
Hobbies and interests
Research
Adam Ramadan
665
Bold Points1x
Finalist1x
Winner
Adam Ramadan
665
Bold Points1x
Finalist1x
WinnerBio
An aspiring surgeon and researcher with a focus and passion for combining innovation and storytelling. Current high school senior and laboratory intern at the Moores Cancer Center in UCSD. Awarded a microgrant in order to lead an independent research study on nutrient content in Lake Hodges.
Outside the realm of science, I am an independent filmmaker, using complex and compelling visual language to explore empathy and human complexity. With a unique blend of the arts and science, I am driven to excel in medicine and contribute meaningful to patient care and research.
Education
Rancho Bernardo High School
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Bachelor's degree program
Majors of interest:
- Biological and Physical Sciences
- Biochemistry, Biophysics and Molecular Biology
Career
Dream career field:
Medical Practice
Dream career goals:
Research
Biological and Physical Sciences
San Diego State University — Lab Intern2022 – 2022Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Other
University of California San Diego — Lab Intern2024 – Present
Public services
Volunteering
Lebanon of Tomorrow — Youth Leader2023 – 2023Volunteering
Scripps Mercy Hospital — Call lights volunteer2023 – 2023
Our Destiny Our Future Scholarship
I want to make a positive impact in the world by merging science and ethics with storytelling—those forces that shape the way we understand ourselves and look after one another. One day, I want to be a cardiologist, not just to cure illness. I want to humanize medicine, to bring empathy to the research frontier, and to build spaces that bridge the gap between scientific progress and the human beings it's supposed to help.
My path was set in motion under unforeseen circumstances. I grew up with films such as Spider-Man 2, which put empathy alongside brute force on the same level. Later, empathy manifested in two different capacities: as a filmmaker interested in moral dilemmas as well as human frailty, and as a research student who interned for the UCSD Moores Cancer Center and researched the Lake Hodges ecosystems through a microgrant. Both projects—albeit so dissimilar—taught me that complex systems, whether cultural or biological, are fragile and must be treated with care.
During my cancer lab studies, I experienced the weight of precision. One errant variable can discredit months of toil. And yet, even more so, I learned that science isn't conducted in a vacuum. Treatments impact real people, with loved ones, with fears, with histories. And that awareness nudged me towards pursuing a career in medicine—because it's the intersection of science and humanity. My Lake Hodges project, however, taught me that knowledge itself isn't power. We discovered pollution patterns in the lake, but our impact didn't occur until we disseminated our research to our community and began constructing an awareness campaign. That is why I believe that storytelling is essential to science. Amidst a sea of noise—polarization, apathy, and misinformation—stories are effective at cutting through. Stories can lead us to trust again in medicine, mobilize us for action for the planet, and make us think ethically. I want to apply the power of storytelling not only as an artist, but also as a doctor. Whether it's leading a patient through diagnosis, breaking down research for the masses, or fighting medical injustice through advocacy, I see narrative as a force for healing and transformation.
I hope to be not only a skilled doctor, but a strong ethical voice in the field of medicine—one grounded by my faith, my background, and my philosophical education. All too frequently, we treat ethics as a box to tick, not as a living, breathing process. But we’re entering a period of gene editing, AI-diagnosis, and ecological health crises. We need doctors and scientists who not only innovate, but who will question the world we’re making. My hope is that I can be one of them.
I do not expect to change the world in one night. But I believe I can make ripples—through each patient I treat, each student I instruct, each listener I touch. In a hospital, a laboratory, or a movie set, my job is the same: to bring empathy, clarity, and accountability to a world that too frequently forgets them.
Code Breakers & Changemakers Scholarship
WinnerOther people might see a scalpel and a camera as being polar opposites - they slice flesh, they capture light. They are the same to me, though. They demand exactitude. They reveal things that are concealed. And they have shaped my vision.
I'm a scientist and a storyteller, and the two have never been separated. As a child, I was fascinated by the power of narrative—not just in film and literature, but in formal narrative in the natural world. Biology is the most powerful script out there: cells have conversations with one another in molecular language, evolution tells more story than fiction, and the body is a mystery to be solved.
My interest is not discovery, but knowledge. In the lab, I examine the microenvironments of tumors, determining how inflammation perpetuates cancer. But I also learn about humans—through film, through philosophy, through observing the world with the same sense I observe under the microscope. What sparks my sense of awe is not how things work, but why they do.
Medicine cures, but it does not comprehend. The body is a machine—diseased organs are extracted, faulty systems repaired. But the patient’s narrative is lost in the process. I am not going to stand idly by as a future surgeon. I am going to close the gap between science and story, using both data and anecdote to reshape the way we provide healthcare.
One issue I long to tackle is the lack of personalized medicine in modern medicine. Treatments are too often addressed to symptoms rather than to individuals. In my bioinformatics work, I've seen how data can transform medicine—how algorithms can predict disease, how gene sequencing can individualize therapy. But data by themselves are nothing. They are just numbers without meaning. People aren't spreadsheets. They are stories, and medicine must learn to read them.
