Lesson
Five: Transfer Essay
| The Admissions Essay Prep Leader shares essay
writing strategies and samples that will help you gain
entrance to your first choice graduate school. For
more free essay writing advice and for help with your
admissions essay, visit EssayEdge.com. |

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Transfer
Essay
Tips
for the Transfer Essay
By: E.
Whitney Soule, the Director of Transfer Admission at Connecticut
College
Transferring
from one institution to another is competitive and complicated.
Before a student can even think about the details of transferable
credit, housing, and financial aid, he or she must get admitted.
Like
freshmen applicants, transfer students compete for limited
space in a college or university. Submitting solid academic
credentials is an obvious requirement. However, most institutions
will require an essay that explains the student's reasons for
transferring. If done well, the essay can be the most powerful
and convincing part of a transfer student's application.
Admission
officers review hundreds, sometimes thousands, of applications
every year and have to make decisions quickly based on the
information available at the time of review. They will be especially
discerning when considering transfer applications. After all,
the student has already been through the application and enrollment
process once (sometimes twice!), and an admission officer will
want to be sure that the next landing is for good.
Since
it is unlikely that admission officers will have the time to
call an applicant for more information, questions often get
answered by extrapolating from the information available in
the application. Therefore, an applicant must anticipate the
questions an admission committee might ask and then answer
them in the essay(s).
Without
exception, transfer students have specific and tangible reasons
for wanting to leave one college and attend another. Every
admission committee will want an explanation. It is both appropriate
and important for the applicant to be able to articulate the
reasons for choosing the first school, why that school is no
longer the right fit, and why the next school will be better.
For
example, if a student writes a simple essay explaining that
he wants to transfer from University A to College B, "Because
College B is smaller and on the east coast," the admission
committee may interpret that the student prefers smaller classes,
is homesick, prefers an undergraduate majority, and so on.
Yet, had the student written a detailed essay about how his
original desire to attend a large university in the Midwest
was no longer appropriate given his new passion to study marine
biology in College B's new science facility, the admission
committee would have confidence in the student's motivation
to pursue transferring.
Naturally,
if an applicant's credentials have obvious inconsistencies,
the essay will need to address those as well. For one applicant,
the problem might have to do with a curious drop in G.P.A.
and for another, it may have to do with a switch in major or
concentration.
Unfortunately,
little consistency exists among colleges and universities regarding
transfer deadlines, application requirements, admission formulas,
and transfer credit evaluation. However, all transfer students
will be expected to explain their circumstances and choices,
most often through an essay or two. The transfer essay is a
student's opportunity to tell it like it is, to get to the
nitty-gritty and defend it with confidence.
E.
Whitney Soule
Associate Director of Admission
Director of Transfer Admission
Connecticut College
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