Maya G.
Q: Have you had teammates that have made you a better athlete / Have you had classmates who have made you a better student?
A: My teammates and classmates Chloe and Hope have made me a better athlete during the volleyball and futsal seasons because they always help me do my best, teach me new things and support me, and they help me be a better student in the same way.
Q: What facet of being a teammate do you find the most similar in both fields?
A: As a teammate you have to look out for your other teammates, support them, and help them improve. Similarly, in academics, you have to help your classmates and support them.
P: ¿En qué se parecen los estudios y el deporte?
A: You have to work hard and practice/study to improve at both.
P: ¿Cuál es su asignatura favorita?
A: My favorite subject is humanities.
P: ¿Cuál es su deporte favorito?
A: My favorite sport to play is basketball.
Enso M.
P: ¿Te encuentras trabajando con la misma intensidad en lo deportivo y en lo académico? Si no es así, ¿en cuál de las dos se esfuerza más?
A: I think that I put my full effort into both athletics and academics. In athletics I think it’s all about focus, reaction and continuing to move but in academics it’s all about thinking critically about things and answering questions.
Q: What do you find to be the most challenging aspect of academics?
A: I think executive functions like remembering to do things on time, finish them, improvise, and try not to overthink things.
P: ¿Cuál es su deporte favorito?
A: My favorite sport is soccer because you are working as a team. You can’t just say one goal is because of one person. In a sport like basketball and futsal, one person can dribble through everyone and score, but in soccer someone has to pass to someone who shoots it.
P: ¿Cuál es su asignatura favorita?
A: My favorite subject is humanities because it’s all about thinking about something critically and trying to expand what you're thinking about it.
P: ¿Tienes un modelo académico o deportivo a seguir? Si es así, ¿quién es y por qué?
A: Yes, an academic role model. There’s an archaeologist named Albert Lynn who got in a car crash and got his leg amputated above the knee so it made things a lot harder for him, but he continued to do things like climb mountains which showed his perseverance.