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Advice from admissions representatives
Lee Cunningham
Director of Admissions and Aid
The University of Chicago Graduate School of Business
The mistake people make most often is not to look
at what the questions are asking. Some people prepare generic statements because
they're applying to more than one school and it's a lot of work to do a personal
essay for each school. On the other hand, generic statements detract from the
applicant when we realize that we're one of six schools and the applicant is
saying the same thing to each and every school despite the fact that there are
critical differences between the kinds of schools they may be applying to. They
don't take the time. They underestimate the kind of attentions that is paid to
these essays. Take a look at what the essay asks and deal with those issues
articulately and honestly.
At least 2, and sometimes 3, people read each
essay. I read them to make the final decision. Our process works so that each
person who reads the application does a written evaluation of what he or she has
read and the written evaluations are not seen by the other reader.
Steven DeKrey
Director of Admissions and Financial Aid
J. L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management (Northwestern University)
We're looking for a well-written, detailed essay
that responds directly to the question. The questions are about extracurricular
activities, motivation, challenges, commitment to the school that kind of thing.
We see a variety and that's fine. Our approach is very individualized. The way
the applicant devises the answer, determines the length, develops the response,
is all part of the answer. The level of effort applicants put into essays varies
considerably, which sends messages to the admissions committee as well.
Over-involved, elaborate essays send one message, while very brief and
superficial essays send another message.
Trying to second-guess what we are looking for is
a common mistake--which we can sense.
We can tell when applicants use answers to other
schools' questions for our essays; we're sensitive to this. Poorly written
essays are a bad reflection on the applicant.
Don't over-elaborate; we're reading a lot of
these kinds of essays. Also, don't be too brief or superficial. We like to have
major ideas presented well.
Michael D. Rappaport
Assistant Dean of Admissions
UCLA School of Law
Applicants should take the time to look at what
the law school is asking them to write about. At UCLA, we say, "we know you have
lots of extracurricular activities--we want to know how you differ, what makes
you unique? What can you bring to the first year class that's going to make you
distinctive from the other 99 people who are already there?" The fact that you
were active in your fraternity or sorority is really not going to do it. What
we're looking for is somebody who, in their personal statement, stands out as
being so unusual, so diverse, that they're extremely attractive as a law student
for the first-year class. Maybe what's going to make them distinctive is the
fact they spent six months living in a log cabin in Alaska. You try to give the
law school some justification for admitting you. With a lot of people, there's
nothing that's going to make them distinctive. If that's the case, they've got
to recognize that, indeed, the essay is not going to make that much difference
here at UCLA.
We're also asking if there's any reason their
LSAT or grades are not predictive. You'd be amazed at the number of people who
completely ignore this--they don't take advantage of the opportunity.
Most law schools operate fairly similarly.
There's a certain group of applicants whose grades and LSAT scores are so high
that the presumption is that the applicants are going to be admitted unless they
do something terribly stupid to keep themselves out. I have seen applicants
whose personal statement has done that, but it's extremely rare. At the other
extreme is another group of applicants who, no matter what they write, are not
going to get in.
The applicant has to realize, first of all, where
he or she stands. If you have a straight-A grade point average and a perfect
LSAT score, you don't have to spend a lot of time worrying about your personal
statement. On the other hand, if you know you're in the borderline area, that's
where the personal statement becomes very, very important.
The applicant should take the time to read the
application to see what the schools are asking for. Sometimes the school will
ask for a general description of why you want to go to law school, or why they
should admit you, something of that nature. In such case you can be fairly sure
that the school is just interested in the essay to see how well you write. So
what you say isn't as important as how you say it. On the other hand, some
schools are more specific--UCLA being a very good example of that.
Make sure the essay is grammatically and
technically correct and well written. Avoid sloppy essays, coffee stained
essays, or ones that are handwritten so you can't read them. You'd be amazed at
what we get!
Beth O'Neil
Director of Admissions and Financial Aid
University of California at Berkeley School of Law (Boalt Hall)
We're trying to gauge the potential for a
student's success in law school, and we determine that, principally, on the
basis of what the student has done in the past. The personal statement carries
the responsibility of presenting the student's life experiences.
Applicants make a mistake by doing a lot of
speculation about what they're going to do in the future rather than telling us
about what they've done in the past. It is our job to speculate, and we are
experienced at that.
Applicants also tend to state and not evaluate.
They give a recitation of their experience but no evaluation of what effect that
particular experience head on them, no assessment of what certain experiences or
honors meant.
They also fail to explain errors or weaknesses in
their background. Even though we might wish to admit a student, sometimes we
can't in view of a weakness that they haven't made any effort to explain. For
example, perhaps they haven't told us that they were ill on the day that they
took the LSAT or had an automobile accident on the way. Such things are
legitimate reasons for poor performance. I mean, we understand that life is
tough sometimes. We need to know what happened, for example, to cause a sudden
drop in the GPA.
Another mistake is that everyone tries to make
himself or herself the perfect law school applicant who, of course, does not
exist and is not nearly as interesting as a real human being.
Between l and 5 people read each application.
Dr. Daniel R. Alonso
Associate Dean for Admissions
Cornell University Medical College
We look for some originality because nine out of
ten essays leave you with a big yawn. "I like science, I like to help people and
that's why I want to be a doctor." The common, uninteresting, and unoriginal
statement is one that recounts the applicant's academic pursuits and basically
repeats what is elsewhere in the application. You look for something different,
something that will pique your interest and provide I some very unique insight
that will make you pay some l notice to this person who is among so many other
qualified applicants. If you're screening 5,500 applications over a four- or
six-month period, you want to see something that's really interesting.
I would simply say: Do it yourself, be careful,
edit it, go through as many drafts as necessary. And more important than
anything: be yourself. really show your personality. Tell us why you are unique,
why we should admit you. The premise is that 9 out of 10 people who apply to
medical school are very qualified. Don't under any circumstances insert
handwritten work or an unfinished piece of writing. Do a professional job. I
would consider it a mistake to attempt to cram in too much information, too many
words. Use the space as judiciously as possible. Don't submit additional pages
or use only 1/20th of the space provided.
John Herweg
Chairman, Committee on Admissions
Washington University School of Medicine
We are looking for a clear statement that
indicates that the applicant can use the English language in a meaningful and
effective fashion. We frankly look at spelling as well as typing (for errors
both in grammar and composition). Most applicants use the statement to indicate
their motivation for medicine, the duration of that motivation, extracurricular
activities, and work experience. So those are some of the general things we are
looking for in the Personal Comments section.
We also want applicants to personalize the
statement, to tell us something about themselves that they think is worthy of
sharing with us, something that makes them unique, different, and the type of
medical student and future physician that we're all looking for. What they have
done in working with individuals--whether it's serving as a checker or bagger at
a grocery store or working with handicapped individuals or tutoring inner city
kids--that shows they can relate to people and have they done it in an effective
fashion? What the applicant should do in all respects is to depict why he or she
is a unique individual and should be sought after. Of course, if they start
every sentence on a whole page with "I," it gets to be a little bit too much.
Next:
Some Successful Examples
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