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Don't worry about figures or 'key words' in an application essay. What they want to see is your personality, what makes you tick, your passions and dreams. This is a tall order for a simple college essay, so here's my advice for you:

Answer the question, and be *honest.* Don't worry about which way will sound best; put down the way you thought of it. A genuine essay will be much better received than one that sounds like your resume. Good luck, and just be yourself in your writing!

2007-01-12 16:28:03 · answer #1 · answered by Free Ranger 4 · 0 0

Colleges and universities want to know if you are able to handle the academic responsibility of college course work. You want to show that you are responsible and reliable and hardworking. They want to be assured that you will not only complete your course work, but that you will excel academically.

Extracurricular activities are nice and all, but as you probably know, not every football player gets into Harvard.

Try and stress your drive to get a college education and what your future plans may be. What do you plan to do with your degree, and how will you utilize their institution to the maximum in order to accomplish that?

All the rest of your extracurricular activities, honors, achievements and volunteer work is placed in its own section of the application. Use the essay section to tell them why you want to go to their college and why they should accept you...how great are you? Why should you be considered above the rest?

2007-01-12 16:21:23 · answer #2 · answered by faithy_q_t_poo 3 · 0 0

decide for it. those are all sturdy, properly-respected faculties, and precise faculties make a minimum of a few dedication to variety on campus (as evidenced by the question). once you're rather stressful, you could examine each college's variety statements and nondiscrimination rules. often, although, admissions team at precise tier universities love variety of their scholars. Even in Georgia, the place i bypass to college, that's an excellent element to write down approximately. To be truthful, this variety of answer is strictly what they are finding for.

2016-10-19 22:09:17 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

i'm currently filling out applications for grad school, and my professors have given me this advice:

reinforce the areas of your personal strength, difference, vision, uniqueness--that which will set you apart from the rest of the applicants.

Search committees want to know what you will bring to their table, to their department, how you will enrich it. Is there anything about where you come from, geographically, familially, environmentally, culturally, socially that contributes to your own personal politics, attitude and values?

Think of real people reading this letter. Make the introduction more personable, as if you were introducing your interest to someone formally (everyone else will say "excited to apply here", too).

try those for now and see how it helps.

2007-01-12 16:21:19 · answer #4 · answered by bigwoodenhead 3 · 0 0

dedication, that u have a personality. that u want it. and try to say any extra curricular acitivites, if any, and this helps. try to describe some difficult time, or barrier in ur life, that u overcame. GPA is good to mention, and also future plans.

2007-01-12 16:08:53 · answer #5 · answered by Matias 1 · 0 0

Don't lie. Tell the truth about yourself. Tell the admissions officer about your ambition, what you want to study and why you want to go to their school. Tell them about your past achievements and struggles.

2007-01-12 21:00:02 · answer #6 · answered by lou 3 · 0 0

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