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THE COLLEGE ESSAY

THE COLLEGE ESSAY. For CHAMPS Juniors and Seniors. Does every college require essays for admission?. NO!

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THE COLLEGE ESSAY

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  1. THE COLLEGE ESSAY For CHAMPS Juniors and Seniors

  2. Does every college require essaysfor admission? NO! Except for the University of California (UC) system, most public universities (including the California State University (CSU) do not ask for them as part of the admissions package. Private colleges almost always do require them.

  3. To those colleges who require them, are the essays important? Absolutely! • If essays are required as part of the application, you can be certain admissions officers will read them. • More colleges are now requiring multiple essays as part of the application. Essays are becoming more important every year.

  4. SERIOUSLY….. So take the essays seriously. They are a blank slate in which every applicant has an equal chance to share compelling stories with the admissions committees.

  5. Why do admissions officers want to spend their time reading essays? • They want to see how well you write. • They want to get to know you better. • They want to gain some insight into your level of maturity and perspective. • They want to judge applications via a more humanistic method than that of merely crunching numbers. You are so much more than a statistic or score! • They want to discover your uniqueness.

  6. The 5 Most Important Rules of Great College Essays Follow these rules, and you’ll already write better essays than most of the students applying to college this year.

  7. Rule #1: Don’t try to impress the reader; just be honest. • If you try to guess what admissions officers want to hear, you’re already on the wrong path. • Don’t inject meaning that wasn’t there, or try to extract life lessons you didn’t learn. • Don’t be afraid to admit what you aren’t good at. • Above all, be certain you answer the question.

  8. The Dreaded McEssay “90% of the applications I read contain what I call ‘McEssays’ – usually five-paragraph essays that are mostly abstractions and unsupported generalization. They are technically correct because they are organized and have correct sentence structure and spelling, but they are boring” Parke Muth University of Virginia

  9. More…. “If an essay starts out, “I have been a member of the student council and it has taught me leadership, perseverance and hard work,’ I can almost recite the rest of the essay without reading it. Each of the three middle paragraphs gives a bit of support to an abstraction, and the final paragraph restates what has already been said. A McEssay is not wrong, but it is not going to be a positive factor in the admission decision. It will not allow a student to stand out.”

  10. Rule #2: Own your stories. You’ve got to write essays that nobody else will write. • Find a unique story (which is difficult). • Insert detail and take ownership (which is easier). • Your admissions officer would rather read an interesting experience that is personal to you than a droning attempt to pass along great wisdom. After all, you are 17 or 18 years old, thus you aren’t expected to write like a grizzled sage.

  11. Rule #3: Don’t simply repeat information from the application. • Use the essay to explain what an admissions officer doesn’t know from your application, or… • Use the essay to give more insight into things you did list on your application.

  12. Rule #4: Tell a good story in your own voice. • This is not an essay for your high school English class – that’s academic writing. Important point – College essays are for storytelling, thus are more fun. • You are totally obligated to entertain your reader. Use your own voice – informal, conversational, not stilted. • However, humor isn’t the only way to entertain.

  13. Rule #5: Avoid cliches • A cliché is something that’s been said or used so many times that it no longer carries any weight. It’s not insightful. It has no “oomph.” • Example: “It’s not whether you win or lose…it’s how you play the game.” • Cliché college essays are the worst kind of McEssays. They bore admissions officers and make them roll their eyes.

  14. Cliché essay topics likely to elicit eye-rolling from readers • How my trip to Europe broadened my cultural horizons. • When I participated in a community service project, I learned that it’s important to help people. • My leadership (or teamwork) position taught me to work well with others.

  15. Good topics gone bad (cliches) There is nothing wrong with writing about athletics, performing arts, travel, community service, or leadership -- Those topics only become cliches when you forget to follow the five rules we just covered.

  16. Writing Tips Colleges don’t expect students to write like Ernest Hemingway. But every student must tell a good story.

