Hobbies and interests
Table Tennis
Drums
Comics
Movies And Film
Songwriting
Singing
Skateboarding
Community Service And Volunteering
Youth Group
Spending Time With Friends and Family
Church
Writing
Screenwriting
Reading
Action
Contemporary
Fantasy
History
Science Fiction
Humor
Short Stories
Art
Music
Thriller
How-To
I read books multiple times per week
Levi Waterhouse
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FinalistLevi Waterhouse
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FinalistBio
I am a student with Achondroplasia, a form of Dwarfism. Though this disability makes my life full of everyday struggles (bullying, systemic and cultural bias, emotional trauma and more), the techniques I've learned to cope with these problems have helped me to excel in the many interests I pursue.
Performing at a young age with legends like Col. Bruce Hampton, Yonrico Scott and Dr. Gordon Vernick, I found drumming to be one of my greatest passions. Though initially frustrating due to my disability, I adapted quickly, progressing in the instrument. This has helped me gain admittance into Georgia Tech, majoring in Music Technology and hoping to advocate and provide adaptable equipment for people with disabilities.
However, music is only one of many facets in my passion towards educative and creative exploration. Paralympic inspiration drove me to strive for athletic excellence, making a world record in indoor dwarf rowing and medaling at the World Dwarf Games. My pop culture fanaticism helped me find work in multiple creative projects, including the award-winning short film “Deer-ly Beloved." The list goes on.
If I am gifted a scholarship, the resources provided would support my current college education, helping my goal to advocate for those with physical disabilities in music industries. I want to make music adaptable, accessible and acceptable in a medium where disabled performers are either few in number or discouraged. I hope to do this through projects including the engineering of adaptable instrument technologies and public relations promoting de-stigmatization.
Education
Georgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Music
Decatur High School
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Bachelor's degree program
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- Music
Career
Dream career field:
Music
Dream career goals:
Musician and Disability-Accessible Instrument Designer
Freelance Actor
Puddle's Pity Party, Disney Channel2016 – 20182 yearsFreelance Drummer
Decatur Jazz Ensemble, Van Heineken, Cover Bands, Georgia Tech Marching Band, Georgia Tech Pep Band, Min-Max & The Rug Cuts2008 – Present16 years
Sports
Rowing
Intramural2019 – 20201 year
Awards
- Current world record holder for the 2019 Dwarf National Games Indoor Rowing Championships, age group 15-17
Basketball
Intramural2010 – 20188 years
Awards
- Leading Member of Mike Glenn's Basketball Camp for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing
- Dwarf Athletic Association of America Basketball Player and 9-time Medalist
Table Tennis
Club2015 – Present9 years
Awards
- Silver Medal at Dwarf Athletic Association of America's National Table Tennis competition (2018)
- Bronze Medal at the 2017 Ontario World Dwarf Games
- Highest ranking in the Decatur High School Table Tennis Club
Arts
Georgia Tech Marching Band
Music2022 Football Season2022 – 2022Georgia Tech Pep Band
Music2022-2023 Basketball Season2022 – 2023Decatur High School Band Program
Music2018 Concert Band Season - LGPE and Holiday Showcases , 2019 Symphonic Band Season - LGPE and Holiday Showcases, 2020 Wind Ensemble Band Season - Holiday Showcases, 2020 Percussion Ensemble Band Season - Holiday Showcases, 2021 Wind Ensemble Band Season - LGPE and Holdiay Showcases2018 – 2022Decatur High School Marching Band
MusicDHS Marching Band 2019 Performance and Competition Season - "007" James Bond Performance, DHS Marching Band 2021 Performance and Competition Season - "A Star Is Born" Lady Gaga Show2019 – 2022Amplify Concert Series (Eddies Attic)
Music"Lennon v. McCartney v. Harrison" Performance Benefitting the Decatur Education Foundation2018 – 2018Eddies Attic & Firehouse Guitars
MusicAMP Student Band Showcase 2017, AMP Student Band Showcase 20162016 – 2017Decatur High School Jazz Band
Music2019-2020 Decatur High School Band Season and Holiday Showcases, 2020-2021 Decatur High School Band Season and Performances, 2021-2022 Decatur High School Band Season and Performances2019 – 2022Nashville 2020 Film Festival
ActingDeerly Beloved (New Zealand Film Festival Award Winner)2019 – 2020The Plaza Theatre
