Hobbies and interests
Science Olympiad
Research
Coding And Computer Science
Speech and Debate
Boxing
Music Production
Volunteering
Psychology
Cognitive Science
YouTube
Anime
Manga
Reading
Academic
Biography
Fantasy
Historical
Literature
Mystery
Novels
Psychology
Realistic Fiction
Science Fiction
Science
I read books multiple times per month
Kim Ngo
1,515
Bold Points1x
FinalistKim Ngo
1,515
Bold Points1x
FinalistBio
I am a freshman at Stanford University, planning to major in Symbolic Systems (an interdisciplinary major that integrates the fields of computer science, psychology, philosophy, and linguistics) with a concentration in Artificial Intelligence. My main goals for the future are to tackle the issue of bias, as a bisexual Asian woman, in artificial intelligence/machine learning and to explore the intersection and interaction of minds and machines. Overall, I hope to one day develop and implement technology to benefit humanity by integrating the fields of computer science and neuroscience/psychology. Any scholarship that I am awarded will help me reach this goal. In high school, I was the captain of my high school Science Olympiad team and a coach for a local middle school Science Olympiad team. For both teams, I held responsibilities in regards to organization, logistics, and being the "go-to" captain/coach for help content/competition-wise. Outside of those two, my other two main activities were public forum debate and my psychology research lab. I joined my school's debate team to push myself out of my comfort zone and improve upon my greatest weakness: public speaking. I became involved with one of my state university's psychology research labs after becoming very interested in cognitive psychology and research. My other activities/hobbies include boxing, traveling, and producing LoFi remixes of anime OSTs!
Education
Stanford University
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Psychology, General
- Computer Science
Eastview Senior High
High SchoolUniversity of Minnesota-Twin Cities
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Bachelor's degree program
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- Computer Science
- Cognitive Science
- Neurobiology and Neurosciences
- Psychology, General
Career
Dream career field:
Neurotechnology
Dream career goals:
Company Founder
Water Safety Aide - experience ranges from teaching private lessons to kids with special needs to group lessons to a dozen middle schoolers
District 196 Community Education2019 – 20201 yearTester - current client rating of 4.7/5
User Testing2021 – Present3 years
Sports
Track & Field
Junior Varsity2018 – 20202 years
Boxing
Intramural2020 – Present4 years
Swimming
Junior Varsity2009 – 201910 years
Research
Psychology, General
UMN Department of Psychology Decision Making Lab — Worked on a small project on the influence of modern technology on social cognition in autism with the help of my lab manager. Currently assisting with a study on Bayesian integration in sensorimotor decision-making under uncertainty.2021 – Present
Arts
South of the River Youth Orchestra
Music2017 – 2019
Public services
Volunteering
Smithsonian Transcription Center — Digital Volunteer Transcriber2020 – PresentVolunteering
Black Hawk Middle School Science Olympiad — Coach2021 – Present
Future Interests
Advocacy
Volunteering
Philanthropy
Entrepreneurship
Bold Gratitude Scholarship
Underneath my bedside table lies a very special box. It is a box that has never been opened by anyone else, but today I am opening it just for you.
There are birthday cards that show the passage of time. The loss of old friends and the introduction of new ones reflected in the changing of the signatures at the bottom.
There is my very first accelerated math test from 5th grade, where I got my first C. My first taste of true academic challenge.
There are pages from my childhood diary, with unrecognizable handwriting and haphazardly taped photos from visits to family in Vietnam.
There is a temporary tattoo from a fundraiser I ran in 7th grade for a friend diagnosed with cancer.
There are notes of encouragement that had been left by my mom in my lunch box throughout elementary school.
There is a photo from my summer at Space Camp, where I befriended a group of Australians. Over two years later, we’re still in contact.
There are red lucky money envelopes, once filled with crisp two-dollar bills, given out during Lunar New Year.
There is a card from my ong noi’s (grandpa’s) funeral. My first experience with death. My first time seeing my dad cry.
Just like a sedimentary rock, the layers of this box provide a chronology of my life, through snapshots of my moments of joy, moments of loss, and moments of discovery. It serves as a reminder to appreciate everything I have and everything I have experienced throughout my life. The rest of the space left in my box, is left for the moments of my future, which I hope will be just as turbulent, and just as meaningful.
Surya Education Assistance Scholarship
"I don’t understand.
Why can’t you speak clearly? Why can’t you sit still? Why can’t you pay attention? Why can’t you just be like everyone else?
I just don’t understand."
I could not wrap my 9-year-old head around the answer to these questions I had about my younger brother. My parents would explain, “He has autism, so some things that we think of as easy will be more difficult for him.” But to a naive child like me, the word “autism” just sounded like an excuse.
One can imagine my dismay when my parents told me I would be spending my summer with my brother at his therapy center. At first, I would only talk to the teachers, but that soon grew boring. I reluctantly began participating in class games, which eventually led to reading books together, then sharing toys at playtime. Soon enough, I was already a part of the class, laughing together with them at the lunch table. At some point, I realized I could get along with them the same as I do with my own classmates. I began to understand.
Hands clammy and heart pounding, I was walking into possibly my greatest challenge in my 14 years of life. I would be teaching private swim lessons to kids with special needs. As each student came and went, each brought their own challenges I had to help them overcome. Benjamin had trouble getting his words together, but he was an enthusiastic learner. Daisy, in addition to needing her vomit cleaned out of the pool twice, required me to learn some sign language. Kyle, who towered about a foot over me, was so energetic, he would sometimes get carried away and risk injuring himself or me. Gwen was a chatterbox who talked so much, it sometimes distracted her from actually swimming. Over the two months I taught these kids, it was through the different strategies and styles I had to adopt to accommodate each one, that I eventually stopped seeing autism as a monolith. I learned, not just about the nature of autism, but how people in general each have their own unique set of personal needs that, with enough understanding and patience, can be fulfilled.
Glancing over my brother’s shoulder at his computer screen, never did I expect to see my socially awkward brother, who can barely hold a conversation, arguing in YouTube comment sections and writing paragraph-long posts on anime discussion forums. I later found his anime forum account, which even had a few dedicated followers. Scrolling through and reading his posts, I barely recognized my younger brother. I began to wonder, just how has the internet changed my brother? How does that change compare to teens without autism? Has it been a positive or negative influence? Even after all these years, it seems there are still things about my brother I don’t understand. This curiosity intrigued me to the point that I began working on a research project into the influence of modern technology on social cognition in autism with the guidance of my lab manager at the UMN Decision Making Lab.
We get along quite well now, my brother and I. What used to be constant fights and grudges, is now banter and inside jokes, shenanigans at the dinner table and weekend anime nights. And while I still don’t fully understand, may never fully understand, unlike my 9-year-old self, I now want to understand, and I will continue this endless pursuit of understanding, following this path wherever it takes me.