Hobbies and interests
Piano
Foreign Languages
Drawing And Illustration
Mental Health
Nursing
Anatomy
Animals
Art
Badminton
Ceramics And Pottery
Japanese
Zoe Hesselroth
3,055
Bold Points1x
Nominee1x
FinalistZoe Hesselroth
3,055
Bold Points1x
Nominee1x
FinalistBio
Hello! My name is Zoe (she/her), and I am a rising senior at the University of Washington studying Nursing and Japanese. I am also a student in the Interdisciplinary Honors and BSN Honors programs.
I am currently working to become a public health nurse so that I can care for my community as a whole and work to alleviate health disparities among underserved communities. I am particularly interested in working with unhoused and immigrant populations and hope to further my education with a DNP Nurse Midwifery degree eventually so that I can immerse myself in reproductive justice work. Overall what really draws me to nursing is the opportunity to connect with people one-on-one, and to be a source of security for folks as I care for them and work to promote healthcare as a universal human right.
Education
University of Washington-Seattle Campus
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- East Asian Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, General
- Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing
Bellevue College
Technical bootcampEastlake High School
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Bachelor's degree program
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- East Asian Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, General
- Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing
Career
Dream career field:
Hospital & Health Care
Dream career goals:
Public Health Nurse, Nurse Midwife, Japanese Medical Translator
RA (Resident Advisor) for Terry Hall
UW Housing and Food Services2022 – 20242 yearsARD (Assistant Resident Director)
UW Housing and Food Services2024 – Present11 monthsMedication Care Manager, Care Manager
Aegis Living Lake Union2023 – Present1 yearOL (Orientation Leader)
UW First Year Programs2023 – 20241 yearPCT (Patient Care Technician)
Overlake Medical Center2022 – 20231 yearStyle Consultant
Target2021 – 20221 year
Sports
Badminton
Junior Varsity2018 – 20191 year
Slow-pitch Softball
Varsity2017 – 20192 years
Awards
- Coach's Choice
Arts
Bellevue College Japan Week 2021
Computer ArtDesigned t-shirt design (back side)2021 – 2021Scholastic Art and Writing Awards
Drawing2020 Scholastic Art and Writing Awards2020 – 2020
Public services
Volunteering
King County Clinic — I was a nursing student volunteer for this year's King County clinic, which is a large-scale pop-up clinic to provide free dental, vision, and medical services to anyone in the King County area. In my role I screened, checked in, and escorted patients.2024 – 2024Volunteering
UW Terry Hall — I was an Assistant Director of Collaboration helping to facilitate weekly meetings, lead committees for events, and communicate across buildings. I developed skills like marketing, organizing supplies within a budget, and creating a funding proposal.2021 – 2022Volunteering
Bellevue College Japan Week 2021 — I am volunteering along with other BC students to help in putting together the event- some of my roles include/d making posters to advertise weekend events, designing the Japan Week t-shirt, and co-facilitating a few weekday and weekend events.2021 – 2021Advocacy
WashPIRG (Washington Public Interest Research Group) — I am currently a member of the Affordable Healthcare campaign, where we are working to lessen the burden of healthcare costs via actions like writing to state senators, collecting petitions, and advocating for government bills.2021 – 2021Volunteering
Missing Maps — Remote Volunteer2020 – PresentVolunteering
Eastside Search and Rescue — Trainee2018 – 2019
Future Interests
Advocacy
Volunteering
Philanthropy
Bold Science Matters Scholarship
My favorite scientific discovery is an often leaned-on pillar of microbiology: agar. The discovery of this invaluable resource is often credited to Robert Koch, while in reality, it was the wife of one of his associates, Fannie Hesse, who suggested its use.
Fannie worked as an unpaid assistant for her husband in Koch’s lab and supported research by preparing environments for bacteria to grow in, cleaning equipment, and making illustrations for publications. As her husband and Koch struggled to find a growth medium that could overcome the limitations of gelatin, Fannie suggested using agar. When her husband notified Koch of the new technique, he immediately added it to his nutrient broths but made no mention of the Hesses’ vital contributions in his 1882 paper discussing the discovery.
Agar is an indispensable tool in the microbiology laboratory, namely due to characteristics like the ability to withstand high temperatures and degradation by many microbes, among others. Without agar, we would not be able to perform critical procedures like streaking for isolation or making plate counts to determine dilutions. However, what makes this discovery my favorite is that it highlights the vital roles played by women throughout STEM fields and encourages conversations regarding the necessity of acknowledging these contributions.
In my research of Fannie, I read sources that clarified how her illustrations were drawn so accurately that they supported a strong understanding of microbiology. I think that even the fact we would need evidence to prove Fannie really understood what she was doing illuminates the assumption of ignorance placed on many women. Overall, Fannie not only contributed a whole world of advancement and potential to the field of microbiology but did so while being disregarded on account of her gender; subsequently illuminating barriers faced by women in STEM fields even into the modern-day.