Lesson
One: College Essay
Question Help
Please
select from the following common application essay question
topics:
Evaluate
a significant experience, achievement, or risk that you have
taken and its impact on you.
EssayEdge
says: This question is actually a combination of two common
questions: Describe a significant achievement and describe
a time when you grew as a person.
Accomplishment
questions show the admissions committee what you value, what
makes you proud and what you are capable of accomplishing.
A common mistake in answering this question is repeating information
that can be found elsewhere in the application. You should
not try to squeeze every achievement on your resume into the
essay. If you do choose to write about an accomplishment that
the committee can read about somewhere else on your application,
be sure to bring that experience alive by demonstrating what
it took to get there and how it affected you personally. Do
not be afraid to show them that you feel proud. This is not
the place for modesty. However do not fall to the other extreme
either-you can toot your own horn, but do it without being
snotty. You will not have to worry about either extreme if
you spend the bulk of your essay simply telling the story.
If you feel
like you have not done anything worth focusing on, then remind
yourself that the best essays are often about modest accomplishments.
It does not matter what you have accomplished as long as it
was personally meaningful and you can make it come alive. Unless
specified, the accomplishment can be professional, personal,
or academic. Did you get a compliment from a notoriously tough
boss? Did you lose the race but beat your own best time? Did
you work around the clock to bring your C in physics up to
an A. Do not think about what they want to hear-think about
what has really made you proud.
For the second
part of the question, they are asking you to open up about
who you really are. Although you do want to show that you have
matured, do not overplay what a terrible person you once were
just to make the point of what a great person you are now.
No one changes that much. Besides, the “before” portrait might
be the one that sticks in the admissions officer’s head. Also,
focus on your current personality rather than on the “old you” or
on every last detail of the event. The reader wants to know
what you are like now, not what you were like a long time ago.
Finally, describe real events and scenarios to prove that your
growth resulted from the decisions you made and actions you
took. Significant events and people can serve as inspiration.
Real change, though, always results from the work, effort,
and initiative you have put into yourself. Take some credit.
For
examples of and short critiques for the Influential Achievement
Essay, click here.
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Discuss
some issue of personal, local, national or international
concern and its importance to you.
EssayEdge
says: This question is among the hardest to answer. Even here
you need to stay personal. If a cause is important to you or
you have a strong opinion about it, relate it back to your
life. What about you, your experiences, or your upbringing
has made this issue resonate for you? Why do you care? Does
the issue affect you personally in any way? Be sure to write
about both sides of the issues to show that you can think objectively
and logically. Showing that you are passionate is great; showing
that you are one-sided or bull-headed is not. Finally, be sure
to refrain from making sweeping generalizations about issues
that would be out of your range of experience.
For
examples of and short critiques for the Social/Political
Concern Essay, click here.
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Indicate
a person, character in fiction, an historical figure, or
a creative work (as in art, music, etc.) who has had a
significant influence on you, and describe that influence.
EssayEdge
says: This type of question attempts to learn more about you
through the forces that have shaped you. Many students make
the mistake of believing that this is an essay about a person.
They go on at length, describing the influential person in
detail without making a connection between it and themselves.
The school doesn’t care about your uncle, or some fictional
heroine. They care about you. What about that person made an
impression on you and how. What action did you take to turn
this impression into personal development and change?
Colleges
learn a lot about your values and standards through your description
of your mentors. It is like getting to know a person by the
people he chooses to hang out with. If you are skeptical, consider
the different impression you would have of the candidate who
admires a dynamic, colorful athlete compared to someone who
looks up to an accomplished but soft-spoken academic. Neither
is better nor worse-just different.
There are
no wrong answers here. Far more important than whom you choose,
though, is how you portray that person. In other words, do
not choose someone because you think it will impress the committee.
Name-dropping is not only very obvious, it is very ineffective.
Heed this one word of caution, though. Applicants very commonly
pick one of their parents. Describing your father gives you
the advantage of knowing your subject well, however, it also
means doing some extra work to make your essay stand out from
the crowd.
For
examples of and short critiques for the Influential Person
Essay, click here.
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Why
do you want to spend two to six years of your life at a
particular college, graduate school, or professional school?
How is the degree necessary to the fulfillment of your
goals?
EssayEdge
says: Knowing the schools to which you apply is an essential
step in answering any essay, but questions such as these ask
you to write about them directly. In answering these questions,
mention specific factors that tie in with your area of interest.
Doing this will help you to avoid the insincere, ingratiating
tone that is a danger in this type of essay. Each point will
be honest and well supported, thereby lending credibility to
the essay and, in turn, to you.
Another challenge
is finding a balanced yet truthful tone. Do not be cocky or
self-effacing. Show a solid, well-researched knowledge of the
school. Be honest and be thorough.
For
examples of and short critiques for the Future Goals Essay,
click here.
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Move
on to Lesson Two: Brainstorming a Topic
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