Gender
Male
Hobbies and interests
Business And Entrepreneurship
Gaming
Dog Training
Community Service And Volunteering
Shooting
Travel And Tourism
Culinary Arts
Exercise And Fitness
Hiking And Backpacking
Surfing
Scuba Diving
Rock Climbing
Foreign Languages
Coding And Computer Science
Statistics
Coaching
Mentoring
Board Games And Puzzles
Violin
Military Sciences
Swimming
Medicine
Biochemistry
Biology
Animals
Finance
Viola
Reading
Adventure
Adult Fiction
Academic
Science
Business
Classics
Cookbooks
I read books daily
US CITIZENSHIP
US Citizen
LOW INCOME STUDENT
Yes
FIRST GENERATION STUDENT
Yes
Jason Cole
5,875
Bold Points1x
Nominee2x
Finalist1x
WinnerJason Cole
5,875
Bold Points1x
Nominee2x
Finalist1x
WinnerBio
I'm in the Army National Guard as a Survey Team Member in the Civil Support Team. My life goal is to be a nurse anesthetist or working in the field of computer science.
My drive to be in the medical field is from my dad; he had diabetes and stage 3 lung cancer. I was at most of his appointments, surgeries, hospital visits. A significant part of my life has been in hospitals. I gained insight within the field itself, an outsider's perspective at what my father did wrong, and what the doctors themselves did wrong as well.
I originally owned a mobile dog grooming business to work with no-kill-shelters. In total, I helped close to 2,000 animals with various shelters. I try to provide aid in any way that I can. I currently volunteer at Heartland Integrations to help immigrants transition into American society.
We look at charitable work as harmless, cost-free, and no foul to the people providing the service and the places themselves that perform the charitable work. Companies rarely reward volunteers for their efforts. My goal is to one day design a program that rewards based on volunteer work across the globe. I think this will help change the world for the better by providing more incentive to those who would otherwise never go out of their way for the cause.
Education
University of Nebraska at Omaha
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Computer Science
- Mathematics and Computer Science
Minors:
- Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Other
Miscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Master's degree program
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- Foreign Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, Other
- Computer Science
- Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Other
- Liberal Arts and Sciences, General Studies and Humanities
Career
Dream career field:
computer science
Dream career goals:
Founding a company.
Survey Team Member
Army National Guard2010 – Present14 years
Sports
Wrestling
Junior Varsity2000 – 20022 years
Awards
- 0
Research
Foods, Nutrition, and Related Services
U.S Army — Fitness Trainer2021 – 2022Computer and Information Sciences, General
University of Nebraska Omaha — Student2022 – 2022animal behavior
Grooming school — Groomer2019 – 2020
Arts
High school
Actingno2006 – 2010
Public services
Volunteering
Heartland Integration Center — Interviewer, clothing drives, financial education, mentorship2022 – PresentVolunteering
National Guard — Food Preparer2012 – 2018Volunteering
Furever Homes — groomer2021 – 2021
Future Interests
Advocacy
Politics
Volunteering
Philanthropy
Entrepreneurship
Bold Hobbies Scholarship
I'm a hodophile with a fancy for tackling anything the current area offers. In a rough summary, my favorite hobby is traveling and practicing the arts of everyday life. I've completed 49 states and six countries and intend to tackle more.
From backpacking from Astoria, Oregon to Sonoma, California, Hiking the mountains in Korea and surfing in Guanacaste. I have a sense of wanderlust I will probably never be able to scratch. When I'm home, as fast as the cherry blossoms come and go, so too am I out the door to go somewhere else. My upcoming adventure is a trip to Morroco traversing up Portugal, Spain, Italy, and finally concluding in Greece.
There's nothing more impressive to me than experiencing what the world has to offer and the stories people tell from all over the world in ways I would never have guessed to tell.
Mikey Taylor Memorial Scholarship
WinnerDepression is the comfortable sweater you always have on but can't find a reason to take it off. You sleep with it, walk around the house all the time with it, and leave the house unkempt because you don't care. This sweater has a familiar scent that makes you long for something that isn't there. You don't want to wash it in fear of removing whatever longing memory is attached to the scent or feel. The sweater in the heat is uncomfortable, but you don't care. You'd rather sweat and be miserable instead of removing the burden. It's a weight you can't relinquish. You can't let go, and in the end, instead of releasing whatever is holding you down, you embrace the weight and feeling and consider it a positive part of you.
Fast forward six years, you don't know where the time has gone, you still can't sleep, your friends are calling you, thinking you're dead. You've deleted your social media and drunk or slept your twenties away at this point. At least your sweater is still kind of cozy, so at least that is a positive. Something happens. For one day, one brief instance, you take your sweater off and feel an odd sensation. The crisp, cold wind hits you. You don't like it very much, but then the sun's warmth caresses your face. The breeze warms up; you embrace all of nature's wonders around you. You ask yourself if this is what you missed out on experiencing all these years after you crawled into a hole when your father passed away. The answer is yes.
You still wear your sweater around the house from time to time. It's too hot to focus on any given task. Going outside sounds miserable. You deliberately turn the air on and warp your surroundings to keep the sweater on; it is comfortable, after all. Once it gets too hot, you decide to take it off. You can feel the wood of your table, the soft sheets on your bed, and your pillows. When you go outside, it isn't as cold this time. You call your friends and socialize, one raspy sentence at a time. The brain fog that clouded your head dissipates, and words and goals take shape and have meaning. You look back and wonder what you have lost from the years that passed by.
