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ISBn13: 9781932662405
Tanabe, gen S.
50 successful Ivy League application essays / gen and Kelly Tanabe.
p. cm.
ISBn 978-1-932662-40-5 (alk. paper)
1. College applications--United States. 2. Private universities and colleges--United States-
-Admission. I. Tanabe, Kelly Y. II. Title. III. Title: Fifty successful Ivy League application
essays.
LB2351.52.U6T36 2009
378.1’616--dc22
2009026129
Tabl e of C onTen Ts
v
vi 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
ThIS BooK woULd NoT hAVE BEEN possible without the gener-
ous contributions of the Ivy League students who agreed to share their
admission essays and advice in order to help others who hope to follow
in their footsteps.
We would also like to thank the admissions officers for spending
the time to impart some of their knowledge to our readers: Dr. Michele
Hernandez, former assistant director of admissions at Dartmouth
College and Eva Ostrum, former assistant director of undergraduate
admissions at Yale University.
We would like to express our appreciation to Chenxing Han for as-
sisting with the analysis of the students’ essays.
Special thanks to the counselors: Mary Pinedo, Whitney High School,
Cerritos, CA; renee Brown, Brooklyn Technical High School, Brooklyn,
nY; Tricia Bryan, John Marshall High School, Los Angeles, CA; Yamila
Dielacher, El Camino High School, South San Francisco, CA; Stephanie
gabbard, Champion High School, Warren, OH; Linda Kimmel, Irvington
High School, Fremont, CA; Lynda Mcgee, Downtown Magnets High
School, Los Angeles, CA; Ann Meyer, Highlands High School, Fort
Thomas, KY; Mary O’reilly, Josephinum Academy, Chicago, IL; Lois
rossi, Uniontown Area High School, Uniontown, PA; Chris Ward, Lake
Park High School, roselle, IL; Carla Zielinski, Perkiomen valley High
School, Collegeville, PA and Carnegie vanguard High School.
1
25 Essay Mist ak Es
tha t Gu ar ant EE
Fail ur E
For EVErY opEN SLoT AT AN Ivy League college, there are 10 to 12
eager applicants vying for it–and you’re one of them. On paper, most
applicants appear very similar. All are well qualified academically with
high grades and test scores and solid involvement in extracurricular
activities.
Imagine the admissions officer who must choose which of these
well-deserving applications to accept. How will he or she make the
decision? Often, it’s the essay. The essay is the one chance for you to
share a piece of yourself that is not encapsulated in the dry numbers
and scores of the application. It is your opportunity to demonstrate
why you’d be a perfect fit at the college, how you’d contribute to the
student body, and why the college should accept you over those other
11 applicants.
The essay is also the one part of your application that you have com-
plete control over. You can write it the night before it’s due and turn in a
1
2 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
piece that is half-baked, or you can spend a little time on the essay and
turn in one that can set you apart from the competition.
The truth is that you don’t have to be a good writer to create a
successful admissions essay. nor do you need to have survived a life
changing event or won a noble Prize. Writing a successful admissions
essay for an Ivy League college is actually much simpler.
The secret is that any topic can be a winner but it all depends on
your approach. If you spend the time to analyze your subject and can
convey that quality of thought that is unique to you through words,
you’ll have a powerful essay. It doesn’t have to be beautifully written or
crafted as the next great American novel. At its core the essay is not a
“writing test.” It’s a “thinking test.” So you do need to spend the time to
make sure that your thoughts are conveyed correctly on paper. It may
not be pretty writing but it has to be clear.
So how do you do this? While we can give you tips and pointers
(which is what you’ll read in the analysis section following every essay)
the best method is to learn by example. You need to see what a suc-
cessful end product looks like. While there is no single way to produce
a winning essay, as you will read, there are some traits that successful
essays share. You’ll learn what these are by reading the examples in this
book as well as the interviews with admissions officers. Then you can
write a successful essay that is based on your own unique experiences,
world view, way of thinking, and personal style.
Why are admissions essays so important to getting into Ivy League
colleges? At their most basic level, essays help admissions officers to
understand who you are. While grades, test scores, and academic per-
formance can give the admissions officers an estimate on how prepared
you are to handle the academic rigors of college, the essay offers the
only way they can judge how your background, talents, experience,
and personal strengths come together to make you the best candidate
for their school. For you, the applicant, the admissions essays offer the
best opportunity to share who you are beyond the dry stats of your
academic record. It’s kind of amazing actually. You start with a blank
sheet of paper and through careful selection, analysis, and writing, you
create a picture of yourself that impresses the admissions officers and
makes them want to have you attend their school.
Chapter 1: 25 Essay Mistakes that Guarantee Failure 3
write about their moms or dads. A parent can be one of the most
influential persons in a student’s life, and it makes sense that this
would be the topic of many students’ essays. So don’t rule out
mom or dad, but do rule out writing about mom or dad in the
way that every other person will write. Explain how your dad
made banana pancakes every morning and what that taught you
about family, or how your mom almost got into a fight with an-
other mom who made a racist comment. Make a common topic
uncommon by personalizing it.
21. Forcing humor. You’ve probably seen at least one sitcom on Tv
or one monologue by Conan O’Brien or David Letterman with
a joke that fell flat. Maybe you groaned at the Tv or gave it an
un-amused expression. Keep in mind that the jokes on Tv are
written by professional writers who earn large salaries to be fun-
ny. now, remember that the great majority of us are not headed
down this career path. What this means is that you shouldn’t
force humor into your essay. If you’re a funny writer, then by all
means, inject some humor. Just be sure to ask an adult or two
to read the essay to see if they agree with you that it is funny. If
you’re not humorous, then it’s okay. You don’t need to force it.
22. Writing the essay the night before it’s due. Almost every stu-
dent has done it—waited until the last minute to write a paper
or do a project. Sometimes it comes out all right, but sometimes
not so much. It is not wise to procrastinate when it comes to
writing a college admissions essay. It takes time. Even if you are
able to write an essay the night before it’s due, it’s still better not
to. The best essays marinate. Their authors write, take some time
away from it and then return to it later with a fresh mind.
23. Failing the thumb test. As you are writing your essay, place your
thumb over your name. Could you put another name at the top
because it could be an essay written by many other students? Or
is the essay personal to you so that basically yours is the only
name that could be at the top? If you fail the thumb test, it’s time
to rethink the topic or your approach to it. You want your essay
to be unique to you.
