I wrote mine about backpacking through Asia. I told a story of spending a day stranded with Japanese students in a port town in China. I told how excited they were to meet an English teacher, and how I saw one was struggling with War and Peace, and gave him my copies of Great Gatsby and Harry Potter.
I figured it made me sound interesting, intellectual, someone whose devotions go beyond mere obligations, and the HP thing made me seem more down to earth. Does your boyfriend have a story about helping out a stranger? Good travel stories?
Mine got me into Harvard Law, and I was definitely a borderline candidate. They make some great books of successful admissions essays, and often put up statistics to show which essays really made a difference. Those books gave me great ideas for mine!
Lauren - Georgetown? They wrote the same thing on mine :)
2007-02-20 11:24:43
·
answer #1
·
answered by LawGeek 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
Sure, just finished mine and applied a few months ago. On my acceptance letters, the signors actually pencilled in that they loved my personal statement, so it does make a difference!
First, what does he want to emphasize? His intentions? His experience? His desire? Make sure that it has one common theme, his entire application (including other essays if they have them). From my experience, it's more important HOW the essay is written rather than what it says.
For example, my personal statement talked about how I wanted to work for me, not for other people. This doesn't tend to be the popular outlook, but it was well written. He needs a niche, something that makes him stand out. Did he have a unique internship that lead him to want to go into politics, study environmental law, international law? Start with an anecdote, preferably funny. Tell him to write like he's writing a speech. Make someone laugh. Then make someone thoughtful. Then make someone understand your point. Then make them laugh or leaving them really thinking about something...
No one can tell him a topic. Only he knows how that funny story he heard applies to law school, or how his desire to work for a non-for-profit goes with law school. What he needs to keep in mind are two most important pieces of advice: 1. whatever you write, write it well (lots of fluid language, parallels, exciting, funny, emotional) 2. do something that seperates you from the other people you're applying with, but not that makes you seem disrespectful. Don't mock the process. Live with it, but change it to meet YOUR needs.
If you'd like more specifics, please feel free to add details.
2007-02-19 07:37:11
·
answer #2
·
answered by Lauren 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
i does no longer use this tale on your guy or woman assertion essay. i think of that regulation college admissions workers study own statements to get a feeling of the applicant's writing skills and to get a feeling of their personalities. that's the kind of tale which will make you memorable yet for the incorrect motives. i think that your admissions kit will ask approximately any arrests - at that element you could and can prepare an basic assertion describing what you probably did and expressing be apologetic approximately. regulation college admissions tests at the instant are not the situation to tutor your humorousness or your quirkiness. you additionally can desire to study with the Bar Admissions place of work the place you reside to work out if the arrest will avert you from taking the bar. solid success - apparently such as you had a non everlasting lapse of judgment and that i'm hoping that it does not limit your profession concepts.
2016-09-29 08:10:52
·
answer #3
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