TheatreThe Silver Screen Spookshow2018 – 2019Georgia Music Educators Association
Music2020 Georgia District 4 District Honor Band Schowcase2020 – 2020Puddle's Pity Party
TheatrePuddle's Pity Party and Friends Holiday Jubilee2017 – 2019
Public services
Volunteering
Lutheran Church of the Redeemer Outreach — Educator, Leadership Member2018 – 2019Volunteering
Friends of Disabled Adults and Children (FODAC) — Volunteer member and supply organizer2016 – 2019Volunteering
Lutheran Church of the Redeemer Food Ministry — Member and organizer2011 – Present
Future Interests
Advocacy
Volunteering
Entrepreneurship
I Am Third Scholarship
As a person with many paths opened ahead of them, I have found this question to be confronting. I am currently a high school senior, about to make a decision on what school I go to, and hoping that I can continue studying music. Things might change though. I’m at multiple crossroads in terms of what type of major I should undergo, whether I should pursue a masters degree afterwards, or if my major will even change.
With this in mind, I at least have an open understanding of what I want to do with my life. I want to advocate for people with physical disabilities. As a person with dwarfism, I have found my experience as an educated youth to be rife with struggles of discouragement and limited accessibility. This has made me want to provide opportunities and resources to those like me, hoping to diminish discouragements in the future. It doesn’t matter how, or in what way, but my goal is to make people achieve their own goals and feel represented regardless of their disability.
This can be in literally anything I do. If I follow my path as a musician, but go to Georgia Tech, I can study music technology, and innovate various adaptable instruments for people unable to use the standard models of playing. I could make disability-friendly attachments and adjustable instrument sizes that could allow anyone to play the instruments they love. This stems from my experience as a musician, as I have found instruments like guitar and piano to be physically limiting. I found drums to be my passion due to its adaptable and variable standards of play, and I was allowed to progress without limiting my ability to play. This drive also comes from my drive to become an academic musician, blending music and engineering skills into any advocating outlet I explore. I want that same experience of open accessibility to be given to people like me.
I could also use this advocacy towards my other passions. As an avid table tennis player, I have been constantly inspired by Mitch and Ian Seidenfeld in their Paralympic table tennis achievements. To go down the Paralympic track would allow me to become an inspiration like them. I would use visibility as a tool to create spaces and resources for those hoping to learn and progress in the sport, disabled or not.
As a creative writer, I could create media portraying physical disabilities in a better light. This could be making comics containing characters with properly-portrayed physical disabilities, writing books about my experiences as a person with dwarfism, or documenting the various histories of progression in the light of discrimination within disabled communities.
I could do one, or two, or hopefully all of these things. However, even if I go down a completely different path, my goal will always be to provide advocacy, because I needed advocacy when I was young. I didn’t have resources or voices to speak out on my behalf when it came to the things I enjoyed. I didn’t have people to look up to who looked like me, or characters to idolize that shared similar struggles, and I know for a fact that there are many who have gone through the same (or worse) situations as me. I could reach my own goals, and help others reach theirs. Doing whatever I can to provide advocacy would create a legacy of innovators and creators unbound by their disabilities, able to excel in anything they hope to achieve, whether it be specifically in music, or whatever else they find interest in.
Bold Great Minds Scholarship
Judith Heumann. She is someone that I have the most respect for in history, not only because of her work, but how that work has directly impacted my life.
Ms. Heumann was a disability rights activist. Contracting polio in her youth, she used a wheelchair her entire life. This experience drastically influenced her education, as the discrimination and lack of systemic support for people with physical disabilities was deeply entrenched at that time. After attending a summer camp for disabled people, Camp Jenned, she was driven to fight for civil rights and equality for disabled people.