24. Forgetting to proofread. Some students put the wrong college
name in their essays, a mistake that could easily be avoided by
10 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
so that you can formulate in your mind how you can best approach
your topic.
We’ve analyzed each of the essays too. You’ll see that even essays
written by students accepted at the premier colleges in the country
are not perfect and have room for improvement. You’ll also see the
strengths of the essays so that you can make sure to incorporate similar
characteristics.
By learning through example, you can create the most compelling
and persuasive essay possible. You’ll know what not to do, you’ll un-
derstand what the admissions officers want and, perhaps most impor-
tantly, you’ll be inspired to write your own successful Ivy League ad-
missions essay.
2
ivy lEaGuE
adMissi ons oFFicEr
Q&a
DR. MICHELE HERNANDEz
Former Assistant Director of Admissions, Dartmouth College
Author of A is for Admission
A: First, admissions officers collect all the different parts of the ap-
plication. Then, all the pieces are scanned and date stamped. It’s all
done electronically like an electronic file cabinet. Once everything is
assembled, admissions officers start to read them one by one (now they
often do them on the computer instead of in hard copy).
Unlike many colleges, Dartmouth doesn’t sort the applications at
first into regional categories or schools. They are placed into complete-
ly random groups that correspond with a particular admissions officer’s
group of states.
13
14 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
A: Some students simply don’t spend any time on their essays. A lot
of bright students think, “I’m number one so I don’t need to take any
time on the application.” The result is that it looks rushed. You want
to show some reflection, that you thought about your application. You
don’t want to have the appearance that you spent only five minutes on
it. Some of the more obvious errors have been not spell checking or
putting the wrong school down, but more often, it’s that the essays are
not interesting.
Another mistake is the admissions officer doesn’t learn anything. If
I read an essay and think, “That’s nice but I don’t know anything more
about this student,” you’ve failed. You have to share something interest-
ing about yourself. remember that it’s not just one essay, but there are
5 to 6 smaller essays. It’s not as limited as you think.
A: Introductions are nice, but the whole essay has to work. It has to
grab you from the beginning like a newspaper lead. It has to make you
want to keep going.
A: One student wrote about shooting a squirrel. I’m sure his guidance
counselor told him to not write about that. However, the essay was
about growing up to be a man, a meditation on what it means to grow
up. While the topic may have seemed like the plot of a bad play, it was
Chapter 2: Ivy League Admissions Officer Q&A 15
a slice of life essay that told a lot about his family and about him. The
topic doesn’t matter as much as what you do with it.
A: You need some feedback because what you think is funny may not be
to other people. You don’t want it to be over-edited where everything’s
perfect, and you don’t need a professional editor. The essay could be a
little unpolished, but I would have a friend or parent read it for diction
and flow. You don’t want an essay in which you can tell that an English
teacher went through it 45 times.
A: It all depends on where you are. If you are very strong academically,
the admissions officers are verifying whether you’re the genius every-
one says you are. For you, the essay doesn’t matter as much. Also, if
you’re in the low end, it doesn’t matter as much. It matters more for the
students in the middle of the pool for that college. If we use the scale of
1 to 9, the essay matters a lot for the students who are rated 5, 6, or 7.
The essays have made a difference for students, but there haven’t been
16 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
many students who have moved from the rejection to the accepted pile
based solely on the essays.
A: It’s not just one essay that counts. It’s the whole application. It doesn’t
matter how good your essays are if your teachers say you’re not inter-
esting. It has to do with how all the information (teacher recs, essays,
school support, transcript) fits together. Your essays have to be in line
with the rest of your application. The admissions officers are going to
be suspicious if you have a brilliant essay but it doesn’t match the rest
of your application. Everything has to be in the same vein.
Also, if you’ve had extraordinary circumstances, you should write
about them in a note. If you weren’t involved in activities, explain that
you were taking care of your autistic sister. You want admissions of-
ficers to know about anything unusual
Dr. Michele Hernandez is the former assistant director of admissions at
Dartmouth College and the author of A is for Admission, The Middle School
Years, Don’t Worry You’ll Get In and Acing the College Application. She is
with the president and founder of Hernandez College Consulting (www.
hernandezcollegeconsulting.com).
EVA OSTRUM
Former Assistant Director of Undergraduate Admissions, Yale University
Author of The Thinking Parent’s Guide to College Admissions
Founder of High School Futures
A: Some schools ask students to write about a role model such as ask-
ing what single person they would have lunch with. The biggest mis-
take that students make is that they spend more time writing about
the other person than themselves. I’d suggest starting from your own
vantage point. How have you been affected? From my own life, if I were
writing an essay, one person I’ve always admired is nelson Mandela.
Every day on the first day of school I read an inspiring quote from
nelson Mandela. One day a boy looked at me and said, reacting to the
quote, “Miss, who are you?” Focus on how your own actions and out-
Chapter 2: Ivy League Admissions Officer Q&A 17
look have changed as a result of that person whether you’ve met them
face to face or only know their writing.
Another really common mistake is that students feel they have to
write something that makes them look different. When you’re apply-
ing to a highly selective college, there’s nothing you can do that looks
different based on the actions themselves. Every admissions officer has
seen someone who does what you do. Instead, focus on what makes
you you. That’s really what admissions officers want to know. Don’t
tie yourself in knots to look exotic. It doesn’t matter what your essay’s
about. It’s how you write about it.
A: You look at their critical reading score. If they have a low critical
reading and writing score and an essay that looks like it’s written by a
college professor or if the essay sounds like a very sophisticated person
wrote it and the recommendations don’t present the same image, these
can be a red flag. For many years, there’s been an understanding that
students in a certain income bracket get coached. If you do nothing,
you’re putting yourself at risk. remember though it’s fine to have some-
one read your essay and give feedback on how it flows. It’s not fine to
have someone read your essay and do line by line edits. That would
present you in a way that doesn’t line up.
A: There was one essay that a student wrote about when his father first
took him for karate lessons. The first sentence was about how he had
been a complete failure at every other sport. There was another one by
a girl who wrote about how she was a comic book artist. She was ap-
plying to art school, and some schools don’t consider it to be a serious
art form. She grabbed me from the very beginning because her passion
was so clear. The essays that grab me give me some kind of hook in the
beginning to reel me in.
A: One Yale applicant wrote about how every day on her way to school
she passed a building where the pigeons rested. You would think that’s
18 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
a ridiculous topic, but it was so well written and engaging. It was about
something mundane, but it really grabbed my attention.
