barbers Hill ISD — Volunteer to tie red ribbons2018 – PresentVolunteering
Key Club — Member2019 – 2020Volunteering
Hugh O'Brien Youth Leadership Foundation — Alumnus2021 – PresentVolunteering
National Honor Society (NHS) — Member2021 – PresentVolunteering
National Junior Honor Society (NJHS) — Secretary2018 – 2019Volunteering
Hearts and Hands of Baytown — On-Site Volunteer2021 – PresentVolunteering
HOSA – Future Health Professionals — Member2019 – PresentVolunteering
Anchor Club — Member2019 – Present
Future Interests
Volunteering
Analtha Parr Pell Memorial Scholarship
Ever since I moved to my current school district in the sixth grade, I have won the district Christmas card contest every other year, having my art sent on a greeting card to all local households and businesses. I have also designed nearly every one of my school district’s T-shirts via design contests. And because of my nearly monthly attendance at school board meetings for recognitions for my art awards, my school, and even my whole town, has come to know me as “the girl who wins all the art contests.”
However, many are surprised to know that I do not want to become an artist. On the contrary, I wish to become a family physician to solve a global healthcare issue which was the reason for my venture into the arts.
As a small child, I suffered from asthma. At around two years old, my mom noticed that I was always breathing heavily, with a heartbeat that seemed to physically move her hand when she placed it over my chest. We sought medical help–but the diagnosis process placed my family in a tough situation. At the time, my dad was in the United States fighting against racial discrimination and labor trafficking after he became a victim of it himself in the Signal International labor trafficking case. Meanwhile, my mom, my brother, and I lived in India with my dad’s parents. My asthma diagnosis was expected to be quick; my symptoms were severe, and we expected the doctors to understand the matter in no time. Little were we expecting the process to take three years, all the while adding to the financial burden of my already struggling family with each doctor’s visit that seemed to take us nowhere.
It was during these difficult times that my mom discovered my love for art. Because of my asthma, we often stayed at my cousin’s house for weeks at a time in order to not burden my grandparents with my care. My aunt was an art teacher–she had a room reserved as her studio. She often let me play around with her paints and pastels and pencils, and when I returned to my grandparents’ house, my grandparents discovered a new nuisance–my increasing tendency to draw on the walls. But my mom noticed that this new interest made me happy–she noticed that art was my distraction from my suffering while I waited for a diagnosis and treatment plan for my asthma. And so, although it angered my grandparents, she talked them into letting me project my wild imagination onto the walls, promising them that they will get their walls repainted when I grow up just a little.
By around third grade, my asthma had nearly completely faded away. For the longest time, I did, in fact, want to become an artist–but my high school journey has moved me in another direction. I realized that having art as a career would transform it from a haven to a necessity–I feared that becoming an artist would take the joy out of something that helped me escape some of the most difficult times of my life.
And so, I resolved to become a doctor. I noticed that the problem of obtaining a fast diagnosis was a problem in not only India, but the whole world–and to become the solution to the problem, I would place myself in the place where the process begins: in the office of the family physician.