Her most famous accomplishment was being the main organizer for the 504 Sit-In, a 28-day protest asking for the signing of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, which would grant civil and personal rights to those with disabilities. This was a successful protest, gaining supplies and support from the Black Panther Party, and eventually passing the bill. She would continue to work for disability rights all of her life, whether it be in media de-stigmatization, structural reform, or education.
Judith Heumann’s work is what has allowed me to feel equal in the world. She has allowed me, through the 504 bill, to feel normal in school and everyday life, having ways to adapt environments for my disability. My school provides resources that make my learning experience equitable. I can reach things, something that is so unthought of in the perception of regular-height students, but a constant struggle in my life due to my disability. If not for her, things as small as getting into my desk seat, or as big as finding a home in my community would not be possible. She has made me feel human, rather than alienated by a world full of things literally out of my reach.
Bold Persistence Scholarship
I have a physical disability called Dwarfism, something that has challenged me my entire life. When I was 4, my legs were surgically broken to straighten them. I had another surgery at 10. I had screws removed at 14.
I’ve found a lack of support in communities I’ve joined, my self or work being perceived as childish or less-than. In common activities, I have felt belittled: stools and soft apologies were (and are) a constant part of my life. However, these struggles do not compare to when I was bullied in middle school.
I had been bullied prior: I had matured quickly, ignoring stares, questions and taunts of people younger and older than me. However, these experiences didn't compare to this. Whenever I would encounter him, he would call me a “midget.” This word is a registered hate term, associated with a darker past of circuses and freak-shows, having dwarfs perceived as inhuman or less-than. These diminutive attacks were something I had never experienced before, and I was emotionally broken over these experiences. I feared this kid.
But, like much of my entire life, I learned to adapt.
I drowned his words out, listening to music or talking with a friend, focusing hard on work rather than on him. I tried to get him out of my mind any way I could. Soon enough, he stopped interacting with me. I was able to overcome my emotional weight from these interactions, enduring his taunts to find peace. Though he later moved away, my perseverance would continue.
Though this situation brought me tremendous emotional strain, it helped me better understand the ignorance I would later encounter throughout my life. It also brought me methods of education and recognition, tools I still use to teach those uninformed of the gift I was given.
Bold Talent Scholarship
One talent I find pride in is table tennis. Because of my Dwarfism, I found inspiration at a young age from Mitch Seidenfeld, the first dwarf to win gold in Paralympic table tennis. His achievements made me hopeful, giving me a person with dwarfism to idolize. The accessibility of the sport also drew me, due to my inability to keep up in other height-demanding sports. Table tennis was an activity where short stature was an advantage, so I went all in.
I commonly practice this skill through repetition. Table tennis is about muscle memory, coordination and reflex, all honed with continual enactment and analysis. Almost every day, I go to my garage and volley with myself, propping half of my table tennis table up to help the ball bounce back. This helps me practice quickly, improving reflexes in conditioning while providing an easy way to switch technique.
Playing with others is a vital step towards improvement. I live close to a recreation center, and every Sunday they set up open play table tennis. This is a really fun experience, because not only am I able to play with different people and playing styles, but I am also able to be taught, absorbing as much information about how to play as I can. Finding an accepting learning environment is something I’ve been grateful for.
Another way I improve my skill is by joining competitions. This brings a level of sportsmanship and focus unseen in other playing environments, which helps me to use all of my skills and observe top-tier players. The Dwarf Athletic Association of America is one group that I attend, and their tournaments are an amazing opportunity to play on a level playing field with other people with dwarfism. I have also earned medals in the World Dwarf Games.
Bold Music Scholarship
Blackbird by The Beatles has been an anthem of support throughout my entire life.
I first heard it after I was adopted from Boston. My mom and dad would sing it to me every night as a lullaby. It would be the song that would help me wind down, and would support me as I grew.
