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Essay Help Course(1)

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楼主
发表于 2003-6-20 12:42:00 | 只看该作者

Essay Help Course(1)


Importance of the Essay
How would you feel if getting into the business school of your choice had nothing to do with your work experience, grades and test scores? Imagine for a moment that the only thing an admissions committee would ever see is your essay. The committee would have to make a decision that will change the rest of your life based on only a few pages of essays.
Since applicants with similar work experiences, undergraduate GPAs, and test scores are often compared to each other, the essay is often the crucial factor in business school admissions decisions. Simply put, you must have an excellent essay. Without the essay, a selection committee would have to arbitrarily choose between two (or even two hundred) candidates with almost identical profiles. As one admissions officer noted:
I personally remember times at Babson when everything else in the file was mediocre. However, because the essays were so good, we called the person in for an interview to get another look. - Former Babson Officer
Understanding the importance of the essays is a necessary first step toward perfecting your business school application. We are here to help you get through the rest of the process. Please choose a link in the left hand menu.

Assess Your Audience
Have you ever tried to imagine what happens to your essay after you submit your application? For many applicants, this part of the process is a mystery, but it does not have to be.
First, your file (application, transcripts, test scores, recommendations, and essays) will be read in its entirety by at least one, and usually by two or three, members of the admissions committee. This means that your application will never be summarily dismissed based on any one factor such as your G.P.A. or G.M.A.T. scores. It also means that no matter how you scored-no matter how well or how badly-your essays will still receive some attention. An admissions officer stated,
I personally can remember times at Babson when everything else in the file was mediocre. However, because the essays were so good, we called the person in for an interview to get another look.
Admissions officers spend anywhere from ten to forty minutes looking at a given set of essays. One officer explained,
Essays are a huge part of the business school application. They are VERY important, so most counselors spend a lot of time reading and evaluating them. We might read twenty sets in a day, including what we take home at night.
Twenty sets translates into over 100 individual essays per day. This is why, when asked for their number one pet peeve, admissions officers answer, "Boring essays!" and "Essays that all sound the same!" When asked what their number one piece of advice for applicants is, they answer, "Put yourself into your essays, and make them interesting!"
Once an application has been given a first, quick read, it will go into one of three basic piles: accept, reject, and unsure. A committee member stated,
Usually, two kinds of files go through easily and aren't read by more than two people: the truly outstanding because the file is so brilliant and the truly outstanding because the file is so poor.
If your application is in either the accept or reject categories, it will generally be read by one additional person for confirmation. If the application is rated acceptable, the second reader is usually the dean. If the second reader agrees with the first, the process is complete. All other applications-and this is usually upwards of 75 percent-fall into the unsure pile. That pile then gets subdivided into probably accept, probably reject, and unsure-and so on and so forth.
The longer your application remains in the unsure pile, the more similar your numbers and background will be to the others in the pile. When competition gets tough, your essays become virtually the only tool you have to make your background and experience come alive, distinguishing you from the rest of the homogenous crowd.
Eight Key Attributes
During that first, quick review of your file (transcripts, G.M.A.T. scores, application, recommendations, and essays), every admissions committee uses essentially the same questions:
Will this person succeed academically at this school?
Will he or she contribute and add diversity to the class?
How does this person compare with the other applicants?
When they read your essays specifically, the committee members look for much more than this. The eight items unanimously cited as "most important in a successful essay" by our admissions advisors follow. Still, be careful how you implement this advice in your own essay. You must not lose sight of the ultimate goal of the essays: to convince the admissions committee that you belong at their business school.
1. Givens
No matter which specific question you are answering, you need to accomplish a few fundamental goals when you write. Admissions committees do not specifically look for these basics because they are expected and should be transparent in good writing. These include:
Have I answered the question asked?
Have I made clear, precise, understandable points?
Is my writing natural, concise, and error free?
When you have finished an essay set, or all the essays required for one school, step back and take a look at them as a whole. Make sure that you have done all of the following in at least one of the essays:
Demonstrated your motivation
Targeted the school
Expressed at least one to three qualities, strengths, or attributes that make you stand out from the crowd
Presented at least one solid and succinct argument for why the committee should accept you
2. Writing/Communication Skills
