Monday, August 10, 2020
How To Write An Effective College Essay
How To Write An Effective College Essay Now school is starting, and she hasnât even begun the unique essay for William & Mary or the conversation with a historical woman for Barnard. She considers dropping her application to Barnard but has a flash of inspiration during a study hall, envisioning herself sitting at a Jerusalem café asking Golda Meir questions about the call of leadership. She now has a short draft of the âWhy This College? â essay for Barnard and a Community essay for UVA; if she has time, sheâll tweak them later for Michigan. Beyond that, the essay is your opportunity to stand out; take advantage of it. With top schools, almost every other applicant will have a high GPA and good test scores. The essay is a chance to become three-dimensional and distinguish yourself as more than just a number on a page. It shows admissions officers who you are as a person and differentiates you from the others. It is crucial to present your true personality through your essay. Rachel takes a few days to relax after completing 11th grade before creating a spreadsheet listing her colleges. She then uses both the Common App and individual collegesâ websites to find guidelines, deadlines and essay prompts. If Rachel has established a relationship with a college admissions representative, she will ask if supplemental essay prompts for next season will change. If she hasnât been in touch with a rep, she will use this yearâs prompts as a guide. Finally, she checks the Common App to make sure supplemental essay prompts have not changed, then gets to work. She plans to write each morning and see her friends in the afternoon only if she has made real progress on her essays that day. Rachel decides to write about her local and global communities of Third Culture Kids. Donât write about something because you think it will look more impressive to admissions officers. If you choose something you are passionate about, the enthusiasm behind it will show, and that is more valuable than anything you could do solely for college admissions. Your transcript, awards, and extracurriculars tell one story. Rather, focus on aspects of you that havenât been covered yet. As for what story to fill that gap, many students havenât experienced extremely novel circumstances yet, and thatâs okay! It is more important in how you use your event to showcase your personality. No event is too mundane if you can make it show how it was pivotal to your development. Her counselor also suggests the University of Mary Washington, another Virginia public school, because itâs close to D.C. Right now, halfway around the globe, an American high school junior is gearing up for the U.S. college admissions process. To be able to tweak this essay for several colleges, Rachel will write about her most meaningful community in the first half of the essay, and then gear the second half to each college. Because UVA and Michigan request similar word counts, she will not have to adjust these for length. Rachel has won numerous awards and intends to play at the intramural level in college. She decides that would make a better topic for Michiganâs âextracurricular activityâ essay. Letâs give her the way-too-peppy name of Rachel Resilient. No generic essays come out of this process, because this is real essay writing, not essay shopping. Youâll see THREE winning essays that were part of accepted applications. This advice may have been repeated over and over, but that is because itâs true. Colleges and universities are quickly becoming more competitive than ever. Every year, the number of qualified students applying to top schools increases, resulting in drops in acceptance rates. Harvard College accepted 1,962 out of 42,749 applicants in 2018, a mere 4.59 percentâ"the lowest acceptance rate in Harvardâs history. Write a story with a setting, a beginning, a middle and an end. In drafting your essay, focus on the content of the narrative. She doesnât even start the basketball essay for Michigan now. But she does complete very rough drafts of the Catch-22 essays for UVA and George Mason. After returning from vacation, Rachel finds herself jet-lagged, distracted by friends and uninspired.
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