I have a vision to cover two periods.
First and foremost, as a surgeon, I will marry clinical practice and research. I envision a world where surgery is no longer removal but precision—where diagnostic technologies empowered by AI, targeted therapies, and minimal invasion transform patient treatment. My research background is already introducing me to these advances, and I am determined to carry them forward.
Second, I will redefine how medicine is perceived. I will transform the practice of medicine and, through screenwriting, film, or public speeches, translate medicine's complexities into tales that teach, inspire, and spark change. Similar to how Atul Gawande uses words to demystify surgery, I will craft tales that bridge the gap between medicine and society.
This is not a vague fantasy. I have already started. My independent research, my filmmaking, my work in the lab—each is a page in the greater tale that I am composing.
This award is not just about funds. It is validation. It is the connection between vision and action. With it, I will be able to explore more deeply into bioinformatics, perfecting the tools that one day will revolutionize personalized medicine. I will be able to continue to research, contribute to advancing surgery, and make certain that my education is not just learning, but change.
For at last, both camera and scalpel serve the same purpose. They do not just disclose. They transform. And I will change the world.
Simon Strong Scholarship
Everyone needs to be seen. I feared the opposite.
I spent decades living under the radar—silent, not brooding, withdrawn as the poets dream, but a less apparent, creepier sort. I was seen, but not so much looked at. A Middle Eastern student among a sea of Americans, a foreigner in my parents' homelands, a face floating between three cultures without ever being part of one.
Initially, I complied. I learned to shape myself into what other people needed me to be—saying the appropriate words, playing the appropriate roles, constantly altering my identity to fit the circumstances. But no matter how accurately I played the character, I was never the protagonist of my own existence. I was an extra to everyone else.
And then I had a camera.
It wasn't much—secondhand, aged model that cost me months in savings—but gazing through the lens for the first time altered something. Everything halted. The world was no longer pieced together, no longer demanding an act of self. It merely existed. Even more, however, I finally had control of what was presented.
I started shooting all of it—strangers on the street, the quietness of my own face, fleeting moments that nobody else appeared to see. It was an obsession, but not only with making films. It was about seeing. About capturing evidence that the world, with all its contradictions, was just as it was. And so was I.
This realization permeated everything that I did. I stopped waiting for approval and created my own presence. I carried it with me into research labs, where I created a niche for myself despite knowing nothing about bioinformatics at first. I carried it with me into my solo studies, my philosophical arguments, my writing, my films. All action became an act of defiance against the idea that I was merely a passive observer.
Had I never struggled against this difficulty—the weight of invisibility—I would be awaiting permission to exist here even now. Shaping myself into what the world wished for instead of causing the world to see me for what I am.
So if I had to give one piece of advice to someone who is fighting the same fight, it would be this: Be the witness you never had. When the world closes its eyes, keep yours open. When it turns a blind eye to you, make yourself seen. Because the strongest thing you can be is something no one can look away from.
And I have no intention on being looked away from.
Nabi Nicole Grant Memorial Scholarship
Faith is not absence of doubt; it is standing in spite of it. I learned this not in a moment of triumph but in a season of doubt when every reasonable course seemed flawed and mine own thoughts insufficient. It had been a gradual pressure—a pressure to succeed, to make good choices, to be in charge at every moment. But with every step I took toward certitude, it receded further.
There is an assumption that hard work guarantees success, that intellectual sharpness can cut a path through obstacles. But life is not so susceptible to reason. I had always assumed that I would be able to analyze and rationalize a solution to a problem. It had served me well—until it didn't. When I faced a challenge at school that left me on the brink of doubting myself, I could not reason a way out. The usual methods—working harder and better, better planning, analyzing failure—were of no use. I began to question for the first time if resolve would be enough.
It was in that place of helplessness that I looked outside of myself. Faith wasn't an easy refuge; it wasn't an easy solution. Surrender wasn't an easy thing; it wasn't quitting, but acknowledging that I wasn't in control of making things happen. I had to learn that effort doesn't always pay off right away, that struggle is not failure but refinement. The burden of perfection dropped when I came to understand that faith wasn't about sitting around and waiting for a fix but having faith in the process and still moving. Faith gave me vision when things were uncertain. It reframed my struggle—not as a roadblock but as a lesson in patience and resilience. It reminded me that I wasn't graded on immediate success but on my resilience in continuing on when I couldn't yet see the finish. My challenge didn't disappear overnight, yet I did. I no longer interpreted failure as a condemnation of me and more as a call to growth.
With this shift in pace, I persisted not because I had faith in success but because I believed that effort and belief in something greater would propel me where I needed to be. And it did. I overcame my challenge—not through sheer force of willpower only, but by turning to faith when reason had no other resources to offer.
Faith did not dispel struggle, yet made it meaningful. Neither is it an excuse nor a crutch for inaction. It is a strength that allows me to stand firm in doubt, to proceed when reason lags behind, and to have faith that in struggle I am being forged for something greater.