Tuesday, August 18, 2020
How To Write A College Essay Step
How To Write A College Essay Step Sample essays can provide you with some great inspiration, and valuable insights into how to write a great essay. However, be careful not to get so caught up reading other peoplesâ essays that you neglect to start your own. Itâs also easy to fall into the comparison trap and begin worrying that your essays will never be as good as these examples. Remember that the sample essays colleges are posting are the BEST essays from among the thousands of students they admit. So, most accepted studentsâ essays are not this exceptional. What about this makes you feel proud, and how will you carry this into the next part of your life? Whether you write about it in your essay, or just list it as one of your activities, sharing the influence it has had on you, personally, will be much more impactful. If youâre asked to write why you want to attend a certain college or program, do your research. Colleges will see if you just read the first paragraph of a webpage or if you really looked. If a school uses an admissions committee the number could jump to three or more. In any case, what YOU can control is how well your essay describes who you are and gives the admissions person a chance to see things in you that will be an asset to the school. Sharing that you participated in an Outward Bound program will help colleges understand how youâre spending your time outside the classroom. When citing a desire to participate in a certain club or program, make sure you can actually participate in it. For example, donât write about wanting to be part of a program only for grad students; save this for your graduate school application. But you also have the opportunity to articulate to colleges why this experience is worth mentioning. I would encourage students to think about how participating in Outward Bound impacted them, specifically. Anyone who completes an Outward Bound expeditioncould say that they were challenged, that they werenât sure they could do it, but on looking back, they feel proud of what theyâve accomplished. The real questions to ask are, why was it challenging for you, personally? And of course, it goes without saying that you should NEVER copy or imitate someone elseâs essay. If you try to make your essay sound like someone elseâs, it will end up sounding fake and awkward, and will NOT work to your advantage. It is okay for a parent to review a childâs essay; it is not okay for a parent to take over a childâs essay, tell her what words to use, what story to write, what message to send. College admissions officers tell us time and again that too many essays come to them sanitized. They want to read a genuine story written by the child in the childâs words and the childâs voice. When parents get too involved, the stories do not sound genuine. An essay is an important part of sharing who you are with a school. With increased competition for admission, the essay has become an important factor in consideration of your admissibility to a school. So if a school requires an essay it is VERY likely to be read. If a school has a writing section in their supplement to the Common Application you can rest assured that ALL of that writing is evaluated by admissions officers. Do your best and assume that it WILL be read and that it WILL have a bearing on your admission chances. When a parent gets too involved, the story does not sound like an essay written by a 17-year-old student. We can tell when the studentâs voice is missing; the colleges can tell too. There is a funny article in âThe Daily Beastâ by Kristina Dell that shares the anecdotes of college admissions counselors from this yearâs record batch of applications. Many of the anecdotes revolve around silly or even comical things students do during the course of the college admissions process. The majority of these anecdotes are drawn from ridiculous mistakes college applicants make in their college essays. If you were to take bets on the percentage of essays read by college admissions personnel, Iâd guess that it would be in the high 90âs. There is no way to determine a typical scenario regarding a collegeâs method for reviewing applications. In all cases at least one admissions officer will look at your essay.
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