Securing acceptance into nearly any college or university continues
to become more difficult as more applicants apply for a limited number of
open spots. Writing a top-notch personal essay as part of the application
process is one way a student can improve their chances.
"Applications
to colleges [and universities] are going up and it is important for students
to have the opportunity to tell us more about themselves than their academic
credentials can show," says Cheryl Brown. She is the director of admissions
at a university.
"Admissions officers want to get to know their candidates,
to understand their talents and aspirations and to use this information to
build a real community on our campuses. We want to enroll people with a variety
of beliefs, outlooks, experiences, goals and achievements."
Essays
enable students to tell admissions officers aspects of themselves that aren't
apparent in the other credentials they submit through the application process.
"They tell us how they feel about things, how they communicate and how they
integrate life's events into their world view," Brown says.
Essays
demonstrate a student's level of readiness for college writing, says Chris
Markle. Markle is the director of admissions at Susquehanna University in
Pennsylvania. Essays also can "carry particular significance for students
whose grades and scores are less than stellar," Markle says.
Choose
a Winning Topic
For starters, students should choose a topic with which
they are familiar and about which they are passionate, Markle says. "Watch
out for generic sports/music essays and overwhelming morbidity," he says.
Through the essay, tell the admissions counselors something they don't
know about you. Don't repeat activity lists that can be found elsewhere in
the application, says Al Newell, vice-president of enrollment at Washington
& Jefferson College.
Newell remembers one student he was unsure
whether to admit until he read his essay. It wasn't the most beautiful prose,
Newell says, but it exposed the vulnerability of this football player as he
wrote about how much he appreciated the love of his widowed father.
"Lessons
learned in a losing season are better than stories about the winning touchdown
-- let the essay show your character," Newell says. "Use the essay to focus
the admissions team on what you want them to know about you personally."
Experts
agree that students need to take time to create a winning essay. Students
must carefully go through the proper steps in the writing process: prepare
a good outline, create a draft and proofread the text.
"Don't write
the essay at the last minute," Brown says. "Give yourselves time to think
about the idea, to execute the idea well and to proofread it so it is perfect."
Shawn Reid is an admission counselor at Gustavus College in Minnesota.
He says somebody should proofread for the writer after every revision. "Take
time to think about what you want to say in your essay and how you are going
to say it," Reid says. "As with everything, practice makes perfect."
Students
should show their drafts to people whose opinions they value, but they shouldn't
have their parents or teachers craft their essays, Markle says.
Reveal
Your True Self
The best essays Brown reads are personal. "They illuminate
the personality and the goals of the writer," she says. "They are honest and
heartfelt. The worst essays are those in which the student tries to sound
knowledgeable in an area they know nothing about. Those essays just don't
ring true and they do a disservice to the writer."
Clear, crisp essays
have the most positive effect on the admissions team, Reid says. "If writing
about an experience, give specific reasons why and how that has shaped you,"
he says.
"For example, if writing about a mission trip to Costa Rica,
tell us in what ways you have changed your daily life because of that mission
trip beyond 'it changed my life.'"
Students need to involve themselves
in their writing. "You should have the starring role in your essay," Markle
says. "Don't be afraid to take risks. Show us your weaknesses as well as
your strengths; they make you uniquely you. Incorporate humor -- with good
taste. Make us laugh and your essay will stand out."
Newell says he
fears that admission counselors have led applicants to believe that they must
have "scaled Kilimanjaro" to have anything interesting to say in an essay.
Newell feels the opposite is true -- that the more common human experiences
make the best essays.
"I don't expect a student to have had the kind
of life experiences they shouldn't have had yet," Newell says. "Most kids
applying have had pretty ordinary lives."
Newell deems his favorite
essay of all time as the "Raisin Essay." The writer, who won a scholarship,
related the events of a family contest to see who could blow a raisin the
farthest with their noses. "She felt her father, an eye, ear, nose and throat
specialist, had an unfair advantage," Newell says.
Write It in Style
Use
concise wording, Reid says. "No need to use 10 words when three will do,"
he says. "Also, the bigger the word does not necessarily mean the bigger
your brain. Admission counselors are not impressed when they have to use a
thesaurus to read an essay."
Markle says there are "seven deadly sins"
of college essay writing. At all costs, he recommends that students avoid
being wordy, overblown or flowery. Essays also should not appear to be colloquial,
folksy or too informal. "Avoid words such as 'very,' 'a lot,' 'cool,' 'awesome'
and 'nice,'" Markle says.
Third, stay clear of being trite, using
cliches in metaphors and symbolism, such as "American as apple
pie." The fourth error is underdeveloping an essay, using ideas that are
introduced without being fully discussed.
The fifth "deadly sin" is
being cynical and condescending, with an essay that contains sweeping generalizations,
such as "all Americans are conforming cowards," Markle says.
Having
essays that contain redundancies (where the same words or ideas are repeated),
sentence fragments and incorrect punctuation are the other errors to avoid,
Markle says.
"The best essays are not necessarily written by valedictorians,"
Markle says. "There is no perfect essay. All essays have quirks and nuances
which give them character. Remember the cardinal rule of college application
essays: Your reader should know you better after reading your work."