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This section
contains three scholarship essays:
- Scholarship
Essay One - Crabiel
- Scholarship
Essay Two - National Merit Scholar
- Scholarship
Essay Three
- Fulbright
Scholarship
Essay One
CRABIEL SCHOLARSHIP
WINNER - won $3,000 scholarship
Like Mr. Crabiel,
I literally work tirelessly in many academic and leadership roles.
I sleep no more than six hours a night because of my desire to expertly
meet my many commitments. Throughout my life, I have worked as long
and as hard as I possibly can to effect beneficial changes in both
school and society.
During the summer
of tenth grade, I took a number theory course at Johns Hopkins University
with students from Alaska, California, and Bogota, Colombia. Similarly,
during the summer following eleventh grade, I was one of ninety
students from New Jersey selected to attend the Governor's School
in the Sciences at Drew University. At Drew, I took courses in molecular
orbital theory, special relativity, cognitive psychology, and I
participated in an astrophysics research project. For my independent
research project, I used a telescope to find the angular velocity
of Pluto. With the angular velocity determined, I used Einstein's
field equations and Kepler's laws to place an upper bound on the
magnitude of the cosmological constant, which describes the curvature
of space and the rate of the universe's expansion.
In addition
to learning science, I recently lectured physics classes on special
relativity at the request of my physics teacher. After lecturing
one class for 45 minutes, one student bought many books on both
general and special relativity to read during his study hall. Inspiring
other students to search for knowledge kindles my own quest to understand
the world and the people around me.
As president
of the National Honor Society, I tutor students with difficulties
in various subject areas. In addition, I am ranked number one in
my class with an SAT score of 1580 and SATII scores of 750 in math,
760 in writing, and 800 in physics. In school, I take the hardest
possible courses including every AP course offered at the high school.
I am the leading member of the Math Team, the Academic Team, and
the Model Congress Team. In the area of leadership, I have recently
received the Rotary Youth Leadership Award from a local rotary club,
have been asked to attend the National Youth Leadership Forum on
Law and the Constitution in Washington D.C., and wrote the winning
essay on patriotism for South Plainfield's VFW chapter. Currently
enrolled in Spanish 6,I am a member of both the Spanish Club and
the Spanish Honor Society. In addition, I recently was named a National
Merit Scholar.
Besides involvementin
academic and leadership positions, I am active in athletics. For
instance, I lift weights regularly. In addition, I am the captain
of my school's varsity tennis team. So far this year, my individual
record on the team is 3-0.
Working vigorously
upon being elected Student Council President, I have begun a biweekly
publication of student council activities and opinions. Also, the
executive board under my direction has opened the school store for
the first time in nearly a decade. With paint and wood, we turned
a janitor's closet into a fantastic store. I also direct many fund
raisers and charity drives. For instance, I recently organized a
charity drive that netted about $1,500 for the family of Alicia
Lehman, a local girl who received a heart transplant.
As Student Liaison
to the South Plainfield Board of Education, I am working to introduce
more advanced-placement courses, more reading of philosophy, and
more math and science electives into the curriculum. At curriculum
committee meetings, I have been effective in making Board members
aware of the need for these courses. In addition, my speeches at
public Board meetings often draw widespread support, which further
helps to advance my plans for enhancing the curriculum.
I have also
been effective as a Sunday school teacher. By helping elementary
school students formulate principles and morals, I make a difference
in their lives every week. The value system that I hope to instill
in them will last them their entire lives. I find teaching first-graders
about Christ extremely rewarding.
Clearly, I have
devoted my life both to working to better myself and to improving
civilization as a whole. Throughout the rest of my life, I hope
to continue in this same manner of unselfish work. Just as freeholder
Crabiel dedicates his life to public service, I commit my life to
helping others and to advancing society's level of understanding.
Scholarship
Essay Two
WINNING NATIONAL
MERIT SCHOLAR ESSAY
Nothing in all
the world is comparable to reading Ayn Rand beneath New York's skyline
or to studying Nietzsche atop a mountain summit.
