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Effective Essays
Many students applying for scholarships perform well in school, participate in numerous extracurricular activities, and work. In many cases, scholarship essay questions are designed to get better acquainted with you in a personal statement, aside from the information you provided on your resume and academic transcript. Help us get to know what makes you brilliant, in the sense that a scholarship committee can see what makes you “shine”--what makes you thrive, what makes you passionate about something.
Effective essays successfully do the following:Give insight about who you are. They are reflective. They show us who you are, how you think, how you decide to act (or not act) upon something, how you approach a problem or dilemma, how you interact with your environment.Avoid the writing doldrums –you have something to write about! “My life would be much more interesting if the content of my life story made people laugh and cry.” Not true. By showing us who you are vs. telling us what you’ve done, we will be interested in reflections about yourself.Some questions to help you brainstorm: Consider your life story – Can you identify an influential event, person, and creative art piece, etc, that has significance in your life? What impact did/does that significant event, person, etc., have on you? Are there special circumstances that you feel would be important for the scholarship committee to know? What is your family history? Fill in the gaps between the generations; how is your family history related to your story? What is distinctive about you and/or your family? What does your story illustrate about you? Track the evolution of your ideas and actions -- Why do you have a particular opinion or point of view on an issue? Why are you persuaded by that viewpoint versus alternative viewpoints? What made you decide to take a particular course of action? What are you curious about and why? What compelled you to join the organizations and participate in the activities listed on your resume? What and why do you contribute to these activities? Take a Survey – Ask your family, friends, teachers, coaches, mentors to describe qualities that they observe in you. Ask them to relay an experience or story that demonstrates these qualities. Find inspiration by reading autobiographies -- Write your own two page autobiography to generate a starting draft of your scholarship essay responses. Show how well you organize and express your ideas.
“Being chosen as captain of the soccer team made me more mature.” An alternative description: What I learned from being the captain of the soccer team was how to motivate and encourage others effectively when situations seemed hopeless. This opening sentence is more specific, but it needs further elaboration to learn how the writer motivated and encouraged team members. Here’s another example of two descriptions: Generic Statement: My mom is the most influential person in my life. She is supportive in everything I do and she is a great role model. I try to emulate her and follow her teachings in everything I pursue. How is this mom supportive? How is she a great role model? Is there a specific example of her mother’s qualities? Show vs. tell. Here’s an alternative description : I want to raise my children like my mother did. My mom never used a guilt trip to teach me wrong from right. When I told her in 4th grade, “I didn’t need to practice “Silent Night” for my organ playing debut at Midnight Mass she merely asked, “Have you thought this idea through?” I thought it was a brilliant plan to keep me “fresh”, so I said, “yes,” without hesitation. My nerves got the best of me that night, and I started on the wrong note, stumbling through the finger patterns of the song, and completely played the piece off key. I couldn’t help but see teens in the audience shaking in their seats, trying to stifle their laughs. After I played the final note, I ran/walked to sit next to my mom, who smiled at me and enfolded me in a huge pew hug. Afterwards, I was despondent; yet, my mother kept beaming with pride that I completed the full song in front of 300 people. She never let on if she was embarrassed or if she was embarrassed for me. She didn’t need to remind me that practice would have made the experience less harrowing. But she knew how to use the power of shame. When I came out of our bathroom one morning, my raven hair bleached to white and my brown pupils sheered over by violet contacts, my mom’s face went pale and immediately flushed to maroon. She paced between our narrow hall way five times, and simply asked, “Why have you erased your grandmother’s features from you? Are you so ashamed of your heritage?” I felt the disappointment of generations with her words and her curt delivery stunned me. I then cried and couldn’t believe what I had done to myself. Before I could run back into the bathroom to correct my appearance, she latched onto the edge of my shirt and forced me downstairs where a family reunion was gathering to celebrate my grandmother’s 75th birthday. My new look attracted questioning stares and joke fodder from my family. With each embarrassing explanation and glances of shame, my mother made me accountable for my actions and taught me the impact of my decision and behavior that day. As in this episode, my mom passed down effective life-learning teaching methods that I hope I can emulate with equal patience and wisdom for my own children. Show how much effort you put into the application process.Crafting a good essay is a process –
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