|
Related
Articles
Brainstorming
Topics
Selecting
an Essay Topic
Writing
the Essay
|
You
must now confront the underlying problem of the admissions
essay. You must now consider topics that will allow you to
synthesize your important personal characteristics and experiences
into a coherent whole while simultaneously addressing your
desire to attend a specific institution.
The following
guidelines will help you get to started. With any luck, one
or two topics, with small changes, will allow you to answer
application questions for 5-7 different colleges, although
admissions officers do appreciate essays that provide convincing
evidence of how an applicant will fit into a particular academic
environment. You should at least have read the college's webpage,
admissions catalog, and have an understanding of the institution's
strengths.
Consider
the following questions before proceeding:
- Have
you selected a topic that describes something of personal
importance in your life, with which you can use vivid personal
experiences as supporting details?
- Is
your topic a gimmick? That is, do you plan to write your
essay in iambic pentameter or make it funny. You should
be very, very careful if you are planning to do this. We
recommend strongly that you do not do this. Almost always,
this is done poorly and is not appreciated by the admissions
committee. Nothing is worse than not laughing or not being
amused at something that was written to be funny or amusing.
- Will
your topic only repeat information listed elsewhere on your
application? If so, pick a new topic. Dont mention
GPAs or standardized test scores in your essay.
- Can
you offer vivid supporting paragraphs to your essay topic?
If you cannot easily think of supporting paragraphs with
concrete examples, you should probably choose a different
essay topic.
- Can
you fully answer the question asked of you? Can you address
and elaborate on all points within the specified word limit,
or will you end up writing a poor summary of something that
might be interesting as a report or research paper? If you
plan on writing something technical for college admissions,
make sure you truly can back up your interest in a topic
and are not merely throwing around big scientific words.
Unless you convince the reader that you actually have the
life experiences to back up your interest in neurobiology,
the reader will assume you are trying to impress him/her
with shallow tactics. Also, be sure you can write to admissions
officers and that you are not writing over their heads.
- Can
you keep the reader's interest from the first word. The
entire essay must be interesting, considering admissions
officers will probably only spend a few minutes reading
each essay.
- Is
your topic overdone? To ascertain this, peruse through old
essays. EssayEdge's 100 free essays can help you do this.
However, most topics are overdone, and this is not a bad
thing. A unique or convincing answer to a classic topic
can pay off big.
- Will
your topic turnoff a large number of people? If you write
on how everyone should worship your God, how wrong or right
abortion is, or how you think the Republican or Democratic
Party is evil, you will not get into the college of your
choice. The only thing worse than not writing a memorable
essay is writing an essay that will be remembered negatively.
Stay away from specific religions, political doctrines,
or controversial opinions. You can still write an essay
about Nietzsche's influence on your life, but express understanding
that not all intelligent people will agree with Nietzsche's
claims. Emphasize instead Nietzsche's influence on your
life, and not why you think he was wrong or right in his
claims.
- In
this vein, if you are presenting a topic that is controversial,
you must acknowledge counter arguments without sounding
arrogant.
- Will
an admissions officer remember your topic after a day of
reading hundreds of essays? What will the officer remember
about your topic? What will the officer remember about you?
What will your lasting impression be?
After
evaluating your essay topics with the above criteria and asking
for the free opinions of EssayEdge editors, of your teachers
or colleagues, and of your friends, you should have at least
1-2 interesting essay topics. Consider the following guidelines
below.
- If
you are planning on writing an essay on how you survived
poverty in Russia, your mother's suicide, your father's
kidnapping, or your immigration to America from Asia, you
should be careful that your main goal is to address your
own personal qualities. Just because something sad or horrible
has happened to you does not mean that you will be a good
college or graduate school student. You don't want to be
remembered as the pathetic applicant. You want to be remembered
as the applicant who showed impressive qualities under difficult
circumstances. It is for this reason that essays relating
to this topic are considered among the best. Unless you
only use the horrible experience as a lens with which to
magnify your own personal characteristics, you will not
write a good essay. Graduate and professional school applicants
should generally steer clear of this topic altogether unless
you can argue that your experience will make you a better
businessman, doctor, lawyer, or scholar.
- Essays
should fit in well with the rest of a candidate's application,
explaining the unexplained and steering clear of that which
is already obvious. For example, if you have a 4.0 GPA and
a 1500 SAT, no one doubts your ability to do the academic
work and addressing this topic would be ridiculous. However,
if you have an 850 SAT and a 3.9 GPA or a 1450 SAT and a
2.5 GPA, you would be wise to incorporate in your essay
an explanation for the apparent contradiction. For example,
perhaps you were hospitalized or family concerns prevented
your dedication to academics; you would want to mention
this in your essay. However, do not make your essay one
giant excuse. Simply give a quick, convincing explanation
within the framework of your larger essay.
- "Diversity"
is the biggest buzzword of the 1990's. Every college, professional
school, or graduate school wants to increase diversity.
For this reason, so many applicants are tempted to declare
what makes them diverse. However, simply saying you are
a black, lesbian female will not impress admissions officers
in the least. While an essay incorporating this information
would probably be your best topic idea, you must finesse
the issue by addressing your own personal qualities and
how you overcame stigma, dealt with social ostracism, etc.
If you are a rich student from Beverly Hills whose father
is an engineer and whose mother is a lawyer, but you happen
to be a minority, an essay about how you dealt with adversity
would be unwise. You must demonstrate vividly your personal
qualities, interests, motivations, etc. Address specifically
how your diversity will contribute to the realm of campus
opinion, the academic environment, and social life.
- Don't
mention weaknesses unless you absolutely need to explain
them away. You want to make a positive first impression,
and telling an admissions officer anything about drinking,
drugs, partying, etc. undermines your goal. EssayEdge editors
have read more essays on ADD (Attention Deficit Disorder)
than we would ever have imagined. Why admit to weakness
when you can instead showcase your strengths?
- Be
honest, but not for honesty's sake. Unless you are a truly
excellent writer, your best, most passionate writing will
be about events that actually occurred. While you might
be tempted to invent hardship, it is completely unnecessary.
Write an essay about your life that demonstrates your personality.
back
to the top
|