The essays also function to showcase your language abilities and writing skills. One of our admissions advisors noted,
Your essay doesn't need to peg you as a future author or scholar but as a future leader in management. That said, the ability to communicate ideas and to present them skillfully is essential to success in the business profession, and good writing stems from good overall communication skills.
Again, admissions committees seek good writing skills-they expect them. A beautifully written set of essays will not get you admitted to business school, but a poorly written set could easily keep you out.
3. A Real Person
What the committee really seeks in the essays is simple. More than any specific background, characteristic, or skill, they want to see a person. Admissions staff are adamant about wanting to feel that they know the human being behind the numbers. One explained,
We are searching for some intangible quality in the application that no number could ever reveal. We hope to find it in the essay. Never squander the chance to tell us who you are in the essay. It helps us to reassure ourselves that the process is human and that what we do for a living matters to another human being.
Knowing this, it might not surprise you to learn that the number one piece of advice from admissions officers and business students regarding the essays is almost always the same. Although they expressed it in many different ways (be honest, be sincere, be unique, be personal, and so on) the advice is always the same-be yourself! An admissions officer explained,
Business applicants get so caught up in wanting to seem like something: a leader, mature, or, God forbid, "businesslike," that they forget to be something. We never get to know them.
4. A Personal Approach
The only way to let the admissions committee see you as an individual is to make your essays personal. When you do this, your essays will automatically be more interesting and engaging. They will help you to stand out from the hundreds of others the committee will be reviewing that week. One committee member said,
Personalize your essays as much as possible-generic essays are not only boring to read, they're a waste of time. They don't tell you anything about the applicant that helps you get to know that person better.
This Sloan applicant wrote an intensely personal essay and did it well. Nevertheless, a good personal essay does not have to be touchy feely as this applicant demonstrates.
5. Details, Details, Details
Each and every point that you make needs to be backed up by specific instances, examples, and scenarios from your experience. These details make your story special, unique, and interesting. Most of the sample essays in this course use detail sufficiently.
6. Something Different/Unique/Interesting/Funny
An admissions committee member explained,
Business applicants should not be afraid to go out on a limb and be themselves-even when that means incorporating humor or being a little bit controversial. They are so often concerned with making the correct impression that they edit out anything that would help their essay stand out. They submit a "safe" essay that is, in reality, sterile, monotonous, and deadly boring.
Still, what makes you different, should be your experiences and you should not take a gimmicky approach to your essays. In general, you should not attempt humor, but your essay should be interesting.
7. Honesty
Admissions officers will not tolerate hype. Do not try to create a larger-than-life impression of yourself or of someone you think the committee would accept. Let your stories relate your qualities.
Honesty can also help your personality to come through in your essay. For example, in this essay, the applicant admits that she was, "Never much of a student," and indulged in the "occasional prima donna fit." While we caution against this risky approach in general, this applicant did a decent job and was admitted to Sloan.
Drawing attention to negatives is not a requirement of truthfulness -- you can be honest and still be completely positive about yourself and your qualifications. If you do call attention-in any way-to your drawbacks, you must be confident that you have addressed these weaknesses with finesse and have not weakened your stance. In other words, those former weaknesses should now be strengths.
8. A Story
Admissions officers also look for essays they can enjoy reading. Some have explained,
Make sure that your essay is readable. Don't make us work. Give your essay momentum-make sure the parts work together and move to a point, carrying the reader along.
Humor is a powerful tool, so use it wisely. Gimmicks are a big mistake, and a sarcastic or flippant tone will often offend. Real humor, inventiveness, and dry wit, though, are always in good taste.
Ultimately, in all essays you are telling a story about an accomplishment, your reasons for attending business school, etc. You can go further by writing your entire essay in the form of a story as this Kellogg applicant did. This HBS applicant also relied heavily on story. Heavy reliance on story is a risky approach because most people are not good writers and because it can undermine the seriousness with which you approach the application. After all, you will not be admitted simply for being a good storyteller.
These risky essays are the exception: this applicant successfully used a more standard approach. If your essays flow well, follow an internal logic, and contain interesting experiences, they will be a success.
To be continued...
沙发
发表于 2003-6-20 18:14:00 | 只看该作者
chipmunk bro,

这好像是哪个editing service的网站上贴的把?
板凳
 楼主| 发表于 2003-6-23 11:22:00 | 只看该作者
Yeah, that will give the new appliants some general guidance.
地板
发表于 2003-6-25 06:02:00 | 只看该作者
Thanks, chipmunk.  It is very helpful to new appliants like me.
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