Ever since I first touched coding and computer science in my second or so year of high school. I've fallen in love with the subject. Seeing how there are always coding problems to be solved, different problems that always require some different perspective, I've enjoyed seeing these problems and taking my own crack at them. But beyond that In my last year of high school I began to see just how important the different perspectives of problems were. After how deeply I fell entranced by the topic, I took every opportunity I Could to deepen my knowledge of the subject. I took every class my high school could offer in computer science. By the time I was starting my last year, I didn't know what to do. The only deeper knowledge of the subject I could even gain was by teaching others what I have learned about computer science. I became a TA for my highschool's AP Computer Science Principles class. throughout this experience I got to see how people new and old to the subject of computer science perceive different problems. I got to see how for some it came easy for others they struggled. I got to see why it was different. In my future I want to explore this as much as I can. I want to see how problems that we can look at and guess, estimate, and need answers to, how those problems are looked at and provide as many perspectives as I can while seeing the interesting unique perspectives of other problems. Currently, I am taking a look at random numbers with Dr. Michael Mascagni. I am researching how they can be generated, why they are generated, and most particularly of how to generate them in reverse order.
I love math, I love computer science, And most importantly I love seeing the beauty of a solution.