Hobbies and interests
Cooking
Makeup and Beauty
Crafting
Reading
Action
I read books multiple times per month
Samantha Gong
865
Bold Points1x
Nominee1x
Finalist1x
WinnerSamantha Gong
865
Bold Points1x
Nominee1x
Finalist1x
WinnerBio
As a second-generation Chinese American, I always looked at the world through various lenses. A long process of self-acceptance took me from feeling embarrassment and frustration before I finally found pride in my culture. As a child, I resented many of the cultural traditions that set me apart from the rest of my peers and could only love our beautiful traditions within the four walls of my home. After arriving at my current high school, I met other Asian Americans who found pride in their culture and celebrated every aspect of it. Eventually, I found the courage to wear traditional dresses, eat my favorite foods, and display pictures of my favorite Asian actors for everyone to see. While attending this school, I learned about the positive and negative sides of my heritage, which gave me a more holistic view of my ancestry and motivated me to be proud of my identity.
This year I am the Diverse Curricula Committee Head under the Student Coalition for Racial Justice that works to diversify the curriculum at my school. My goal is to ensure that all students feel represented within history.
Recently, I started working as a pharmacy technician at one of the only 24-Hour Walgreens pharmacies in my area. I had the opportunity to ask about the pharmaceutical industry and careers in drugs and medicine.
During my junior and senior year, I was a student researcher in regard to drug discovery and computer-aided drug design, which is crucial in my future endeavors. My life’s dream is to create my own cosmetic company that is dedicated to uplifting Asian American women’s self-esteem.
Education
Illinois Mathematics And Science
High SchoolGeorgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus
Bachelor's degree programMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
Majors of interest:
- Chemical Engineering
- Pharmacy, Pharmaceutical Sciences, and Administration
- Cosmetology and Related Personal Grooming Services
Career
Dream career field:
Cosmetics
Dream career goals:
Company Founder
Pharmacy Technician
Walgreens2021 – 2021
Sports
Swimming
Varsity2018 – 20191 year
Awards
- Conference Champion
- Most Improved
- 1st at Regionas (Relay)
- 8th Individual at Regionals
Research
Medicinal and Pharmaceutical Chemistry
Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy and Covid Moonshot — Research Scientist2020 – Present
Arts
IMSA Student Productions
Photography2019 – Present
Public services
Volunteering
IMSA Student Productions — Photographer/Video editer2019 – PresentVolunteering
EXODUS — Tutor2019 – PresentAdvocacy
Gender Equality Now — Outreach Director2020 – 2020Volunteering
Independent — Weekly/Monthly volunteer2020 – Present
Future Interests
Advocacy
Volunteering
Philanthropy
Entrepreneurship
Megan Springsteel Memorial Cosmetology Scholarship
WinnerTen years ago, I started to play with my mother’s makeup. My first attempt came short of its original intent to make one look beautiful due to my clumsy inexperience. This innocent event was only the beginning of a decade-long infatuation with everything cosmetics-related: from listening to self-taught beauty gurus to watching professional Vogue YouTube videos and even making my own tutorials (all evidence hidden in the depths of my own computer, of course).
What was a simple fascination with the magic of enhancing natural beauty, slowly fell out of focus as my attention and the attention of all my peers turned to a teenager’s worst nightmare: puberty. I criticized every feature on my face, learning tutorials to manipulate the small imperfections to become more eurocentric and “popular.” Unhappy with my monolids, I used every trick and method known to mankind to give myself some type of crease (see Google results page 86 purple line). All through middle school and until my freshman year, my makeup box became my Pandora’s box to reject and resent every feature that came from my Chinese heritage.
In my freshman year, my grandpa suddenly fell ill, leaving me emotionally distraught over the fact that I was oceans away with no way of visiting. I was expected to continue going through daily normalities when all I wanted was to go see my sick grandpa, my childhood best friend. When my relatives made the hard decision to stop medical treatment, I saw my father cry for the first time in my life. This jarring loss made me realize how much I had lost touch with my family and heritage. I felt embarrassed that my last conversation with my grandfather consisted of me relaying the briefest of messages through my parents. The language I had once spoken almost fluently had been reduced to a mere “hello” and “I love you.”