When I started going to school, it was a song that lifted me up. I was bullied for my height, and whenever I felt bad about the way I looked, I listened to this song. Messages of taking what you have, no matter how broken or different, and learning to live with it in hopeful anticipation, was something I took to heart. It would inspire me to look past all the bullying and taunting, aiming for a place where I could fit in.
It also inspired me to become a musician. This was the first song I heard from the Beatles, and I became obsessed in my early childhood. Ringo Starr was one of my favorites out of the group, so I asked for a drum-set for my 5th birthday, and got it. 13 years later, I’ve progressed to writing my own songs, playing in my own bands, and still listening to the Beatles for song inspiration.
Now, it’s inspiring me to fulfill my goals. My hope is to provide advocacy and technical solutions for people with physical disabilities who might be discouraged from physical aspects of music creation. I know that feeling of being different, and not being able to do things just like everyone else does. However, as Paul McCartney tells me every time I listen to this song, you just have to “take your broken wings and learn to fly,” adapting and overcoming as many obstacles as you can.
Bold Best Skills Scholarship
My best skill has to be drumming. The adaptability of the instrument drew me in at a young age due to my physical disability (Dwarfism), and driven by a new opportunity, I went deep into practice. I've been playing for about 13 years now. From this work, I gained opportunities including performing onstage with Col. Bruce Hampton, taking lessons from legends like Jim Payne and Jeff Sipe, and being accepted into Berklee School of Music for Drum Set.
I have improved this skill in multiple ways, one being joining ensembles. I recently reached a point where most of my drumming progress has been in group performance, gaining technique to help better understand how to complement other instrumentalists. I have found many of my personal skills to greatly improve when working amidst unique perspectives, so I love collaborating creatively with others. In high school, I tried to join as many band programs as possible, trying to find these perspectives, and it led me to attend every level of band at my school in four years (percussion class to wind ensemble and IB music theory). These groups gave me ways to adapt to any musical environment, improving my skills dramatically.
I have also started revisiting the basics of my instrument. Though exploring very complex rhythms is fun and challenging, it is hard to do when a baseline of rudimentary skills aren’t well known. That is why it is common for me to practice a lot of easy rhythms and practice exercises on repeat with a metronome before getting into the more complicated stuff.
This skill has allowed me to reach my highest potential, helping me to continue learning and finding new ideas for more than 13 years. It has also driven me to push past barriers, finding a home in music.
Bold Know Yourself Scholarship
I have learned that I am adaptable.
This is something I have known for a long time, but something that I have found little value in, until recently. I have Achondroplasia, a form of dwarfism, making me only four feet tall. With the life experiences that followed, I didn't find my disability as something to take pride in, but a burden. Constant teasing and bullying occurred in my education, and the ignorance of my condition in systems I found myself in made the expirience even more isolating. These systems were both social and physical, and in both, I learned to adapt.
In social situations, I found myself amidst groups that had little knowledge towards my condition, and in response acted in ways that were emotionally harmful towards me. However, understanding their ignorance, and adapting to these situations, I would educate. I would teach them about my disability, the history of its ridicule and the shame that comes with it, the pride that many who have it gain in communities like the Little People of America (which I am a member of). This would help me in changing the viewpoint of people who knew almost nothing about me or what (let alone who) I was, and because of that, I began to find value.
In physical situations, it was ironically the smallest concepts that made me struggle. High countertops, tall stools and average height activities were always tough to overcome. However, the adaptability of stools, chairs and modification helped me create new ways to live in a world not meant for people my size. Knowing that I could work around my environment, finding creative ways to support myself and my interests without reliance on the kindness of others (which I still use), was another way that I found pride and value.
Bold Turnaround Story Scholarship
I have a physical disability called Dwarfism, something that has challenged me my entire life. When I was 4, my legs were surgically broken to straighten them. I had another surgery at 10. I had screws removed at 14.
I’ve found a lack of support in communities I’ve joined, my self or work being perceived as childish or less-than. In common activities, I have felt belittled: stools and soft apologies were (and are) a constant part of my life.