It’s important to tell a good story. Think about the stories you listen
to in your life that your relatives tell or your friends tell. If they’re well
told, that’s what catches your attention.
A: Topics that deal with personal tragedy are difficult. Frequently the
students are not far enough away from the event to write about it with
any distance. They’re not really telling a story. The essay is either a fac-
tual narration or therapeutic. I would be very wary of writing about a
really serious, heavy topic. It can be done, but I think that the rule of
thumb should be if the topic is still sensitive enough that you might
wince a little bit, tear up, or cringe, maybe it’s not a good topic. If you
can talk about the event and maybe even have a sense of humor about
it, that’s a sign you’re far enough away from it. Of course that doesn’t
mean you have to write about it with humor.
A: There was at least one student where the essay was very significant.
I fell in love with this student because of his essay, and I wanted him
to go to Yale. I thought he would add so much to the school, but one
of his SAT scores was weak. It’s so competitive that if there’s one chink
in the armor, that can end it. I could’ve passed over him and no one
would’ve objected, but I made such a case for this student. I fought for
him, and he got in. However, it can’t just be on the basis of the essay
alone. His teachers also really loved him and thought he walked on
water. There has to be some resonance between the essay, the teachers
and the classes.
it would be like to sit in a room and have a conversation with the per-
son. The essay should make the admissions officers feel like they’ve had
a conversation with you and want to learn more. It’s not more esoteric
than that.
Eva Ostrum worked as an assistant director of undergraduate admissions at
Yale University and wrote The Thinking Parent’s Guide to College Admissions.
She also founded and runs High School Futures, an organization that works
on educational reform in urban high schools (www.hsfutures.org).
20 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
3
21
22 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
would be that wafting, wondrous bacon smell that would draw dear,
sweet Sally abruptly from her slumber—long before an alarm clock has
the chance to pierce the air.
Oh, bacon: what a marvelous, glorious thing! I live for those heart-
stoppingly good strips of succulence, so crispy and crunchy, so packed
with perfection. The thought of having a plate of bacon every day, per-
haps every school day, sends me into sheer waves of ecstasy!
To be sure, many others would also wax poetic about this lovely
breakfast food. But precious few would share this same zeal for learn-
ing. I, however, can smugly decree that I do regard both very highly. I
brightly waken every morning to the mellifluous joy that sounds from
my alarm clock, a huge smile plastered on my face, and the yearning
to learn in my heart.
When I board my school bus Monday through Friday, it is still pitch
black outside. Busmates will groan about how even the day has not
yet dragged itself out of bed; I only chuckle through their thirty-min-
ute rant fest as we chug down the freeway. Opting to be part of a far-
away Magnet school, after all, has its benefits. My peers may still not
look forward to waking up earlier, but when we are all together in
a classroom, we take on the “bacon mentality.” I have the opportu-
nity to choose from a wealth of diverse classes, and love arriving to
school each day with the prospect of having a new Spanish History
lesson—taught to me in Spanish, for a change. Teachers, driven by
the enthusiasm of their Magnet students, are inspired to create new
classes for advanced students, including those who have completed AP
Spanish Literature and are still eager to learn more, or those who want
to learn about a specific aspect of a subject—we now have a Middle
Eastern History class. not to be outdone, the post-AP exam period
of my English Language class included an intensive literature study,
where we laughed at good ol’ Yossarian in Catch-22, and developed a
strong attachment to Jay gatsby. I’d like to think that The Great Gatsby’s
pursuit of Daisy is not unlike my own pursuit of bacon. I’ve gobbled up
new knowledge rapidly, hankering after it like any elusive bacon strip,
and happily digesting any new bits of information.
But six classes a year are simply not enough to satisfy my hunger
for knowledge. Just as I eat bacon all three meals of the day (when pos-
sible), I attempt to learn all days of the week. rather than make another
trip to some lackluster movie theatre on the weekend, I dedicate my
Chapter 3: Academic Passion 23
AnAlysis
Mariam’s essay “Bacon” uses lively language and plenty of humor
to tell a story that highlights her eagerness to go to school. Her writing
is casual and funny, and it conveys in a personal and genuine way her
enthusiastic attitude. “Bacon” reminds us that topics do not have to be
serious to be sincere.
The metaphor of bacon is a very memorable one in image, smell,
texture, and taste. Mariam capitalizes on these features in her beauti-
ful—and mouthwatering!—descriptors of a Saturday morning breakfast
of eggs. With a touch of humor and a hint of parody, she writes, “Oh,
bacon: what a marvelous, glorious thing! I live for those heartstopping-
ly good strips of succulence, so crispy and crunchy, so packed with
perfection. The thought of having a plate of bacon every day, perhaps
every school day, sends me into sheer waves of ecstasy!”
Just when this celebration of bacon begins to appear over-the-top,
and readers are beginning to worry that Mariam swapped a food mag-
azine piece with her college admissions essay, she links the succulent
bacon metaphor with school: “To be sure, many others would also wax
poetic about this lovely breakfast food. But precious few would share
this same zeal for learning.” Though Mariam takes a risk in waxing po-
etic over bacon, she does so with carefully calculated dramatic effect
that ultimately pays off. We are convinced that the “yearning to learn” is
deeply engrained in our bacon-lover and early-riser author.
Mariam’s narrative also shows us the sacrifices she makes for at-
tending a Magnet school far from home. Her use of the phrase “ba-
con mentality” is original and creative. Mariam’s descriptions of her
classes are specific enough to prevent them from reading like a list.
Rather, she demonstrates the depth of her commitment in her classes
by citing specific details like Yossarian in Catch-22. Mariam’s essay
demonstrates how she is able to fit impressive details of her life into a
narrative framework, a strategy that can avoid the pitfall of sounding
like bragging. Mariam follows the “show, don’t tell” mantra when she
mentions the Magnet school in the context of her long early-morning
bus ride, and in celebrating her Spanish history class, which is impres-
sively taught in Spanish.
24 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
At the end of the essay, the bacon metaphor may seem overdone
to some readers, as Mariam has “gobbled up new knowledge rapidly,
hankering after it like any elusive bacon strip” and has expressed a
desire for “fresh, new crisp” learning to satisfy her “hunger for knowl-
edge.” She might have reduced the number of mentions of bacon and
hunger. However, Mariam’s essay ultimately stands out for its origi-
nality and unpredictable connections, like linking The Great Gatsby
to—what else?—bacon.