  17. Writing Tip #1: Don’t tense up; be natural. Your essay should sound like you. We’re not saying you should use slang. A good approach is to write like you were speaking to an adult you respect, but also like and with whom you feel comfortable. Also, write as if you’re brainstorming – then revise. Spend as much time thinking as you do writing and brainstorm!

  18. One Way to Brainstorm Start listing people who are important to you and, for each, a few character traits and the way in which you’ve been influenced. Examples: Team Coach – Honest, demanding, friendly, constructively critical – Taught me athletic skills, sportsmanship, good role model, gets the best from me. Grandmother – Courageous, optimistic, patient, generous, young at heart – Taught me by example to rise above problems, introduced me to culture, travel, helps me with parents. So let’s say you look at your list and decide to write about your grandmother. You want the reader to get a sense of her, so it is necessary to describe her. However, a detailed portrait is not required, only a thumbnail sketch. What’s important is her character, not her appearance…..

  19. Here’s what might result: “To look at my petite grandmother whose gray curls are always carefully coifed, you’d never know that she has survived the tragedy of war in Europe, including the loss of family members. It is hard to imagine that her neatly manicured hands labored many hours at a sewing machine in order to provide an education for her younger sisters when they first arrived in this country. Yet, in spite of these struggles, she has remained optimistic about life, an outlook she has passed on to me. She has also introduced me to culture and the joys of travel, and although I was a somewhat reluctant companion when I was younger, I have learned to value her company and insight.”

  20. Writing tip #2: Find a good opener. Your first sentence needs to get their attention. Good sentences are expressive. Compare these openers “Throughout my life, I’ve been fortunate enough to live in a variety of different places. In each new city, I learned something more about myself and about others.” Wouldn’t you agree that most readers will not be eager to read what lies ahead in that story? vs….

  21. I think this one’s better… • “It’s hard to find a good steak in Loma Mira, California. In fact, it’s hard to find a lot of life’s essentials in a small desert town of only 1,200 people. The day before my family moved there when I was six, my mother told me that there wasn’t even an ice cream shop there. I did not take the news well.”

  22. Good openers from real essays • “Even at age nine, I had a knack for business. That’s when the snow cone empire first took off.” • “I think Holden Caulfield is a jerk. There, I said it. I’ve been dying to say it ever since we read The Catcher in the Rye in my sophomore English class.” • “I can make a mean hamburger. In fact, I’m a professional. I’ve got four years of professional hamburger-making experience.” • “Everything to do with horses smells bad. They smell bad. Their saddles smell bad. All their blankets and medicines smell bad. So, as a competitive rider, I pretty much stink all the time.

  23. Writing tip #3: Use details • Details make writing interesting. • Details make readers feel like they were with you on the stage during the play, in the art class learning to paint, or on the bridge before you bungee jumped. • Details help you take ownership of your story. The specifics are what make the story yours.

  24. Example of writing without details “I was extremely nervous before the orchestra started playing. However, when I saw my dad in the audience, it helped me to relax and play well.”

  25. Example of writing with detail “I remember how nervous I was sitting there on the stage waiting for us to start playing. My violin was resting on my shoulder but I could feel it shaking against my chin. I scanned across the dimly lit crowd and somehow, I found my dad. From behind the video camera he was holding, he mouthed those words that he used to yell from the stands before I would go up to bat in little league. Now, I was about to play as the first chair violinist in my community orchestra – the biggest performance of my life. I couldn’t hear him, but I could make out those words – “Go get ‘em.” As the conductor raised his wand, I smiled at my dad, nodded back at him, and started to play.”

  26. Writing tip #4: Don’t make big claims your essay doesn’t back up. • If you learned a life-changing lesson, say so. But if you didn’t, don’t say so. You don’t need a life lesson to write a great essay. • If you claim that one community service project taught you how important it is to help people, and you never volunteered anywhere again, your essay loses some credibility.

