Kinsey Martindale Profile





By: Kate Franzen



Kinsey Martindale had no idea what was awaiting her that first day at Lincoln High School. But four years later, she is grateful for the experience and opportunities she has gotten from being a part of the community.


Martindale is a senior at Lincoln High School and plans to attend college. “I’m not sure where, ideally somewhere in China or Taiwan because they are Mandarin speaking countries,” she explains.

Martindale has many passions including learning languages, specifically Chinese, and she loves to travel.


“Lincoln has helped me pursue it [learning Chinese and getting a better understanding of the culture] because they have Chinese here and… and because I went to China with my Chinese class. I stayed with a host family,” she says.


Martindale complains of being a teenager in today’s society. “Elders think school was fun. They didn’t experience the stresses of today’s high school”. To her, the hardest part of being a teen is her elders not understanding that it’s different for her than it was for them. She feels that social media and pressure to get good grades has a negative impact on many students.


“It’s a different time for us,” she says.


Martindale wants to help this year’s freshmen have an easier time in highschool than she, and many of her classmates did. Martindale is a peer mentor for Mrs. Klein-Wolf’s 7th period FLI class. She says that she was offered that class and took it as an opportunity to do her best to better the Lincoln community.


“Freshman and sophomores get disconnected from the rest of us,” she says about upperclassmen.


“It was horrible!” she recalls the way freshman were treated when she was a freshman.


“Coming into this class, I wanted to be a mentor, but also be a friend… I wanted to be that central person”.


Although she found it quite cheesy to think about, Martindale had a lot to say to her freshman self.


“I wish I knew that even if people don’t accept you, it’s ok. It’s ok to be the person that you want to be and to make decisions that you want to. It's easier to be who you want to be, how you want to be, express yourself how you want to express yourself. I didn’t get that until junior year,” she reflected.


Martindale’s advice to younger students was simple and straightforward. She wants everyone to know to “take every opportunity that comes to you.”


Martindale is grateful for her years here at Lincoln High School and believes that she got a lot out of it. “It made me a little more open,” she said.

Comments

  1. Really cool and comforting to hear that a senior wants to help freshman, and the quotes were very fluid with the rest of the transitions!

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  2. Very intersetting story and I liked the flow

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  3. I really enjoyed how you interviewed a senior!

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  4. I love the focus of your profile and how you interviewed someone who already experienced all four years of high school!

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  5. I love the idea of you interviewing a senior and I like how you asked her questions about how she felt as a freshman

    ReplyDelete

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