AnAlysis
In this essay, the author begins by stating that she has “always
been a math-science girl.” The honest confession that follows, “I sighed
and sulked through classes on US History and French,” underscores
this point. She goes on to provide specific examples of her “fascina-
tion and persistence” regarding math, even causing a chuckle when
she asks why math is useful to learn and receives an answer that
doesn’t “do math justice”—being able to count change at the grocery
store. This is comical, providing an excellent contrast to algebra with
its “foreign symbols, formulas and letters.” The rendering of math as a
“foreign” language shows us the fascination the author has with math
and its applications. Her praise of math and vision for the potential of
what to others might merely be a boring academic subject is memo-
rable in its admiring tone: she notes the “creativity and thinking out of
the box” math requires, and believes its “beauty lies in its simplicity.”
The references to specific math theorems, equations, and postulates
further strengthen the author’s assertion that she is intrigued by all the
applications that math has for the real world, whether they are ordi-
nary or academic. The strength of this author’s examples lies in their
accessibility to a general audience. She summarizes this nicely when
she writes, “I draw graphs and try to make shapes from functions for
fun, count to 10 to calm down, and save money at the store, too.” The
reference to saving money at the store nicely ties back to the original
anecdote about math being undervalued in society.
26 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
whEN I wAS FoUr YEArS oLd, I fell in love. It was not a transient
love-one that stayed by my side during the good times and vanished
during the bad-but rather a love so deep that few would understand.
It was not the love for a person, but the love for a language. It was the
love for Spanish.
Having been born and raised behind the Iron Curtain, in a country
where Western influence was limited and the official and only language
was romanian, I was on my own. Everyone around me, especially my
family, had trouble understanding what could possibly draw me to
such a foreign and, in their opinion, unattractive language. But as they
say, love is blind, and the truth of the matter is that I wasn’t even sure
what it was exactly that made Spanish so fascinating to me. The only
thing I knew was that I absolutely adored hearing its perfectly articu-
lated phrases, and trying to make sense of its sweet and tender words:
serenades to my innocent ear.
Spanish entered through my door on June 16th, 1994, when a man
from the local cable company came to connect our living room to the
Chapter 3: Academic Passion 27
AnAlysis
Oana’s essay opens with a fresh perspective on a theme that is of-
ten overused and can easily become hackneyed—love. The first sen-
tence surprises us: “When I was four years old, I fell in love.” Her young
age piques our curiosity, and she holds our suspense until the last
sentence. Like many of the excellent essays in this book, the strength
of this essay lies in its originality. Oana describes a love for the lan-
guage of Spanish. Learning Spanish in itself may not seem particularly
exceptional, but Oana’s background as a Romanian provides an un-
usual and memorable juxtaposition to her Spanish-speaking abilities.
In her descriptions, Oana playfully and effectively uses terms relat-
ing to love. For example, she notes that “love is blind” and personifies
Spanish as it “entered through [her] door on June 16th, 1994.” The
sentence, “for six years, destiny kept us apart” continues to perpetuate
a personified sense of Spanish, the language, being a “lover” to Oana.
These examples show the power of artfully expanding on a metaphor
to provide richness and coherence to one’s essays.
Oana’s love for Spanish’s sweet serenades contrasts with her
family’s feelings towards this foreign and “unattractive” language. She
Chapter 3: Academic Passion 29
language is but a cracked kettle on which we play music for the bears to
dance, while we dream of making the stars weep. The experiences we
have never fit within the too-close confines of language; but I will try
anyway. The classes that I attended were nothing like the classes that I
would take normally. nowhere else would the teachers encourage six-
teen and seventeen year-olds to look for sexual imagery in Shakespeare,
and then find even more than they did, without the exercise being
sordid instead of literary. I attended classes named anything from Dirty
Words: Clean Thoughts (a class on Profanity; the only course in which
the use of profane or vulgar language was prohibited) to Teenage Female
Angst: Beyond Holden Caulfield to Buffy the Vampire Slayer. All of them
opened my mind to a brand-new way of looking at the world, and pro-
cessing information. Thanks to the varying education that I received, I
know that valuable information about life is not only in the “classics,”
but even appears in seemingly mindless and trashy zombie films.
While I learned a lot in the classrooms of gHP, I feel that most of
my growth occurred outside of the classroom. I met the sort of people
who will change the world, who will go forth into the world and, with-
out making a big name, will do the things that make the world a better
place. My best friends there were people that I would never have met;
people I would never have known existed; people that I can now not
imagine life without. One was a math major, an excellent athlete in
every sport, and an accomplished singer; the running joke was that the
only thing that he was bad at was failing. The other was a phenomenal
writer, always ready to play an endearing trick on somebody, and the
former’s girl-friend. Both of them were fairly conservative Christians,
and yet totally accepting of me for whom I was, despite any of my
clashes with their beliefs. I did not limit myself though, and made it al-
most a mission to find and talk to as many of the people there, because
I was sure that each and every one of them would have an interesting
perspective on things. Once I was walking back from playing Frisbee,
and was stopped to discuss what the ethical framework for life ought
to be; just for fun. The experience that I had there has undeniably
changed me forever.
Chapter 3: Academic Passion 31
AnAlysis
Aditya’s description of his six weeks at GHP make use of plen-
ty of diverse and lively examples to demonstrate how this “was the
best thing that ever happened” to him. The one-paragraph format that
Aditya chooses can be difficult on the readers, since long paragraphs
can be quite daunting. Aditya might have chosen to create a new para-
graph with the sentence, “The experiences we have never fit within the
too-close confines of language; but I will try anyway.” Another logical
place to begin a new paragraph would be with the sentence, “While I
learned a lot in the classrooms of GHP, I feel that most of my growth
occurred outside of the classroom.” In general, multiple paragraphs
help organize an essay to focus the content and provide flow to overall
paper structure.
While the sentence, “It was the best thing that has ever happened
to me,” seems simplistic, Aditya quickly redeems himself from the cli-
ché with a sentence that shows his mastery of the English language.
He writes, “That is something of a hackneyed phrase; people cheapen
the extremes of language by constantly using superlatives for every-
day occurrences, making it harder and harder to actually describe
the few subtle and transcendent moments of life.” His reference to
Madame Bovary demonstrates Aditya’s ability to draw connections
between ideas and thereby support his own assertions. The examples
Aditya references are particularly strong because he relates them to
one another, instead of simply rattling off a long list. It can be challeng-
ing to present a diversity of interests while also holding a core focus.
