Admissions Essays are the Best Way to Make a Splash
in the Applicant Pool
By
the time you apply to college, it's too late to
significantly raise your GPA or class rank. Your SAT
score is pretty much set as well. It's also too late
to significantly change the number or range of your
extracurricular activities. This leaves you with
only two ways to add impact to your
application packet.
One way is to submit outstanding
letters of reference. However, while you
can choose your letter writers, you have no control
over what they actually say about you, or how
persuasively they say it.
Happily, the remaining way
to add impact to your application is completely
under your control: your college admissions essays.
Your essays give you your best chance to stand out
from the sea of applicants with similar grades
and SAT scores.
The Current College
Admissions Outlook
As
reported on our sister site,
collegeadmissioninfo.com, the 2004-2005 college
admission year was exceptionally competitive. 2005-2006 is certain
to be just as tough. In fact,
college admissions are bound to remain
competitive over the coming years. The population of
U.S. high school seniors continues to increase as
the children of baby boomers reach their late teens.
At the same time, an increasingly sophisticated
economy means that more and more high school
graduates plan to go to college, and more of them are
setting their sights on elite schools. Top colleges are
not, however, increasing their class sizes. This means
that a growing pool of high school graduates is competing for a fixed number of freshman class
slots. At the same time, awareness of admissions competition is causing
applicants to hedge their bets by applying to more schools. The
National Association for College Admission
Counseling reported that almost a third of 2003
college applicants applied to at least
seven different schools. We will not be surprised if
the total number of this year’s college applications
actually exceeds the record numbers
set last year.
Essays play an
important role in helping admissions officers sort
out the mass of application material they receive from all these applicants. A
good essay can answer questions raised by incomplete
or seemingly conflicting information from an
application form. More importantly, a good essay
conveys a sense of the applicant as an intelligent,
motivated and interesting person, someone the college wants to have as a member of its community.
We Can Help
In our pages you’ll find many tips
and pieces of advice that can help you write that
kind of essay. We will also help you understand the different aspects
of college admissions essays and personal
statements. We
have links to pages with other useful information for college applicants,
too -- on SAT preparation, on financial aid, and on
other admissions issues.
We welcome your feedback and certainly hope you
enjoy this site and find it useful.
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