The Personal Essay
What the essay should accomplish
The personal statement is
one of the most critical components of the application. Why is this
the case? Well, imagine yourself as one of the people sifting through
hundreds fabulous applications - all
with high GPA's, stellar community service, glowing letters
of recommendation, and excellent internship or lab experience - and
having to choose a small number of recipients from a large pool.
It's like being in a candy store, or rather a gourmet chocolate
shop; everything looks good and choosing is difficult. How would
you choose? The personal statement is the place where you have a
chance to add a distinguishing ingredient that makes your application
one that cannot be refused. Here is where you make your individual
mark by weaving your personal experiences with your professional
aspirations.
The more you can picture yourself as a reader and not simply a writer
of your essay, the more successful your essay will be. Below are
some guidelines for writing the personal essay.
The anecdotal beginning
The personal essay should not simply
regurgitate information already contained in the transcripts, resume,
etc. It should present a picture of you as an individual. The best
way to grab a reader's attention
is with a personal story. You might begin with a defining moment
from your past, a pivotal occasion, a revelatory experience, or an
encounter that shaped or changed you and informed the direction you
have taken.
Your academic objectives
Your personal anecdote should lead easily and logically into a description
of your academic and professional objectives. In this description,
you should define both the individual significance of your proposed
work and its potential contribution to human well-being. Frame your
project in terms of the current concerns within the discipline. How
does your planned study or research extend or expand or enrich the
field? How might it change understanding in the field? How will it
address current limitations or repair current deficiencies or open
new doors in the field? How does it reach beyond the field to affect
the culture at large? Why is it important to do what you propose
to do? And why is it important that you do it? Your plan of study
should be detailed enough to demonstrate your serious investigation
of the question but not so technical and specialized as to become
boring.
Provide compelling academic reasons for your choice of institution
and program.
It is useful to know something about the faculty you plan on studying
with and their research interests. The strongest scholarship applications
frequently cite encouraging correspondence from faculty in the program
where you plan on studying.
Your qualifications
The account of your qualifications should
go beyond the data given on your resume. It might include, for example,
evidence of any research skills or employment training relevant to
your anticipated graduate studies. Advanced language skills, governmental
internships, tutoring, editorial experience, emergency-room volunteerism, "shadowing" professionals,
publishing and writing, travel, and similar activities may have distinctively
formed you to pursue your chosen educational and professional paths.
Make the most of these.
Your character, values, and work
As a whole, your essay should provide a clear sense of your human
character. Your personal anecdotes, your objectives, and your qualifications
should present a seamless picture of a unique individual with particular
aspirations, values, as well as the talent to carry out these aspirations
and values. Providing these seamless connections, however, is no
easy task. This is why so much of your time should be spent on revision.
Polish your essay as if it were a jewel. You need it to shine as
brightly and deeply as possible.
Revise, Revise, Revise
Has this been emphasized enough? Important in the revision process
is outside input. Do not be shy about asking professors, mentors,
and friends for critical analysis of your draft. While the essay
must be written by you - it is, after all, your essay - outside
readers will provide important insight. Think about who you ask to
read your draft. Make sure this person is interested in and capable
of giving you valuable critical feedback, and not merely in praising
you or shooting you down.
When revising your essay ask yourself and have your readers ask
the following questions: 1) Is the author someone I'd like
to chat with? 2) Does she understand where she's been and know
where she's going? 3) Do her plans make sense? Do they make
sense for her? 4) If I had the money, would I fund a scholarship
to support these plans?
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