Aditya’s center appears in the form of literary and cultural analysis of
many sources, from classics to “trashy zombie films.” The reference
to Madame Bovary also shows us that Aditya truly learned to open
his “mind to a brand-new way of looking at the world, and processing
information.”
Had Aditya ended his essay here, we would have learned about
his cognitive development but missed out on the social and emotional
aspects of his GHP experience. The descriptions of the close friend-
ships Aditya formed with a diverse group of people further strengthen
our understanding of how Aditya grew to be an open-minded person.
Aditya devotes quite a large amount of space to talking about the math
major who couldn’t fail and his writer girlfriend; he might have sum-
marized this information more concisely in order to explain his own
relationships to them. By writing that they totally accepted him, Aditya
removes his personal agency; he could have reworded the essay to
explain how he became more accepting of them.
The last sentence of the essay, “The experience that I had there
has undeniably changed me forever,” is somewhat abrupt. With limited
32 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
Many students choose to write about a transforming summer edu-
cation experience. In “Raising the Bar,” the author describes the gru-
eling, rigorous academic program at MIT in which she participated.
Foreshadowing the difficulties that lay ahead, the author writes, “We
were told that our confidence would be shattered, our minds blown
away, and our lives changed forever. Still somewhat unmoved, we
were not afraid.” This fearless attitude gives way to “crying over prob-
lem sets.” The essay aptly describes the intensity of the program by
explaining how busy the days were. She found herself “finishing a book
per week, zooming through subjects once foreign to [her], and con-
structing a semi-autonomous robot from drill motors all at the same
time.” While these tasks might seem like a list, they are necessary to
account for the author sleeping only four hours a night. When describ-
ing an event with a scope that is quite broad—in this case, six weeks
long—it is always helpful to hone in on a few highlights. Three is typi-
cally a good number of examples. This essay might be stronger had
the author explained more about the robot construction, since this is an
unusual activity that piques the reader’s curiosity. As a major project,
the robot may have merited more space in the essay. The author could
have spent less time listing the classes she took, especially if she
could list this elsewhere in the application. What is more compelling
than any course title is her observation that “the work was so intense
34 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
that when [she] entered school in the fall [she] enrolled in second year
Calculus, and maintained the only A in AP Physics, having no physics
experience prior to MITES.” This demonstrates the extent to which her
learning was accelerated because of the MITES experience.
At the end of the third paragraph, the author gives a long list of
activities in which she is involved. It is unclear what some of the activi-
ties entail—for instance, the ACE mentoring team, or the GEAR-UP
Mentoring program. These examples might be more appropriate in
a resume or another section of the admissions essay. Choosing one
main activity or event and elaborating on it is a strategy to help keep an
essay focused. While it is tempting to list all of our accomplishments, it
is more memorable to focus on just one, or a few. Ultimately, the author
brings us back to her main point, that MITES was a pivotal point in her
academic career. Having a main thesis helps tie together an essay. In
this paper, the author summarizes by saying, “The motivation and en-
couragement I gained from MITES has fueled my academic pursuits
and pushed me to raise the bar.” When editing your own writing, ask
yourself if your various examples, sentences, and paragraphs serve
the main point. This helps create a coherent, tightly-woven essay.
4
Boo ks/litEratur E
“Rosencrantz and Guildenstern”
Fareez Giga
Stanford University
35
36 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
messages of the play to our own chaotic existences. This brilliant liter-
ary work captures the essence of a tragedy within a comedy, something
only few authors can accomplish. It is able to provide profound, theo-
retical ideas that have long been questioned into a comic perspective,
and yet keep its integrity.
AnAlysis
In just one short paragraph, Fareez engages with the literary work
“Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead” in a lively and creative man-
ner. Early on, the essay pinpoints the “oxymoron” of the tragicomedy
form, giving us a theme of contrasts that runs throughout the short
essay response. Fareez demonstrates his familiarity with the work by
highlighting a specific scene from the play. This is more effective than
a summary; considering the limited space provided, a summary would
take up too much space and could also seem too general. The subse-
quent analysis of this scene shows that Fareez is an active interpreter
of the literary work, as well as an avid reader of other plays, as shown
by the analogy he draws to Hamlet. Through the description and analy-
sis of one specific scene, Fareez addresses a broader issue: the “intel-
lectually exciting” aspects of literary work that the essay prompt asks
him to explain.
The reference to “life’s unanswerable questions” implies that these
are the types of deep philosophical inquiries that Fareez himself par-
ticipates in. He might have chosen to be more explicit about this, there-
by linking his analysis of the play more directly to his own life. This
would help address the “explain why” aspect of the essay question in
greater detail. It is always important to address all parts of an essay
question to show that you have read the prompt mindfully and given it
careful consideration.
This essay relates to Fareez’s other essay, “A Dramatic Coup”
(Chapter 16), in that it describes his passion for drama and theater.
Some students choose to write on completely different topics for
their various essays, especially if they have a diversity of interests.
However, it is also appropriate to focus on a particular passion or inter-
est, especially if you plan on pursuing this in college or are applying to
a special program in a school and wish to demonstrate your dedica-
tion to a specific field such as science, music, or service. Writing more
than one essay on a specific passion/interest runs the risk of sounding
redundant, so this approach may be more useful for shorter essays. In
Fareez’s case, he was able to demonstrate in “A Dramatic Coup” that
he is a dedicated actor, and also show that he is able to approach the-
ater from a more intellectual and philosophical angle in “Rosencrantz
and Guildenstern.” Read together, these two essays give us the sense
Chapter 4: Books/Literature 37
car EEr
“Puzzles”
Anonymous
Harvard University
39
40 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
The writer’s essay takes a tangible theme—puzzles—and uses it
in a variety of ways to demonstrate her interests, passions, and values.
Her writing is engaging because it plays with many different senses of
the word “puzzles,” so the theme doesn’t feel tired or redundant. She
begins her essay with a reference to a 3,000-piece jigsaw puzzle that
her grandmother gave her. Her subsequent use of humor (“To most,
this would not sound very exciting—it would be almost as bad as a
shirt saying ‘My grandparents went to India, and all they bought me
was this stupid shirt’”) effectively draws readers in. This statement also
sets up an expectation that most people would not be thrilled by this
gift but that the writer is not “most people.” We can see that she is de-
voted to completing the impressively large puzzle by her mention that
she even sacrificed sleep in pursuit of her goal.
