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Teaching
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Christian Fiction
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I read books multiple times per week
Stella Walker
825
Bold Points1x
Finalist
Stella Walker
825
Bold Points1x
FinalistBio
Hi! My name is Stella Walker and I am an undergrad at National University, studying law. My life so far has been guided by being helpful to others, and the belief that education is one of the most powerful means of change. Growing up, I was always interested in how laws and policies can mold our environments. I believe that everyone has a right to be heard and understood and, most of all, to be treated fairly. My motivation comes from standing up for my peers, helping out with local small businesses, and taking part in conversations on how the knowledge of the law paves the way to justice and provides realistic solutions to everyday issues.
Education
National University
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Law
Miscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- Behavioral Sciences
- Bible/Biblical Studies
- Classics and Classical Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, General
- Architectural Engineering
- Criminology
Career
Dream career field:
Law Practice
Dream career goals:
To start my own private practice!
Teacher, Assistant to the Director
Thomas Learning Centers - Westminster2022 – Present3 years
Sports
Soccer
Varsity2021 – 20221 year
Research
Criminology
N/A — Researcher and Developer2023 – 2023
Public services
Volunteering
Thomas Learning Centers - Westminster — Assistant2021 – 2021
Future Interests
Advocacy
Politics
Volunteering
Philanthropy
Phillip Robinson Memorial Scholarship
Law is the backbone of society, the framework that holds us together. It is what separates order from chaos, fairness from exploitation, and justice from injustice. It forms the base upon which the hopes and dreams of individuals and communities lie, and it is also so very fragile. It seems that the people who need justice the most are the same people who are not being fairly represented and, ultimately, get the short end of the stick.
This, among other reasons, drew me to study law. I have been a witness to how the undermining of justice can easily take place and how important it is to have people who are willing to fight for what is right. I was taught from a young age that justice is an immovable constant, strong and sturdy and always on the right side. But the older I become, the more and more I realize how this isn't true in the slightest. In reality, the truth is almost always buried under layers of bureaucracy, power, and privilege.
I was raised in a neighborhood full of lower-class families struggling to make ends meet, where the system was blind to the struggles of working-class people. I watched people I knew being treated unfairly by the institutions that were supposed to protect them, from courts to schools. I have been a witness to how someone can fall through the cracks; a friend detained by police for no honest reason, turning a neighbor out of their apartment when their rent was paid, a family member being denied basic healthcare benefits because of some sort of clerical error. In all these situations, the people concerned did not know their rights nor did they have any means to retaliate against the system.
I believe that the law is about molding a society where we all have equal access to justice. Too often, the scales of justice are weighed in favor of those who already have power, money, and influence. But the law is for all, particularly for the voiceless, the marginalized, and the oppressed. It is meant to be the protection of the dignity of each person - irrespective of their background, status, or wealth.
Studying law is not about learning to argue cases or win disputes but to learn the mechanics that drive our world and find a way in which they can serve everyone, not just the upper-class. I want to be the lawyer who looks to solve systemic problems, challenge injustices, and wields the law as a tool to make society fair. I believe that in a society where so much feels uncertain and broken, the law can be a binding force that unites us in our humanity.
I want to study law because I believe that justice is what will make a society fair and free. I want to be part of the generation that works to repair the cracks in our system and ensure the law is a force for good - not just for those who can afford it, but for everyone.