Some schools require you to write a series of
short essays rather than submit a single personal statement. If this is the
case for you, then you should consider the impact that your essay set will
have as a whole. You need to balance the structure and content of the set as
much as you do within each essay individually. Yet, with these challenges
come several advantages. More essays means more opportunity to sell
yourself. Multiple essays give you ample space to do justice to all the
different areas of your life, avoiding the pitfall of cramming too many
points into one essay. And, you can take more risks being creative in one
essay, while providing other traditional essays, thus appealing to readers
with different tastes.
When you are required to answer multiple
questions, there is often a strict word limit for each answer. But even
though each essay is short, each one requires as much attention as long
essays. The best way to approach a short essay is to write a regular,
full-length essay and then cut it down. Let yourself write as long as you
feel inspired, without time limits or length constraints. After you have the
ideas on paper, go back and look for the pieces of gold buried under all of
the words. Begin by reducing the introduction and the conclusion from one
paragraph to one sentence each. Choose only the clearest, most direct parts.
Some short-answer questions ask for lists of
activities, jobs, or honors. There are two approaches to answering such a
question: the list and the paragraph. For each, provide complete information
about the items you are listing, following the same format for each list.
Include the activity, your involvement, and the time commitment. Make it
clear that your activities have involved responsibility and effort. And
don't worry about the number of activities you list -- when it comes to
quality, less is often more.
We have stressed in numerous places
throughout this course the importance of proofing your essays and getting
feedback. While most applicants are stringent about taking this step after
writing individual essays, some forget to apply the same advice to their
essay set as a whole. Before you send in your application, assess the
impression that your essays will make when taken together.
- Are my main points evident?
- Are there redundancies or apparent
contradictions between essays?
- Is a coherent image presented
throughout the essays and does each essay contribute to the same
image?
- Is a consistent voice and style used
throughout the essays? Does it sound as though they were written by
the same person?
- Does the essay set support the
impression that is made in the rest of the application?
For examples of short essays, click
here.
Essays included from Georgetown, Duke, Dartmouth, and Harvard.
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