In her second paragraph, the writer links this pastime to her in-
tellectual interests. She makes a clear and compelling comparison
between puzzles and scientific research, noting that both require a
“logical and levelheaded approach.” She demonstrates self-knowledge
when she notes that this “suits [her] skills and temperament.” This
analysis is very explicit and may seem to violate the “show, don’t tell”
rule; but in her case, it helps us make the connection between puzzles
and science—a connection that might not be immediately clear—and
does so with precisely the “logical and levelheaded approach” that she
describes. It is important to remember that rules like “show, don’t tell”
are meant as guidelines but can be flexibly interpreted. It is best not to
sacrifice one’s personal voice for writing “rules,” which are best thought
of as recommendations.
The beginning of the third paragraph takes us away from puzzles
but aptly illustrates her dedication to a career in scientific research.
Using an appropriate level of vocabulary, she describes her research
at a UCLA cardiology lab. This demonstrates that she can explain
complex ideas in clear and concise terms, a great strength for any re-
searcher. The laboratory provides a different context for us to see the
writer’s response to challenging problems as well as a tireless resolve
to solving any mystery.
The final paragraph nicely wraps up the essay by referencing the
3,000-piece jigsaw and her lab work to illustrate the broader theme of
solving puzzles. We can see that the writer is both proud of her work
(it is “integral”) and humble (it is “a small piece” of the atherosclerosis
puzzle), and she is eager to apply her spirit of curiosity and enthusi-
asm to her future college endeavors.
42 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
“Addressing injustices”
Mathew Griffin
Brown University
AnAlysis
This essay demonstrates Mathew’s commitment to social justice.
Rather than making justice an abstract or philosophical issue, the es-
say shows us how it is directly relevant to Mathew’s life by giving this
injustice many faces: those of his aunt, his friends Eric and Vince, as
well as the people he has met through volunteerism. While a long list
of these people probably would not be interesting to read, Mathew
has fit them into his essay as characters in stories. He does this by
keeping the personal profiles distinct (his aunt has schizophrenia, Eric
was paralyzed in a car accident, Vince is depressed). Furthermore,
the organization of this short essay helps separate the people about
whom he writes into two categories: 1) those who are close to him
and 2) those who are in the wider community. In this way, Mathew
shows the influences that are closest to home before branching out to
the bigger community. As Mathew’s essay demonstrates, writing about
one’s personal experiences is an effective way to rein in a topic as all-
encompassing as justice.
The beginning of Mathew’s essay makes a generalization. He
states, “My reasons for wanting to be a doctor are very similar to why
most people choose their career path: I want to make things fairer.”
Mathew might have started with simply: “I want to make things fairer.”
Since the essay questions specifically ask why he is interested in med-
icine, referencing all professions and careers beyond medicine broad-
ens the scope of the answer rather than narrowing it. Furthermore, it is
best to avoid sweeping generalizations in order to respect the plurality
of beliefs in the world. For instance, many people may not choose their
career paths to make things fairer; some may be motivated by money
or fame. “Things” is also a bit vague, as is the phrase “other factors”—
Mathew’s might have clarified these terms so we can have a stronger
sense of what sources of injustice he is hoping to fight.
Mathew takes advantage of the essay prompt to write about his
volunteer work at a recent hospital. His story about the grandmother
he met is heart-touching because Mathew is willing to share his per-
sonal reaction: “As I talked to her, I remembered how many times I’ve
seen pictures of my grandmother lifting me and my cousins and caring
for us, and I became overcome with emotion.” This gives us a sense of
Mathew’s deep sense of caring for others.
44 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
Shiv demonstrates motivation and drive in this essay about his
passion for research in science and technology. Many essays about
academic interests focus on schoolwork or extra-curricular activities
such as Science Clubs or math competitions. Shiv’s story deviates
from the norm by showing how “academic” interest is also a passion
in his free time—the references to Popular Science and Scientific
American illustrate this hobby. The most unique element of Shiv’s story
is his bold initiative in contacting the researchers at MUSC and CU
after reading the “Print Me a Pancreas, Please” article. Shiv writes
about his response to this article in concise, clear terms. “Having
read much about tissue engineering, I realized this “organ printing”
approach could potentially address problems of traditional tissue en-
gineering methods, such as the need to precisely place specific cell
types in 3D scaffolds.” While somewhat complex, the ease with which
he uses terminology demonstrates Shiv’s familiarity with the topic.
The second paragraph of the essay presents many small but de-
lightfully informative details that show Shiv’s determination in pursu-
ing research. We learn that he sent 50 emails to researchers, then,
undaunted by the lack of a response, called the PI and arranged a
personal meeting. He drives an astonishing 26 hours to meet the re-
searcher, and “made the ‘unpopular’ decision to miss the dance.” Shiv’s
resolve is clear: “To me, this was clearly the right choice. I was trading
a great school experience to literally get my hands into cutting-edge
medical research.” These details distinguish Shiv from his peers.
46 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
The third paragraph also provides details that show Shiv’s distinc-
tive accomplishments, including his original computer-aided designs
and science competition awards. However, these details read like a list
and could easily be included in a resume. It might be more compel-
ling to write about the meaning of an award rather than simply listing
its name, as Jason’s essay “Birthing a Business” (Chapter 14) shows.
Shiv briefly mentions the laboratory techniques he learned on his
way to achieving his award. Strong essays not only summarize the
end product (an award) but also describe the process, the means to
achieving the end.
Shiv’s essay does a nice job of combining specific references to his
research and larger, overarching goals. By presenting the story of the
“turning point” of the university research experiment, Shiv compellingly
illustrates his entrepreneurial instinct and passion for applied research
that is directed toward finding solutions to real-world problems.
still being trained in ancient ways and often hurting their patents more
than helping. I want to give back my blessings a hundred-fold and
spread better medicine. First, I want to see the health of our world as
I help it by joining Medecins Sans Frontieres as soon as I can. Only
after I help things first hand can I make a mature decision on how I
should try to help the world as a whole. I feel the experiences that I
get from my education and the experiences helping people across the
world will give me a very strong ability to know how to help to the
best of my abilities. Today I am already planning for this journey by
teaching myself foreign languages. I hope that by the time I am ready
to help people, knowing many languages will help me bond with my
patients and truly make me a doctor without borders. I plan on fighting
for health for as long as I can, and I want to help every person I can
regardless of background, money or stigma.
