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College and University Discussion
Reply to "1590 test score what would be good reach?"
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[quote=Anonymous]Don’t try to make your kids something they’re not. But every kid has interest in hobbies. The problem is we often don’t take time to nurture them because we think they should be on a certain super aggressive path. There are so many different different ways to show an interest in global health, premed, or medical anthropology or whatever The topic interest is. Here are random ideas from Claude. I think some of them are quite good and easy to incorporate. Mind you, you might not even include all of these on an eventual college application, but could be good fodder for essays or just things your kid might generally enjoy as a human being. Community-Based Activities: Volunteering with refugee health organizations Working with community gardens or food security initiatives Participating in cultural exchange programs with health components Joining health equity or environmental justice advocacy groups Research & Academic Pursuits: Conducting ethnographic interviews with healthcare workers or patients Creating a medical terminology dictionary for underserved language groups Developing a local medicinal plant guide or herbarium Studying traditional healing practices from different cultures Creative Endeavors: Medical illustration or anatomical art Documentary filmmaking on health disparities Creating accessible health education materials Podcasting about unusual medical specialties or global health challenges Hybrid Health Activities: Learning wilderness medicine or outdoor emergency care Studying culinary medicine and therapeutic cooking Exploring medical technologies through maker spaces Developing apps for community health monitoring Global Perspectives: Learning languages relevant to underserved medical populations Virtual volunteering with international health organizations Organizing medical supply drives for underresourced areas Corresponding with healthcare providers in different countries Many of these activities can evolve naturally from existing hobbies like art, cooking, gardening, technology, or language learning while building unique perspectives that would strengthen applications to specialized premed programs.[/quote]
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