favoritearticlesinc.com favoritearticlesinc.com
   Index >> About Us >> Privacy >> Terms of Use >> Add Url >> Submit Article
Search:   
Free links exchange
 
   

Drink & Food

   

Computers & Networking

   

Policies & Law

   

Property & Estate

   

Education & Learning

   

Investment & Finance

   

Health & Hygiene

   

Careers & Employment

   

Automotive

   

Self Help

   

Technology & Science

   

Art & Creative

   

Recreation & Entertainment

   

Business & Commerce

   

Lifestyle & Fashion

   

Healthcare & Medicine

   

Issues & News

   

Travel & Vacation

   

Malls & Shopping

   

Family & Home

   

Games & Play

   

Adventure & Sports

   

People & Society

   

Teens & Kids

 

Index –› Education & Learning –› College List
 

The Application Essay

 

Excerpt
The following is an excerpt from the book The Ivey Guide to Law School Admissions
by Anna Ivey
Published by Harcourt; April 2005;$14.00US; 0-15-602979-0
Copyright ? 2006 Anna Ivey

The Application Essay

Whether you're submitting a personal statement, a statement of purpose, or a diversity essay, make sure to follow these rules:

Rule #1: Edit and Proofread, Then Proofread Again Your grammar, spelling, and punctuation must be flawless. When in doubt, pullout those old standbys The Chicago Manual of Style and Strunk & White. If grammar, spelling, and punctuation aren't your strong points, enlist a friend to help (and give you a tutorial, while you're at it). There's no excuse for a college graduate to mess this up. And beware the spell-check trap -- it won't catch "right" when you should have written "write," and it won't catch your "commitment to pubic service." (You laugh, but I saw that typo as a law review editor.) Always have a second pair of eyes proofread your essays before you send them off.

Rule #2: Nothing Cutesy Anything cutesy or gimmicky will make admissions officers groan. Stay away from the following:

Essays in the form of poetry
Essays in the form of a legal brief ("For all the reasons cited above, the admissions committee should admit Petitioner to Slamdunk Law School.")
Essays in the form of an obituary ("Tracy Johnson died the most respected jurist of her time.")
Essays in the form of an interview
Crayons, construction paper, perfume, or illustrated essays, no matter how sophisticated
Rule #3: No Legalisms You're not a lawyer yet, so your use of legal concepts or terminology will most likely demonstrate that you have no idea what you're talking about, not to mention the fact that legal writing is considered god-awful by the rest of the world, including admissions officers. Many applicants, for example, refer to a company or a person violating someone's right to free speech, when, in fact, the First Amendment applies only to government restrictions on speech. And by all means, steer clear of anything in Latin.

Rule #4: Show, Don't Tell Back up any general statements with examples and anecdotes. If you write, "The student presidency taught me that leadership means more than delegating," tell us how you learned that lesson. What were the conflicts and problems you faced? If you write, "I have excellent time-management skills," back up that statement by pointing out that you graduated in the top 10 percent of an engineering program that 40 percent of engineering freshmen drop.

Rule #5: Respect Page Limits and Other Minutiae If a school gives you a page or word limit, abide by it. And follow the spirit of the rule as well as the letter -- don't get too sneaky with fonts, margins, and line spacing. Admissions officers won't cut you any slack if your essay comes in under the page limit but makes them go cross-eyed because the font or line spacing is so small. If a school doesn't specify a length, a good rule of thumb is two to three pages, double-spaced, in eleven-point Times New Roman, with one-inch margins all around. When in doubt, shorter is better than longer. As an admissions officer buddy of mine likes to say: "The vast, vast, vast majority of just-out-of-college applicants (almost all applicants, really) are not interesting enough to fill six pages. Show me that you understand my time is valuable, and show me that you understand how to pick out what's really important."

Make sure to put your name and Social Security number in a header and page numbers in a footer, just in case your file goes splat and has to be reassembled. Also, identify in the header what essay question you're answering, if you're given more than one option or are submitting more than one essay ("Personal Statement," "Optional Essay #3," etc.). By the way, you don't need to give your essay a title like "Morris 405" or "Jorge." I added those titles in the appendix essays so that I could refer to them easily in this chapter.

Don't submit pages that are crumpled, stained, or smell like pot smoke -- most admissions officers really aren't looking for that contact high. Really, your essay shouldn't smell like any kind of smoke.

And finally, if you're getting too close to your material and think you're losing perspective, turn to the sample essays in the appendix to keep your big-picture objective in mind. Can you see how much more engaging and revealing the good ones are?

Copyright ? 2006 Anna Ivey

Author
Anna Ivey, JD, served as dean of admissions at the University of Chicago Law School. She now runs Anna Ivey Admissions Counseling, a counseling firm for college, business school, and law school applicants. She divides her time between Boston and Orlando. Please visit her website at http://www.annaivey.com.

Author: Anna Ivey
 
Author Bio:
Anna Ivey, JD, served as dean of admissions at the University of Chicago Law School. She now runs Anna Ivey Admissions Counseling, a counseling firm for college, business school, and law school applicants. She divides her time between Boston and Orlando. Please visit her website at http://www.annaivey.com
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Q & A From On the Road with the Breakthrough Strategies Teacher Professional Development Workshop
 
Water - the Perfect Fuel
 
DOE Biological and Environmental Research Helps Fuel "Biology Century'
 
What You Know Can Save You
 
Are you going to struggle with Math this year?
 
The Public And Social Benefits Of A College Degree
 
International Large-Scale Sequencing Meeting
 
Teacher Tips: Presenting Your Lesson to ADHD Students
 
Book Review: Seth Godin - All Marketers Are Liars
 
Live In The Moment - Book Review
 
 
 
 
 

Plant Genome Significant to Agriculture, Energy, Human Health

For the first time, scientists have sequenced the complete genetic material of a plant, that of the ... - Aaron Hall
 

Why Learn Swedish?

Aside from the possibility of living in Sweden or Finland (where Swedish is an official second langu ... - Philip Nicosia
 

Online College Degree: How Do You Know if it is a Legitimate Program

The best thing to do before signing up with any online university is to look around and do your rese ... - Gerri Stone
 
 

Fossils: A Teaching Tool That Promotes Enthusiastic Learning

Use fossils as a teaching tool to promote enthusiastic classroom learning in earth scienceand math, ... - Claudia Mann
 

Can You Get A Bachelor Degree Online At A University?

There are lots of options for studying on the internet. Most major colleges offer web courses and de ... - N Haffner
 
 
   Index >> Privacy >> Terms of Use
© 2008 www.favoritearticlesinc.com All Rights Reserved.