AnAlysis
In “Healing Beyond Borders,” Mathew makes good use of a small
amount of space to answer the two questions in the essay (“What
is your vision of a physician?” and “How do you view your role as a
future physician?”). When there is more than one specific question in
an essay, it can be tempting to answer them separately as in a sur-
vey/questionnaire; but for college essays, it is best to take advantage
of the format allotted to write a coherent piece. Mathew’s essay does
an excellent job of providing a strong thesis sentence to address both
questions in a single argument: he places healing people as his main
priority, but he also wants to “work on a much larger scale.”
Mathew goes on to explain what this “larger scale” work would
look like, giving us a vision of his role as a future physician. He writes
about his desire to research mental health issues and to become “an
advocate for public health.” He then extends the “larger scale” beyond
the U.S. to global proportions. However, rather than writing abstractly
about “the world,” which can sound idealistic but lacking in substance,
Mathew pinpoints a specific way in which he can engage in global
healthcare: Medicins Sans Frontieres. This reference demonstrates
Mathew’s research of healthcare on a worldwide scale, and the sen-
tence “Today I am already planning for this journey by teaching my-
self foreign languages” demonstrates his commitment to this goal.
Aspirations in college essays are strengthened by concrete “evidence”
that you are already making progress toward these goals. Mathew
could have mentioned the specific foreign languages he is studying to
further define those places to which he is most drawn.
48 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
“scientific sparks”
Ariela Koehler
MIT
Aunt Diane died after a five-year battle with breast cancer. It was during
my aunt’s illness that I realized I could use my natural love of science to
benefit others facing similar challenges.
I have continually pushed myself closer to this goal by excelling in
my AP science classes, studying biotechnology at UC Davis through the
COSMOS program, and competing as a member of my school’s Science
Bowl Team. This past summer, I had the opportunity to intern at the
reijo Pera Lab at Stanford University through the Stanford Institutes of
Medicine Summer research Program. During this two-month intern-
ship, I worked with human embryonic stem cells to explore the func-
tion of PrDM1, a potentially-useful gene in the creation of regenerative
medicines.
The scientific spark my parents recognized years ago has shaped my
life, and with it, I wish to shape the lives of others. I aspire to become a
biomedical researcher, a career that harnesses my long-time fascination
of science and my commitment to improve the quality of life for those
facing medical challenges. It would be a privilege to work alongside
scientists, exploring new treatments and technologies to create exciting
new options for patients and their families.
AnAlysis
Ariela fits a great deal of information about herself and her family
into her response to the essay prompt, which asks for a description
of “the world you come from” and an explanation of how “that world
shaped your dreams and aspirations.” These challenging questions re-
quire writing about outside influences as well as one’s personal goals.
Ariela does a wonderful job of focusing the essay by presenting us her
family life—mostly in the first three paragraphs—and explaining how
this nurtured a “thirst for scientific knowledge”—described in the last
three paragraphs. While she also mentions her school (AP science
classes), clubs (Science Bowl Team), and summer opportunities (an
internship at Stanford), these all fit within the context of Ariela’s fam-
ily life, particularly her parents who encouraged the “scientific spark”
they saw in their daughter. This central thesis holds the short essay
together.
The introduction to “Scientific Sparks” presents an intimate view of
Ariela’s life growing up with separated parents. Her realization that “I
was the one thing that united” her parents provides a nice segue into
the third paragraph, in which she describes her parents’ many efforts
to support her scientific interests. The specific details Ariela provides
50 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
are fun and memorable: bedtime nature field guides instead of nursery
rhymes, 3 a.m. meteor showers, owl pellet and palm tree experiments,
a lecture on quantum physics at the age of 8.
Each of the paragraphs provides a glimpse of Ariela’s life grow-
ing up. This chronological ordering is clear and effective, helping to
move the essay from past experiences to future aspirations. Ariela’s
use of turning points helps drive the narrative along. For example, she
describes the realization in first grade that her parents no longer love
each other; then she tells about her Aunt Diane’s death, which helped
her see that she “could use [her] natural love of science to benefit oth-
ers.” The subsequent examples, which are somewhat list-like, none-
theless show us ways in which Ariela has applied science to health
issues. Her experience at the Riejo Pera Lab best supports this point.
Ariela might have chosen to write more about her summer internship
at Stanford as an iconic project rather than listing so many others. For
instance, it is unclear what the COSMOS program is, though she may
have written about this elsewhere in her essay.
The end of Ariela’s essay provides an excellent, succinct summary
that directly addresses the essay questions. Through mentioning her
parents, she describes her “world,” and through stating her intention
of becoming a biomedical researcher, she shows how the two major
themes in her essay—a love for science and desire to help people—
are related.
“Researching Cancer”
Anonymous
Harvard University
I Trod ThE mUd IN ThE misty spring rain. It was Qing Ming, the
holiday in China when we honored our deceased ancestors. On the
ground of the cemetery, drenched flowers lay in my grandfather’s re-
membrance. That morning—a month before my sixth birthday—I
clung tightly to my mother’s sleeves and finally learned why he passed
away.
My grandfather had been a victim of cancer. Because the diagnosis
came too late, all treatment was futile. As my mother whispered this to
me with grief in her eyes, I stomped angrily in the mud. I blamed the
doctors who couldn’t find the tumor in time to save him. That rainy
morning launched my dream to help cure cancer—a common wish,
but one that fueled a life-changing pursuit. Knowing that the best pro-
Chapter 5: Career 51
AnAlysis
The author of this essay might have taken the boring approach of
just describing where she worked and what she did while researching,
but she found a way to tie her research to a personal experience. By
explaining in detail why the research was intellectually challenging to
her, the author gave readers clues to her character. From her child-
hood experience, we understand her motivation for wanting to help
find a cure for cancer. Learning about her grandfather’s death sheds
light on why she sought out an internship at the cancer center and why
she now has an interest in pursuing a career in the field. It always adds
meaning to a student’s career goals when we understand the roots of
his or her interest. Many students make the mistake of sharing lofty
dreams such as finding the cure to cancer but don’t back them up with
actual actions that show that they are working toward making a differ-
ence. This student not only presents the global problem but demon-
strates how she has and will continue to play a role in addressing it.