These struggles do not compare to when I was bullied in middle school.
I had been bullied prior: I had matured quickly, ignoring stares, questions and taunts of people younger and older than me.
But these were mere pokes to my conscience, compared to the stabs that were this bully’s choice words.
Whenever I would encounter him, he would call me a “midget”.
This word is a registered hate term. It comes from its association to penny circuses and freak shows eras ago, having dwarfs perceived as inhuman or less-than.
I feared this kid. But, like much of my entire life, I learned to adapt.
I drowned him out, listening to music or talking with a friend, trying to focus on work rather than him. Soon enough, he stopped interacting with me. I was able to overcome my emotional weight towards our interactions, finding peace in ignoring his taunts.
Though this situation brought me tremendous emotional strain, it helped me to better understand the ignorance I would later experience throughout my life. It brought me methods of education and recognition, tools I would use to teach those blind to the life I was given.
Devin Chase Vancil Art and Music Scholarship
Hi, I’m Levi!
I’ve been playing the drums for 13 years. Ever since my uncle gifted me a tiny Ludwig drum kit, my musical progression has expanded to levels I never thought I could achieve. And that progression has allowed me to see just how impactful music is.
There were gaps in my musical development at first. I have Achondroplasia, a form of Dwarfism, so my progress slowed with the demanding leg surgeries I had to undertake. However, these hiatuses allowed me to find a sense of patience and anticipation in music that would benefit my progression in the long run.
Later in my musical education, I found learning opportunities under Robert Boone (Count Basie's Orchestra) and Jim Payne (Maceo Parker, Fred Wesley, Pee Wee Ellis). These experiences allowed my technique, as well as my drive to explore other musical outlets, to grow. In high school, I worked in every ensemble provided, even taking International Baccalaureate level music theory courses. My expanding musical understanding led me towards experimenting with digital audio workstations, arranging personally influential pieces, composing original songs, and recording fully-produced tracks.
All of this helped me join Georgia State University’s Rialto Jazz Youth Orchestra, and later be admitted into Berklee School of Music, Georgia Tech (a Music Technology major), University of Georgia, and Georgia State University.
With these experiences behind me, I found a sense of enjoyment and respect for music, as well as its aspects that make it so vital towards the progression of society.
Music is influential because anyone can create it. It sounds so simple, because it is: music is an art only limited by the drive of the artist. It's something that transcends and unites almost all forms of human variance. People halfway across the world can get together, never having met, not speaking the same language, and create something beautiful that they can both understand.
Another is how it draws out memory. Music-elicited tears have been scientifically surveyed because of their prominence. People hold vivid images of influential moments in their life through the music playing at that time. I still remember hearing “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa” by Vampire Weekend, screaming “IS YOUR BED MADE, IS YOUR SWEATER ON” with my family, driving to an Atlanta Thrashers hockey game. That song brings warmth to my chest no matter how cold the weather is.
It holds a duality of emotion that nothing in the world could match. It soothes the soul, brings those in panic calm, and guides those who struggle to rest to sleep. But it can also bring an unparalleled slew of intense emotion, inciting the greatest physical and mental performances in any medium. It brings people together under a movement, solidifies messages across the world. “Come Together” by the Beatles is a song that I listen to to wind down and read, but it’s also the song that helped me win a world record in adaptive indoor rowing.
That’s why I want to major in music. I want to provide a sense of unity despite differences, because that’s what I feel when performing music. Being a person with a physical disability, music helped me connect with my community despite struggles to find common ground. That's why with every opportunity gained from this scholarship, I hope to provide a sense of advocacy towards those who hope to explore and create music despite limitations. From adaptive music technologies, to using visibility to provide a voice towards groups not as present within the music industry, I will use all of this musical inspiration and tutelage to be that glue that unites and connects.
Clairo "For Atlanta" Scholarship
I have Dwarfism.
I’m four feet tall.
I was adopted from Boston when I was 7 months old, and was raised in Decatur, Georgia.
