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Keira Carstensen

2775

Bold Points

1x

Finalist

1x

Winner

Bio

I am determined to reach my goals and I've been committed for a long time. In middle school and high school, I started taking college courses and worked on a high GPA to get into better colleges. I am currently a freshman at Oregon State University. I want to get a master's degree in aerospace engineering and work on innovative technology for NASA or Blue Origin. I come from a low income family with neither of my parents going to college, but that doesn't discourage me in any way to achieve my dreams.

Education

Oregon State University

Bachelor's degree program
2023 - 2027
  • Majors:
    • Mechanical Engineering
  • Minors:
    • Aerospace, Aeronautical, and Astronautical/Space Engineering

Newberg Senior High School

High School
2019 - 2023

Miscellaneous

  • Desired degree level:

    Master's degree program

  • Graduate schools of interest:

  • Transfer schools of interest:

  • Majors of interest:

    • Aerospace, Aeronautical and Astronautical/Space Engineering
  • Not planning to go to medical school
  • Career

    • Dream career field:

      Aviation & Aerospace

    • Dream career goals:

      Fluid dynamics engineer

    • Intern

      A.R.E. Manufacturing
      2022 – 20231 year
    • Barista

      Starbucks
      2021 – 20221 year

    Sports

    Cross-Country Running

    Varsity
    2019 – 20234 years

    Track & Field

    Junior Varsity
    2019 – 20234 years

    Public services

    • Volunteering

      Oregon Road Runners Club — Volunteer
      2020 – 2023
    • Volunteering

      Interact — Treasurer
      2022 – 2023

    Future Interests

    Advocacy

    Volunteering

    Heroes in High School 2023 Resilience Scholarship
    Winner
    I spent the first ten years of my life living a relatively normal and happy life. My family wasn’t wealthy, but we could afford the things that we needed and enjoy a small outing every now and then. My life hit a wall soon after I turned ten years old when my mom developed an inherited mental illness of bipolar disorder. She slowly started to change into a completely different person, and so did I. I started to go from playing soccer games on Saturdays to cleaning the house. I stopped playing games with my brother in the evening to cook meals. I learned to grow up quickly after having to save her after the attempts she made to end her life. She had to stop working altogether. Between paying her medical bills and living on my father’s income alone, we had to file for bankruptcy and change our lifestyle to one where necessities were sacrificed. Instead of falling apart in these moments, I clung to the goals and dreams I had set prior. They became my light at the end of the tunnel, and the people that cheered me on pushed me through the tunnel to today. However, that tunnel and its end became significantly longer after another three years of my life were disrupted. When I was thirteen, I suffered a traumatic brain injury from falling from a high perch onto my head. I had to be life flighted to a trauma-one hospital in Portland where the doctors worked frantically to keep me awake; alive. The following days in the hospital were remembered few and far between. I remember being told that I acted like a four-year-old and was really into the Jello. On the fourth day, I became fully conscious, managed to walk to the bathroom with the IV pole accompanying me, and sit back down on my bed and conversate with my puzzled family. The doctors that came in soon after were astonished. I was unable to walk, hear, or act my age from the permanent brain and nerve damage I sustained, but I suppose divine intervention determined otherwise. However, I was not out of the woods yet. For the following years, I endured intensive physical therapy for the disabilities I still sustained, and today suffer from permanent vestibular damage, hearing loss, and memory defects. Fear not, for through the face of adversity, I gained unwaveringly advantageous life skills and grit. I experienced a lifetime in six years that gifted me with wisdom, maturity, perseverance, resilience, empathy, and the relentless drive to keep moving forward. There is a parable of ancient wisdom that I like to live by after these experiences: good or bad, who’s to say? These experiences have strengthened my will to pursue my ambitions and passions because I can face the challenges on the path to my goals and dreams with the confidence that I will prevail and fail forward. I was not able to become whole and new again without the support of my teachers, friends, and family, and certainly not without failures and setbacks on the journey forward. I am able to share my story with others to give them advice, wisdom, and sometimes just an empathetic ear to guide them through their own adversity. I do not put these experiences behind me because they are what shaped me into the person that I am today. In the heat of these moments, they were dreadful and painstaking, but now that I have an omniscient point of view, I know that I have gained more than I could’ve ever hoped for and more than I lost. Today I can balance being a student, student-athlete, leader, teammate, daughter, sister, friend, coworker, and soon-to-be aerospace engineer because of the tunnel of challenges, the people that push me through, and my goals and dreams in the light of the tunnel, but not the end.
    Richard P. Mullen Memorial Scholarship
    One of my proudest achievements is continuing to uphold a balance of academic rigor, paid work, athletics, the responsibility of being the female figure in my family, and personal hobbies and interests while facing setbacks and adversity. I continued to pursue and often needed to attend to these responsibilities and interests even through recovering from a traumatic brain injury that left me with permanent disabilities and a challenging recovery. Overcoming this adversity all the while sustaining my responsibilities and passions demonstrates my maturity and wisdom in real-life circumstances. I have the ability to help others by sharing knowledge and advice with others and persevere through life’s future challenges. I have developed skills not only for overcoming future challenges but also the grit to take on and carry through challenges in academics and in my future career. This scholarship will help alleviate some of the financial burden to pay for college as a first-generation student from a low-income family. Paying for college myself has always been a concern but with many available scholarships and financial aid to apply to for others in my situation, I can feel confident that I can earn high education and make a generational change in my family. I have always had a passion for math and science-related topics in and out of school, but I only recently hashed out my narrow vision for my major in college and my future. I’ve wanted to be a part of space exploration and work for an agency like NASA for a long time. I want to contribute my skills to discoveries that will possibly improve the lives of millions of people. In the next decade, I want to begin working in the aerospace industry to learn how to be an engineering planner for rocket assembly and software. I first want to work for an aerospace company such as Lockheed Martin or Boeing because they have some of the most renowned training programs and technologies available. After I obtain experience in my field of study, I want to pursue a master's degree in aerospace engineering to be eligible to become a NASA engineer. Pursuing a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering with a minor in aerospace engineering at Oregon State University will allow me to have a broader skill set than aerospace engineering alone because, in addition to a background in computer science, thermodynamics, mechanical design, and fluid dynamics, mechanical engineers obtain skills in chemical engineering, electrical engineering, and materials science to perform their job. This well-rounded expertise will give me the additional qualifications to eventually become a NASA engineer. Pursuing such a difficult degree program and career path is intimidating for a first-generation college student, but it gives me the grit to stay on track and never waver from a big dream because of my narrow vision.