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Mina Fairall

685

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Finalist

Bio

I am studying kinesiology because I am extremely interested and invested in how the body moves. My goal at the end of my academic journey is to become a certified Athletic Trainer because I love working with sports teams and providing care for athletes on the field/court and find the science behind how muscles, bones, and ligaments work incredibly intriguing. I think it is impressive how certain movements or pain can tell an examiner so much about injuries, almost like a puzzle that once put together will help someone feel better. However, my own academic intrigue is not the only fuel of my ambitions and future. In my life, my family is depending on me to succeed. Most of my cousins and relatives have not completed nor attended college. My younger brother looks up to me to follow the path I am making for myself and complete my college career to start my life. My family is depending on me to not just succeed enough to survive, but to succeed enough to make our lives better. My parents have given everything they had to me and my brother to make sure that we could get a good education and have a better life than they had. Moving to a city they could barely afford in order to give their kids a great education has taken a toll on them. My family needs me to complete what they couldn't, and their support fuels my drive for success. My creative thinking and optimistic (but realistic) attitude keeps me striving for better things. No barrier will me able to hold me. I owe it to my family, friends, community, and myself to not give up and keep pushing to make my goals a reality.

Education

University of La Verne

Bachelor's degree program
2021 - 2025
  • Majors:
    • Parks, Recreation, Leisure, Fitness, and Kinesiology, Other

South Pasadena High School

High School
2017 - 2021

Miscellaneous

  • Desired degree level:

    Master's degree program

  • Graduate schools of interest:

  • Transfer schools of interest:

  • Majors of interest:

    • Parks, Recreation, Leisure, Fitness, and Kinesiology, Other
  • Not planning to go to medical school
  • Career

    • Dream career field:

      Athletic Training

    • Dream career goals:

      Head Athletic Trainer

      Arts

      • independent

        Drawing
        Instagram- Marsh._.Art, Twitter- Marsh._.Art
        2019 – Present
      • South Pasadena Public Library

        Illustration
        2019 – 2020

      Public services

      • Volunteering

        South Pasadena High School — volunteer student sports manager
        2019 – 2020
      • Volunteering

        Girl Scouts of Greater Los Angeles — Scout
        2010 – 2021

      Future Interests

      Advocacy

      Volunteering

      Hindsight 20-20 Essay Scholarship
      Determining whether or not my K-12 experience adequately prepared me for college is complicated. There is no easy ‘yes’ or ‘no’ answer. The education system is meant to prepare students for life after high school. In my case, it was meant to prepare me for college. In order to determine the extent to which my California school experience prepared me for college, I must first evaluate my K-12 years through an academic, social, and emotional lens. I attended a really great school system, academically speaking. In high school alone, I was exposed to many opportunities for hands-on learning environments and was able to take Advanced Placement courses to go towards college. I am privileged to have had so many interesting learning opportunities. I took the Bio-Medical Science four-year Pathway and the Sports Medicine 2-year course that introduced me to the field that I am currently studying in university. I was also able to get hands-on experience with the Athletic Trainer at my school to discover that I want to focus on Athletic Training as my major concentration. These experiences made the transition from high school classes to college classes easy. I was even able to successfully make the Dean’s list in my first semester. All this to say that my K-12 experience in South Pasadena more than prepared me academically for the challenges I would face in university. However, where my school system excelled in academics, it lacked in social preparation. Being with the same group of people from Kindergarten all the way through Senior year made the sudden shift to university incredibly challenging. Personally, I had not needed to make many new friends since grade school since our entire class grew up together. We were very rarely exposed to people outside of our close-knit community, making the development of social skills a serious problem. I have had many conversations with fellow classmates that have had a difficult time socially transitioning to university because of this disconnect. Many of whom, including myself, have found ourselves struggling with social anxiety now that we have left the safety net of our home town. My school system's priority of academic success left little room for social events. There were no parties and dances were scarcely attended. Therefore, from my perspective, social preparation was simply not present in my school system. As previously mentioned, my high school had an overwhelming emphasis on academics, which had a horrible effect on students' emotional well-being. You have probably heard about the issues surrounding placing self-worth on a letter grade. This was my, and my peers, schooling experience. In my experience, perfection was the expectation. It was not an achievement to take honors and AP classes, awards were not celebrated, and a 3.8 GPA was the minimum requirement. The environment surrounding academic intelligence was insufferably toxic. I had two close friends attempt suicide and knew of others. Almost every person I talked to was anxious and/or depressed because of this heavy, blue-ribbon cloud. Personally, I have been left struggling emotionally and mentally while still performing great academically. Needless to say, my K-12 experience gave me an unhealthy relationship with success. I have had to re-teach that an “A” is good and achievement should be celebrated. I still struggle with this, but I am doing better. The level of pressure to be academically perfect placed on us by the school system did not prepare me, or my peers, for a life in college. I was more than adequately prepared academically for college and drastically underprepared for the social and emotional aspects of surviving day-to-day life.