Since childhood,
the studies of philosophy and science have interested me profoundly.
Having read many books on relativity, quantum mechanics, existentialism,
religion, capitalism, democracy and post-Aristotelian philosophy,
my quest for knowledge has only intensified. Certainly, the purpose
of my life is to discover a greater understanding of the universe
and its people. Specifically, I plan to better grasp the interrelationship
among forces, matter, space, and time. In addition, I hope to find
a unified field theory and a convincing explanation for the birth
of the universe.
During the summer
of tenth grade, I took a number theory course at Johns Hopkins University
with students from Alaska, California, and Bogota, Colombia. My
attendance of the New Jersey Governor's School in the Sciences is
another accomplishment that exemplifies my dedication to knowledge.
During the summer following eleventh grade, I took courses in molecular
orbital theory, special relativity, cognitive psychology, and I
participated in an astrophysics research project. For my independent
research project, I used a telescope to find the angular velocity
of Pluto. With the angular velocity determined, I used Einstein's
field equations and Kepler's laws to place an upper bound on the
magnitude of thecosmological constant, which describes the curvature
of space and the rate of the universe's expansion.
In addition
to learning science, I recently lectured physics classes on special
relativity at the request of my physics teacher. After lecturing
one class for 45 minutes, one student bought many books on both
general and special relativity to read during his study hall. Inspiring
other students to search for knowledge kindles my own quest to understand
the world and the people around me.
Also, as president
of the National Honor Society, I tutor students with difficulties
in various subject areas. Moreover, I am ranked number one in my
class, and I am the leading member of the Math Team, the Academic
Team, and the Model Congress Team. In the area of leadership, I
have recently received the Rotary Youth Leadership Award from a
local rotary club and have been asked to attend the National Youth
Leadership Forum on Law and the Constitution in Washington D.C.
Currently enrolled in Spanish 6,I am a member of both the Spanish
Club and the Spanish Honor Society.
As student council
president, I have begun a biweekly publication of student council
activities and opinions. Also, the executive board under my direction
has opened the school store for the first time in nearly a decade
and is finding speakers to speak at a series of colloquia on topics
ranging from physics to politics. Directing fund raisers and charity
drives also consumes much of my time. For instance, I recently organized
a charity drive that netted about $1,500 for the family of a local
girl in need of a heart transplant.
Consistent with
my love of freedom and my belief in democracy, which is best summarized
by Hayek's Road to Serfdom, I have recently initiated an application
to become the liaison to the local board of education. Also, in
keeping with my belief that individuals develop strong principles
and ideology, I teach Sunday school three months a year and have
chaperoned for a local Christian school.
Outside pure
academics and leadership roles, I lift weights five times a week
for an hour each day. In addition, I play singles for my school's
varsity tennis team. Because I find extraordinary satisfaction in
nature and have dedicated my life to its understanding, I enjoy
mountain climbing. Among the notable peaks I have reached are Mt.
Washington, Mt Jefferson, Mt. Madison, Mt. Marcy and Mt. Katahdin.
Unquestionably, my life's aim is to dramatically raise the height
of the mountain of knowledge so that my successors may have a more
accurate view of the universe around them.
Scholarship
Essay Three
Fulbright
Application Essay
On one hot late-summer
day when I was in high school, my parents came back from a shopping
trip with a surprise present for me: the legendary board game, Diplomacy.
At first I scoffed at such an old-fashioned game. Who would want
to waste glorious sunny days moving armies around a map of pre-World
War I Europe, pretending to be Bismarck or Disraeli? But after playing
the game once, I became absolutely riveted by the nuances of statecraft,
and soon began losing sleep as I tried to craft clever diplomatic
gambits, hatch devious schemes, and better understand the game's
ever-changing dynamics. As my friends and I spent the second half
of the summer absorbed by the game, my parents grinned knowingly.
