Saturday, March 21, 2020
3 Ways to Write a Great Personal Statement for College!
3 Ways to Write a Great Personal Statement for College! (This article has been updated to reflect the new 650-word limit for the Common Application) The New York Times has been rife this season with articles about the college application essay.à The Common Applicationââ¬â¢s newly reinstated 650-word guideline is the topic of much conversation, as are general themes and strategies for the personal statement. It is now early November.à Some early application deadlines have come and gone, and November 15 deadlines are around the corner.à Is your high school senior still stuck or struggling with his or her personal statement? Many people, not just college applicants, have a hard time writing about themselves.à Yet thatââ¬â¢s exactly what you need to do when writing a personal statement. à No matter how much you might not like it, your personal statement is about you.à Thereââ¬â¢s really no way around it. Today I will provide some assistance and resources to help any college applicant to get those 650 words written. 1.à Relax!à Have fun! ââ¬Å"Itââ¬â¢s all about loosening up,â⬠à says a California college professor in Crafting an Application Essay That ââ¬ËPopsââ¬â¢, a New York Times article which reported on the recommendations of 5,000 admissions officers and counselors who gathered at the latest NACAC conference.à I couldnââ¬â¢t agree more. To help students have fun with their personal statements, Stanford University has come up with an interesting twist:à They ask applicants to write a letter to their future freshman roommates. Here are some samples, quoted in the article, of how students approached the essay: ââ¬Å"If you want to borrow my music, just ask. If you want to borrow my underwear, just take them.â⬠ââ¬Å"I eat ice cream with a fork, and I drink orange juice right after I brush my teeth just for the sour taste.â⬠ââ¬Å"If you have anything other than a Dodgers poster on the wall, I will tear it down.â⬠Note that all these lines are written in the first person ââ¬â unfortunately to some, a required element of writing about yourself.à And note that all the lines are unique.à Itââ¬â¢s unlikely that two applicants would have written the same thing. Hereââ¬â¢s the key to writing a great essay:à Write something no one else could have written. If that sounds like a daunting task, loosen up!à Take a cue from Stanfordââ¬â¢s essay question, no matter what topic you choose to write about.à All you have to do is tell stories about yourself. 2. How NOT to Start your College Application Essay One common pitfall students fall into is trying to write an essay about their reasons for applying to school, instead of simply telling a story.à One of my recent clients started her essay to graduate school with, ââ¬Å"I am applying to the XX school for several reasons.â⬠à I coached her to simply start telling her story.à This approach made the project a lot easier, and made her essay a lot more interesting! Hereââ¬â¢s the start of an essay that meets this requirement: When I went to Fall Out Boyââ¬â¢s Chicago radio show, there was the comment from the drummer, ââ¬Å"The girl from New York is here.â⬠à When I fought my way to the front of the crowd in Florida, there was the bassistââ¬â¢s point of his finger at me as he mouthed one of my favorite lyrics: ââ¬Å"I still hate you.â⬠This opening line works because it tells a story no one else could tell.à It brings us into a world unique to the applicant.à And it sets us up to think something interesting is going to happen in this essay.à The reader is compelled to read the next line. Contrast this to an alternate version of the essay that might have read, ââ¬Å"Music is one of my passions, and because of that I attend a lot of rock concerts.à My favorite band is Fall Out Boy.â⬠You might laugh, but version two is the way many college essays read.à Or, to avoid boring the committee, applicants swing the other way:à ââ¬Å"Raindrops heated by the flashing lights above, falling abundantly and without end, singeing my hair, my skin, my eyesâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ Hereââ¬â¢s a tip:à If you are not a brilliant creative writer, just stick to the facts.à They will set you free. 3. Doing it in 650 Words The Common Application now sets a 650-word limit for a college application essay.à The more you stick to a story ââ¬â a story that is directly linked to the point you want to make in your essay ââ¬â the easier it will be to stay within that limit and to knock the socks off the admissions committee! The New York Timesââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å"The Choiceâ⬠blog provides spot-on advice for how to stay succinct in Advice on Whittling Your Admissions Essay.à Read this article immediately if you are over the limit and unsure of how to cut your writing down to size! You might also gain some breathing room from Matt Flegenheimerââ¬â¢s October 28, 2011 article, College Application Essay as Haiku?à For Some, 500 Words Arenââ¬â¢t Enough. Need Help with your Personal Statement for College? If youââ¬â¢re still stuck, panicked, or unsure, consider getting some help.à The Essay Expertââ¬â¢s Ivy-educated consultants are skilled in working with students to craft essays that say more than you might even imagine can be said in 650 words.à Just try us!
Wednesday, March 4, 2020
Fall Leaf Colors by Tree Species
Fall Leaf Colors by Tree Species Certain broadleaf trees can be uniquely identified by their brilliant fall leaf color. In some cases, a trees common name is derived from its primary autumn leaf colorà (such as red maple and yellow poplar). The most common leaf colors of fall are red, yellow, and orange. Some tree species can express several of these colors simultaneously as the season progresses. How Fall Leaf Color Develops All leaves start out in summer as green. This is because of the presence of a group of green pigments known as chlorophyll. When these green pigments are abundant in the leafs cells during the growing season, they mask the color of any other pigments that may be present in the leaf. But with autumn comes the destruction of chlorophyll. This demise of the green pigments allows other, previously masked colors to come forward. Those unmasked fall colors quickly become markers for individual deciduous tree species. Trees With Red Leaves Red is produced by warm, sunny fall days and cool fall nights. Leftover food in the leaf is transformed into the color red through anthocyanin pigments. These red pigments also color cranberries, red apples, blueberries, cherries, strawberries, and plums. Some maples,à sweetgum, and oaks have red fall leaves. Dogwoods, black tupelo trees, sourwood trees, persimmons, and some sassafras trees also have red leaves. Trees With Yellow and Orange Shades Chlorophyll is destroyed with the onset of autumnal conditions, which reveals the orange and yellow leaf colors, or carotenoid pigments. Deep orange is a combination of the red and yellow color-making process. These yellow and orange pigments also color carrots, corn, canaries, and daffodils, as well as egg yolks, rutabagas, buttercups, and bananas. Hickory, ash, some maples, the yellow poplar (tulip tree), some oaks (white, chestnut, bear), some sassafras, some sweetgum, beech, birch, and sycamore trees have yellow leaves in the fall.
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