You attempt to throw away the sweater only to turn around and pick it back up. You try to put it on, but it's too hot and uncomfortable. It smells horrendous too. The hardest thing you do ends up being washing it. Your sweater doesn't smell or feel the same, but at the end of the day, it's still your sweater. As time heals the wounds, you realize you don't need to wear your memories constantly. You don't have to keep it unwashed, and you don't have to throw it away. You embrace it as part of who you are. Wrap it around your waist, slap it on your shoulder if you want, or don't wear it at all that day. If you see someone else struggling the same way you are, maybe they need to know it's okay to take their sweater off from time to time too.
AptAmigo Innovation Scholarship
I am a problem solver. An issue between friends? If someone is struggling to find something I'll help them. If a friend requires a service, I'll find a way to do it. Helping people; it's what I do.
During the year 2020 cities shut down, attempting to accomplish services was next to impossible. What is not discussed but in demand? Around, but not fierce in competition. Food is often a staple go-to for the average individual, but I dug further. I did not want to create a supply chain for Etsy, nor did I want to compete with an abundance of individuals with an easy start-up cost. I looked around and saw dogs, cats, and various other animals. I called local grooming companies and discovered that all of the groomers in my area are backed up by months with hundreds of people on a waitlist. Even though the grooming shops were open, per covid, they could only hold so many employees and dogs at a time. The solution? Mobile dog grooming. Now, what separates it from the rest? Mobile Dog Grooming not only complemented covid regulations ((1 on 1, no contact.)) It also allowed the customer to stay at home and we come to them. What separated me from the other mobile dog groomers is my emphasis on working with high social anxiety animals. Most groomers in the mobile field did not want to deal with huskies, shepherds, huge 200 lb dogs. I embraced them and converted them into my niche.
I specialized in high social anxiety dogs and wanted to get myself recognized. The average dog has gone over a year without a groom ((covid)) and other individuals were looking to purchase animals with their new stimulus checks. I called the local no-kill shelters to team up with them. I will groom the animals if they're adopted for free to show my work. I serviced Omaha and Fremont Nebraska. I've become recognized and provided charitable work to great causes. I have accomplished numerous goals with one task. Volunteer work, reputation, building clients, and rapport, but most of all, I got to help hundreds of animals find homes.
The mobile dog grooming experience taught me that there is more than one way to accomplish a task and to operate a service. I will apply this knowledge to my upcoming goals and five-year plan. The world is moving into a digital age and so I have transitioned my degree to complement both the medical field and computer science so that I can transition into computer programming if I'm not accepted into med school. This is incredibly efficient because of how it transitions into my life outside of the military. I can take all of these skills and convert them into programming for my real estate and future blockchain designs. I intend to build programs to help me micromanage rental homes and my business.
The beginning of this project will be purchasing starter homes and gravitating toward three-bedroom homes in military-focused areas. They're not looking to buy homes, want to live off base, and have good landowners. I like helping military service members.
Bold Influence Scholarship
Change. I believe our brightest stars come from within the mass deemed the most hopeless. As a highly influential figure, I encourage helping those communities/people. True grit is in those who are most unfortunate. These are also the people who get to see the result of our decisions and everything we ignore. The people who know what needs changing in this world aren't the individuals who never frequent the most desperate locations. Instead of building away from the impoverished, we should restore them and help them grow.
I stand for better education in the forgotten communities, better clinics, better business opportunities within the area. I stand for better infrastructure and rewarding our community for cleaning up their homes. I stand for never leaving a fallen comrade.
McCutcheon | Nikitin First-Generation Scholarship
Your father can't read or write, your mom left; you're 13 years old educating yourself because you cannot attend a public school. What do you do?
The world changes as you dive deeper into the unknown. In a town of 800 people with books dating back to the 70s, no computer, and solar technology is still a concept. Solar panels already existed 100 miles west. Ignorance defines most of the rural mid-west and coming from a family with little to no educational background while being home-schooled did me no favors.
It started with curiosity. How do I obtain a vehicle, how do I file my taxes? Why are these people being mean to this person who doesn't speak English? What is life outside of Fullerton Nebraska? Different, vast, complex, fascinating. Education inspired me to travel to 5 countries and 49 states. I now understand why my dad could not control his diabetes. It allowed me to be one of the only family members without chronic health problems. Education helps me know that if an influencer or a media source tells me a piece of information with misleading facts, I can decipher the content. If you understand that having multiple sources to reference and cultural background helps better inform you of whether the information was factual or publicity.
Education helped me understand that if a person bows and says to me, "kamsahamnida." They are not wrong and do not have to learn English. Wherever I go, the culture and people will be different. Education allows you to appreciate these opportunities to explore views, ideas, habits that you may have never thought of or experienced. Education is experiences and concepts that help shape where you reside; inform your friends about the one-dollar recipes that you learned in Korea, or Mexico with your friends so that they can afford to eat.
Education allows you to understand that you don't need to be a type-A personality to lead, educate, inspire, and motivate people into better lives or a more complex way of understanding the world around them. What if I told you there are children in Africa whose only world is an old soccer ball, a few rabid dogs, cheap meals fresh from the jungle, and the same 10 kids they see every single day? A large city gathering over there is 10 villages all coming in to see their kids play "football." In the U.S that is a town of 100. Knowledge allows you to understand that these people might be happier than you.