Ever since she was a child playing on her family's farmland in Wisconsin, Bailey Flanigan was guided by her own selective, yet wide-ranging, curiosity. Describing her young self as spirited and a bit unruly, she directed her energies to everything from building booby traps to doing experimental construction projects to exploring an intense interest in medicine to writing fiction and music to planning nonprofit organizations to help lessen social inequality. 'I found myself unmotivated to take all the AP [advanced placement] classes for the sake of it. My interest was captured by classes where I could be creative ' where I could use math to solve real-world problems, creatively write, make music, connect distant ideas, or deeply explore the humanities ' and I worked on such classes obsessively, as an opportunity to explore my intuitions and interests,' she says. 'Instead of joining clubs, I ended up spending a lot of time thinking and creating on my own, and trying to understand what...
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