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Kaili Kniffen
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Finalist1x
WinnerKaili Kniffen
1,585
Bold Points1x
Finalist1x
WinnerBio
Hi! I am Kaili Kniffen, and my greatest goal in life is to become a Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist. I have struggled with mental illnesses such as BPD, OCD, and GAD for as long as I can remember, and there is nothing I would love more than to help kids like me get the help they deserve so that they can live happier, healthier, and more fulfilling lives. I am a senior at Wissahickon High School and am planning on attending a four-year university to study psychology and pre-medicine. I have been active in making change in my community, most notably campaigning to the Wissahickon school board to change the start times of the high and middle schools.
Education
Wissahickon High School
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
Majors of interest:
- Psychology, General
- Medicine
Career
Dream career field:
Psychiatry
Dream career goals:
Server/Busser/Hostess
Normandy Farms Estates2022 – Present2 years
Sports
Diving
Junior Varsity2021 – 20221 year
Color Guard
Varsity2018 – 20213 years
Volleyball
Junior Varsity2019 – 2019
Arts
Wissahickon High School to Woodward Art Museum
Sculpture2022 – Present
Public services
Advocacy
N/A - Student-Run Effort — Founder/Researcher/Presenter2021 – Present
Future Interests
Advocacy
Volunteering
Morgan Levine Dolan Community Service Scholarship
WinnerAt seven years old, I was living in Austin, Texas. I went to an elementary school with an awning that had a net stretched across the bottom of the roof. My little second-grade brain never could figure out why that net was there. As I looked up at it each day, pondering its existence, I began to notice that dead birds would collect underneath. The birds would be distorted, strangled by the cords, their tiny bones snapped in their futile struggle to escape the net’s grasp. As a seven-year-old, this was horrifying, to say the least. I decided that I would not stand for it - I wrote a letter to my principal, explaining the situation and asking if there was any way to take the net down and spare the coming children from the terror I had endured.
I was only partially successful - the principal had not been aware of the issue before that point and consulted the school board. She was turned down but told me that she was proud of my initiative. In retrospect, I would like to believe that this was a turning point in my life. I had gone after my goal, regardless of how daunting it was, and I had gotten results.
In my sophomore year of high school, I began a project that would once again mark a time of growth and empowerment in my life. I was meant to spend two months studying the adolescent brain’s reaction to sleep or lack thereof. This project made me realize that my high school’s start time of 7:37 am was far too early to properly sustain fourteen hundred teenage brains. I decided that this needed to change, so I found out how to get on the school board’s presentation schedule and shared my findings in an attempt to convince them to consider a later school start time. The board president had informed me that school start times were far down on the list of priorities, but I was welcome to present my research. The board was impressed and requested further information, so I banded together four more sophomore girls, and together we did more research, planned a series of school board presentations, and campaigned at board meetings for two months. Eventually, the school board was convinced - the new start time is currently being decided, and a start time of 8:30 am or later is going into effect in the 2023-24 school year.
My approach to problems I see in the world around me is a huge part of who I am: an advocate, both for myself and for the greater good of the population. This quality inspired my aspirations of becoming a psychiatrist. This career path would allow me to advocate for each teen that comes to see me and allow me to make a difference in the world by easing each of their struggles. Not only do I hope to become a practitioner, but I also wish to conduct research of my own to better understand the brain chemistry that causes mental illnesses, and what can be done to prevent or treat them at the source.
To achieve my dream of becoming a psychiatrist, I will attend a 4-year university and medical school, undoubtedly throwing me into substantial student debt. Any amount of money could help ease that stress and allow me to focus on my studies so that I can help as many people as possible. This scholarship seems perfect for me, as I have been someone in my community to rally my peers for greater change that benefits us all.