  27. Writing tip #5: Don’t ask yourself or anyone else “What should I write about?” • The appropriate question really is, “What should I tell them about me?” • Don’t ask, “Do you like it?” but rather “What do you think it says about me?” • Ask yourself, “If college deans were to place me with roommates based on this essay, would they be able to choose compatible people? Would it give them enough to go on?”

  28. UC Essay Prompts Instructions Respond to both prompts, using a maximum of 1,000 words. You may allocate the word count as you wish. If you choose to respond to one prompt at greater length, we suggest your shorter answer be no less than 250 words. Stay within the word limit as closely as you can. A little over – 1,012 words, for example – is fine. • Prompt #1: Describe the world you come from – for example, your family, community or school – and tell us how your world has shaped your dreams and aspirations. • Prompt #2: Tell us about a personal quality, talent, accomplishment, contribution or experience that is important to you. What about this quality of accomplishment makes your proud and how does it relate to the person you are?

  29. General Tips for UC Essays • Find your best story and consider which UC prompt it will fit. • Read the prompts carefully, and make sure that you address every part of the prompt. • Strong answers to UC prompts often address how you’ll bring these talents, experiences and lessons with you to college, and how that will impact other students in the campus community

  30. They stress clarity • UC admissions officers stress the importance of clarity in your essay. In the case of the UC application, it is more important to be clear than it is to be entertaining.

  31. Tips for UC Prompt #1 Prompt #1: Describe the world you come from… • You don’t necessarily have to write an essay that’s entirely about your family, community or school. You have to choose a story that lets them see one part of your world, whatever that part may be. • Most good stories relate to your world in some way. So find a story you want to tell, and identify from what part of your world this story hails – family, community, school, etc.

  32. Examples of essays that describe a student’s world • If you work at Burger King and share the money with your parents to pay bills, you’re writing about the world of your family. • If you volunteer at a local homeless shelter right down the street from your house, you’re writing about the world of your community. • If you write about your experiences in student government and what you’ve tried to accomplish to improve your school for other students, you’re writing about your world at school.

  33. Don’t forget to address how this experience has influenced your dreams and aspirations. • “Dreams and aspirations” don’t necessarily have to be big and lofty, like a career goal or what you expect from your life after college. They just have to be true. • You can describe short-term goals or plans, like what you want to study in college, or how you’re hoping to play the lead role in the play next year, or that you’ll likely be promoted to manager at your job next year, which will give you experience and a pay raise. Those things are all dreams and aspirations.

  34. Tips for UC Prompt #2 Prompt #2 : Tell us about a personal quality, talent, accomplishment….. • Don’t necessarily use this essay to recount your most impressive accomplishment. Instead, select something that is/was very important to you. • If sticking with AP Euro and fighting through the D you got first quarter meant a whole lot more than getting the top spot in the fall talent show, consider sharing your AP Euro experience and why it was so important to you.

  35. More… • Make sure to address the part about why this experience makes you proud. • Remember that your story must explain how this experience relates to the person that you are. If you simply recite your accomplishments without putting in the kind of details that helps you own your stories, the reader won’t learn anything about you.

  36. Misc. Pointers… • Watch spelling – there is no excuse for errors. • Don’t repeat lists of activities. • Don’t let mom or dad or anyone else write the essay. • Think small – anecdotes and rich details work. • Be free with format – the traditional five-paragraph essay may not be the most appropriate to use. • Don’t write about writing, SATs or the college process. • Accentuate the positive – even in a painful experience. • Don’t be intentionally provocative, and try not to state opinions about controversial subjects.

  37. Final thoughts… • Application essays are the best way to help admissions officers get to know who you are beyond grades and test scores. Make the most of the opportunity by starting now and spending the time to write thoughtful, revealing stories. • Don’t be afraid; be confident. Have the guts to tell the stories you want to tell. Write something that makes you proud when you read it. If you do, admissions officers will probably enjoy your stories.

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