How could I resist being fascinated with Diplomacy, they asked me,
when I incessantly read about international affairs, and liked nothing
more than debating politics over dinner? How could I resist being
fascinated, when I had spent most of my summers in Greece (and,
much more briefly, France and England), witnessing first-hand the
ways in which countries differ socially, culturally, and politically?
Though my passion
for foreign policy and international affairs undoubtedly dates back
to high school, I never had the chance to fully develop this interest
before college. Once I arrived at Harvard, however, I discovered
that I could learn about international relations through both my
academics and my extracurricular activities. Academically, I decided
to concentrate in Government, and, within Government, to take classes
that elucidated the forces underlying the relations of states on
the world stage. Some of the most memorable of these classes included
Human Rights, in which we discussed what role humanitarian concerns
ought to play in international relations; Politics of Western Europe,
in which I learned about the social, economic, and political development
of five major European countries; and Causes and Prevention of War,
which focused on unearthing the roots of conflict and finding out
how bloodshed could have been avoided. Currently, for my senior
thesis, I am investigating the strange pattern of American human
rights-based intervention in the post-Cold War era, and trying to
determine which explanatory variables are best able to account for
it.
Interestingly,
I think that I have learned at least as much about international
relations through my extracurriculars in college as I have through
my classes. For the past three years, for instance, I have helped
run Harvard’ s three Model United Nations conferences. As
a committee director at these conferences, I researched topics of
global importance (e.g. the violent disintegration of states, weapons
of mass destruction in the Middle East), wrote detailed study guides
discussing these subjects, and then moderated hundreds of students
as they debated the topics and strove to resolve them. Even more
enriching for me than directing these committees was taking part
in them myself. As a delegate at other schools’ conferences,
I would be assigned to represent a particular country on a particular
UN committee (e.g. France on the Security Council). I would then
need to research my country’ s position on the topics to be
discussed, articulate my view in front of others in my committee,
and convince my fellow delegates to support my position. Trying
to peg down a country’ s elusive ‘ national interest,
’ clashing over thorny practical and philosophical issues,
making and breaking alliances — - Model UN was basically a
simulation of how diplomacy really works.
Thankfully,
I have also found time over the past few years to cultivate interests
and skills unrelated to Model UN and foreign policy. One of the
most important of these has been community service. As a volunteer
for Evening With Champions, an annual ice-skating exhibition held
to raise money for children with cancer, and as a teacher of a weekly
high school class on current events and international affairs, I
have, whenever possible, used my time and talents to benefit my
community. Another more recent interest of mine is the fascinating
realm of business. Two years ago, my father’ s Christmas present
to me was a challenge rather than a gift: he gave me $500,but told
me that I could keep it only if I invested it in the stock market
— - and earned a higher rate of return than he did with another
$500. Since then, I have avidly followed the stock market, and become
very interested in how businesses interact and respond to strategic
threats (perhaps because of the similarities between business competition
and the equally cutthroat world of diplomatic realpolitik). A final
passion of mine is writing. As the writer of a biweekly column in
the Independent, one of Harvard’ s student newspapers, I find
very little as satisfying as filling a blank page with words -—
creating from nothing an elegant opinion piece that illuminates
some quirk of college life, or induces my readers to consider an
issue or position that they had ignored until then.
Because of my
wide range of interests, I have not yet decided what career path
to follow into the future. In the short run, I hope to study abroad
for a year, in the process immersing myself in another culture,
and deepening my personal and academic understanding of international
affairs. After studying abroad, my options would include working
for a nonprofit organization, entering the corporate world, and
attending law school. In the long run, I envision for myself a career
straddling the highest levels of international relations, politics,
and business. I could achieve this admittedly ambitious goal by
advancing within a nonprofit group, think tank, or major international
company. Perhaps most appealingly, I could also achieve this goal
by entering public service and obtaining some degree of influence
over actual foreign policy decisions -— that is, becoming
a player myself in the real-life game of Diplomacy.
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