When I was 4, I had to have my legs surgically broken to straighten them, and another double-leg surgery when I was 10. I had the screws removed when I was 14.
I was bullied through all of middle school. I have PTSD whenever I see a red hoodie.
I’ve been called a “midget'' so many times, I’ve been desensitized to the word. That scares me.
I feel constantly diminished in my life. Whenever I have to ask help for the most minimal tasks, when I can’t walk fast enough for my friends, or when I avoid the stares of grown adults as they laugh about my condition.
I was put on my high school’s basketball team out of pity, and had to leave because I couldn’t handle the taunts.
I’ve been treated and dismissed like a child, picked up without my permission, shoved, and even thrown.
I can’t drive without pedal extensions, can’t cook without stools, and can’t play sports without overexerting. I can’t walk down the street without someone giving me a look.
I can’t even talk to someone without them looking down at me.
It’s grueling.
Listening to music helped me through this, but to an extent: I could drown out the laughing for only so long. So, hoping to get these belittled feelings out, I took up the drum kit.
Drumming got me through high school. It didn’t restrict me like piano or guitar, instruments that needed big hands or long arms. It didn’t put me out front like a trophy of inclusion like choir. I felt like a cog in a well-oiled machine, contributing rather than being a hood ornament.
It was a slow start. Even though I could adjust the drums to my height, though I didn’t need to be that good with my fingers, it was still physical. It took years of practice, of catching up (like I always did) with my friends, trying to get past the basics.
But I loved this instrument. I felt strong, not diminished. I was the heartbeat to any band I joined, helping ideas and emotion stand strong.
Clairo’s music resonated with me, but so did her past. About 4 years after she moved from Massachusetts to Georgia, I did the opposite—moving to Georgia from Boston. She performed covers at small venues, I busk in my Decatur’s town square. She felt like a distant cousin, related by music instead of blood.
And whenever I hear a song of hers, I’m reminded of the memories that make me who I am.
“Partridge” reminds me of Christmas, sitting in a wheelchair with red & black casts on my legs, getting gifted drumsticks. I was aching then, but I was happy too. That was one of my favorite holidays.
“North” reminds me of going to Waffle House after a marching band show, all sweaty from performing, laughing way too loud with my friends in a back booth. I didn’t feel four feet tall.
“Softly” reminds me of sitting on my parents’ bed, sobbing, my family hugging me from all sides. It was a stressful day, there was some test I failed, and I was hyper-focusing on the laughs and stares I got walking home from school. I just couldn’t deal with it anymore, couldn’t hold it in. The floodgates opened. And they were there, comforting me, helping me push past all of that anger and sorrow. I couldn’t feel more loved by my family then.
Bold Dream Big Scholarship
In the future, I am an old man, sitting at a piano, trying to write a new song. Many years have passed, and with them, memories and ideas. Friends. Family. Gigs. A Grammy or two sit a little dusty on top of the piano. I finally find something that I like the sound of, so I start recording.
Around my room are little things that remind me of my life, what I’ve accomplished. A framed diploma hangs on the wall next to pictures of those I’ve adored. Musicians I’ve been able to meet, play with, or support. Music books pile on a bookshelf, worn and loved. All the music I've played, all I've learned: It feels like a life well-lived.
A prototype of a small drum seat leans next to that bookcase, haphazardly built, falling apart. I have Dwarfism, and I remember that I had been using the same drum throne for the past 12 years. My back was starting to feel the wear and tear of a stiff seat. I needed something that fit my needs, as well as any other short drummer who couldn’t use the average drum throne, so I decided to make my own. I immediately felt the difference, and it sparked my journey towards adapting equipment towards those with physical disabilities. Prosthetic attachments for amputees to help make drumming feel more comfortable, more ergonomic keyboards and guitars for musicians who need wheelchairs, and even adaptable DAWs for those who rely on assistive technology for day-to-day functioning.
I even made a scholarship for this kind of work, supporting students who want to explore their passion for music regardless of their physical, mental, or societal struggles. To be able to see students who really shine makes me feel better than any stage or any song.