I threw myself into learning the Chinese language, thus my vocabulary growing tremendously. Thanks to my deep dive into Chinese media and culture, I came to the sudden realization that the features I had once used makeup to hide away were being admired, praised, and showcased; pale skin, monolids, and round faces--everything I possessed was being recognized for the beauty I had once believed I lacked. All of a sudden, makeup became not an impersonal disconnect, but rather an artful enhancement of the features that connect me back to my heritage.
My interest in makeup blossomed into a thirst for knowledge of cosmetic science; in the process of joining the market, both makeup and medicine must be biologically manufactured, tested, and FDA approved. Intrigued by this world and its collision with my own passions, in my junior year I participated in a research project focusing on drug discovery and computer-aided drug design- led by a teacher who had a background in the pharmaceutical industry- using a computer program to design fragments based on a Covid-19 compound in hopes of discovering a fragment that could be used to create an antiviral. In the methodology of using the components of a problem to create the source of a solution, I couldn’t help but relate to my nearly viral childhood insecurities. Right in front of me in Youtube tutorials and google searches, in Asian culture and the Chinese language sat the fragment of a cure: makeup. With my lifelong love for makeup, newfound knowledge in medicinal chemistry, and immovable confidence in the culture I shared with my grandfather, I found myself playing with my mother’s makeup again; only this time making plans for my own future makeup company.
Clarence Penny Jr Memorial Scholarship
Ten years ago, I started to play with my mother’s makeup. My first attempt came short of its original intent to make one look beautiful due to my clumsy inexperience. This innocent event was only the beginning of a decade-long infatuation with everything cosmetics-related: from listening to self-taught beauty gurus to watching professional Vogue YouTube videos and even making my own tutorials (all evidence hidden in the depths of my own computer, of course).
What was a simple fascination with the magic of enhancing natural beauty, slowly fell out of focus as my attention and the attention of all my peers turned to a teenager’s worst nightmare: puberty. I criticized every feature on my face, learning tutorials to manipulate the small imperfections to become more eurocentric and “popular.” Unhappy with my monolids, I used every trick and method known to mankind to give myself some type of crease (see Google results page 86 purple line). All through middle school and until my freshman year, my makeup box became my Pandora’s box to reject and resent every feature that came from my Chinese heritage.
In my freshman year, my grandpa suddenly fell ill, leaving me emotionally distraught over the fact that I was oceans away with no way of visiting. I was expected to continue going through daily normalities when all I wanted was to go see my sick grandpa, my childhood best friend. When my relatives made the hard decision to stop medical treatment, I saw my father cry for the first time in my life. This jarring loss made me realize how much I had lost touch with my family and heritage. I felt embarrassed that my last conversation with my grandfather consisted of me relaying the briefest of messages through my parents. The language I had once spoken almost fluently had been reduced to a mere “hello” and “I love you.”
I threw myself into learning the Chinese language, thus my vocabulary growing tremendously. Thanks to my deep dive into Chinese media and culture, I came to the sudden realization that the features I had once used makeup to hide away were being admired, praised, and showcased; pale skin, monolids, and round faces--everything I possessed was being recognized for the beauty I had once believed I lacked. All of a sudden, makeup became not an impersonal disconnect, but rather an artful enhancement of the features that connect me back to my heritage.
My interest in makeup blossomed into a thirst for knowledge of cosmetic science; in the process of joining the market, both makeup and medicine must be biologically manufactured, tested, and FDA approved. Intrigued by this world and its collision with my own passions, in my junior year I participated in a research project focusing on drug discovery and computer-aided drug design- led by a teacher who had a background in the pharmaceutical industry- using a computer program to design fragments based on a Covid-19 compound in hopes of discovering a fragment that could be used to create an antiviral. In the methodology of using the components of a problem to create the source of a solution, I couldn’t help but relate to my nearly viral childhood insecurities. Right in front of me in Youtube tutorials and google searches, in Asian culture and the Chinese language sat the fragment of a cure: makeup. With my lifelong love for makeup, newfound knowledge in medicinal chemistry, and immovable confidence in the culture I shared with my grandfather, I found myself playing with my mother’s makeup again; only this time making plans for my own future makeup company.