graduate 版 (精华区)
发信人: threeinone (逃.....), 信区: Oversea
标 题: 怎样写Statement(5)
发信站: 听涛站 (Sat Oct 23 19:55:59 1999), 转信
Structuring Your Personal Statement
You're sitting in front of the computer screen. Your word processing prog
ram is open, but the screen is blank. You've been staring at it for what s
eems like an eternity. You don't know where to start or where to go. What
are they looking for? How are
you supposed to write it?
The cause of your frustration? An application essay. You can write applic
ation essays in many different ways, but the human interest story provides
an effective model for writing your essay and easing your frustration. Yo
u read human interest stories
in newspapers and magazines all the time. They are popular and effective
because they engage the reader's interest, persuade him or her of the writ
er's point of view, and sell
periodicals. Similarly, an application essay or personal statement must e
ngage the admissions staff, convince them of your viewpoint, and sell you.
Human interest stories typically have the following structure: lead, thes
is, body, conclusion. Using that structure for your personal statement pro
vides you with a framework around
which to build your essay.
Begin with a lead, also called a hook. A lead is usually a brief anecdote
, a question, a startling statistic or quote, or a gripping description of
a scene. The lead has a very
important job: hooking the reader. Any writer will tell you that the firs
t few lines of an article, ad, or letter determine the success of that pie
ce. And the same is true for your
essay. Put your most interesting tidbit at the beginning.
Now that you have the reader's attention, tell him/her the point of your
essay--the thesis. The thesis can be a one-sentence summary or road map of
your personal statement. It
typically follows the lead and introduces the body, the longest section o
f your paper.
The body provides evidence to support your thesis. In writing the body av
oid generalities and platitudes; give concrete examples from your life. Wr
iting about specific experiences
has a number of advantages:
Specifics keep the reader's attention more effectively than generalities.
Drawing on situations in your life will distinguish you from other applic
ants who superficially may be very similar to you.
All good things must end; so too must your essay end with a conclusion. T
he conclusion ties up the essay by briefly referring back to the lead, res
tating the thesis, and if
relevant, mentioning some long term goals.
Lead, thesis, body, conclusion. That is the structure of a successful hum
an interest story and personal statement. After all, the effective persona
l statement really tells a human
interest story--a human interest story about you.
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