As the author describes her internship, she clearly explains what
she did to research cancer. Most importantly, she outlines it in a way
that is understandable to a layperson. As readers, we can easily con-
ceive the subject’s intellectual hold on her. This student’s writing pro-
vides enough detail that we understand the complexity of her research
but not so much that we are bogged down with too much information.
It’s not enough to just state what you did; it’s more compelling to ex-
plain why.
In the fifth paragraph, the student ties her past experiences to her
future plans. She explains that she intends to pursue a career in the
sciences and to continue cancer research. Admissions officers like to
understand the direction that students are taking so that they can visu-
alize how they will contribute to society while undergraduates and after
graduation as well. They want to know why you are pursuing a career
field and what you hope to achieve as a part of it.
In the last paragraph, the student refers back to her personal ex-
perience. She wraps up the essay in a highly relatable way by con-
necting her grandfather’s death to the intellectual excitement of cancer
research as it applies to her career plans. She packs a lot into a short
amount of space but does so in a way that flows smoothly and keeps
our interest.
6
EVErY TImE I drIVE INTo A client’s driveway, there’s always that mo-
ment. That moment where I must shed any doubt I have and become
adamant. That moment where I realize that, people are depending on
me, and I must do my best to help them. And that moment where, with
tool bag to my side, I must prepare to face whatever problem is waiting
for me in their house. This time is no different. As with the hundreds
of other problems I’ve faced, I must remember that every problem has
a solution, and I can find it.
When I am greeted by a middle-aged woman as I approach the
house, my remaining doubts evaporate. Once I see the individual I am
about to help I become saturated with resolve. However, all she will see
from me is a smile as I ask her how she is. I then ask her what the prob-
lem is, and she leads me to her computer. She tells me that her com-
puter is shutting down randomly, and then leaves as I begin to work.
With a simple push of the power button, the process begins.
Unfortunately, for this case, just as quickly as it starts—the computer
53
54 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
Mathew’s essay is powerful because he doesn’t just tell us about
his entrepreneurship venture but actually gives us a sense that he’s
taking us to his work by narrating the process. This essay is also
strong because Mathew demonstrates attributes that are desirable for
an aspiring doctor—determination, problem-solving skills, and an ea-
gerness to help others—using an example unrelated to the sciences
and medicine. Since Mathew also wrote about science and medicine in
“Exploring Life’s Intricacies” (Chapter 19) and “Addressing Injustices”
(Chapter 5), this essay diversifies his portfolio of essays while still con-
Chapter 6: Entrepreneurship 55
chall EnGEs
“Unshakable Worth”
Sarah Langberg
Princeton University
57
58 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
Sarah’s essay is written with candor about a difficult and highly per-
sonal topic—growing up without her father. She presents her thoughts
in a way that elicits admiration for her strength, rather than pity. In
writing about tragedies and tribulations that affect us but are outside of
our control, it is important to think carefully about what kind of tone to
use, and what kind of reader response this tone invites. For example,
if Sarah had chosen to write an essay entirely fixated on the extreme
anger she felt toward her father, readers may have felt alienated; if she
wrote an essay that conveyed only sadness, we might have felt pity for
her. The strength of Sarah’s essay is that she is honest in displaying
a spectrum of emotions. She conveys both confidence and vulnerabil-
ity, which humanizes her story and also suggests to readers that she
has invested valuable time and energy in a process of maturation and
healing from the pain that she has experienced growing up.
The opening paragraph of the essay gives us a sense of the emp-
tiness that Sarah has experienced: she writes about “an identifiable,
yet indescribable absence.” The paragraph is slightly risky in that it
devotes several sentences to describing her father’s decisions to leave
her family, though the space allotted for the entire essay is limited. In
this case, though several sentences seem to be redundant in telling
the basic fact that Sarah’s dad left two weeks after she was born,
they work to create a sense of loss, of something “missing.” This is an
excellent reminder that not all sentences need to convey new informa-
tion; they can also help create a mood or portray emotion. Sarah’s
first sentence creates a sense of bitter irony and sadness around the
situation with her father, setting the context for the dialog with “this
long-gone man.”
The story about the phone conversation builds suspense. We, like
11-year-old Sarah, wonder how her dad will react, and hold expecta-
tions that he might redeem his absence. Sarah mentions the “speaker/
mute function,” a more memorable symbol than simply “the phone.”
The suspense continues with the foreshadowing sentence, “Maybe if
he would have known the simple fact that his daughter was listen-
ing, maybe then some shred of human decency would have shined
through.”
The remainder of the essay focuses on Sarah’s reactions to the
phone conversation. The second to last paragraph is particularly pow-
erful in the way she juxtaposes the conversation she overhears with
her emotional reactions: “Crash,” “No words,” and questions like “How
60 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
Angelica’s essay is reminiscent of Jason’s “Hurricane
Transformations” (Chapter 15) in that it relates a story of self-trans-
formation as she changes schools. The first paragraph opens with a
memorable repetition: “I wish I was invisible. I wish I was invisible. I
wish I was invisible.” This mantra demonstrates the fear Angelica has
of going to an unfamiliar place. She honestly confesses a shortcoming
she has: “I am a shy person, and it has always been difficult for me to
adjust to a new environment.” In these admissions essays, it is appro-
priate to share perceived weaknesses. However, it is best not to dwell
on these weaknesses excessively. In Angelica’s case, she describes
her shyness in order to help us trace her progress as she slowly be-
comes less introverted.
At the beginning of the second paragraph, we get a palpable sense
of the distress Angelica’s shyness causes her through her description
of her “confused eyes” and nauseous stomach. She humorously de-
scribes the insular attitude she takes at her new school, LFA: “. . . my
shyness and I did not think it necessary to make new friends.” The
transition to the next sentence is somewhat abrupt; Angelica might
have considered using a paragraph break or adding another sentence
so readers can see how she came to realize she “had to take initiative.”
However, she does a wonderful job of illustrating several ways in which
she stepped out of her comfort zone by describing her leadership on
the volleyball team and her community service as a tutor. Angelica
wisely uses two concrete examples rather than writing a long list. Her
ability to juggle extracurriculars and schoolwork without sacrificing
sleep suggests that she will continue to manage her time wisely and
pursue a well-balanced lifestyle in college.
This second paragraph also hints at the importance of Angelica’s
Hispanic ethnicity. She writes, “I was the minority” at LFA, and de-
scribes her work at the Nuestro Center. This is a creative way to write
about one’s heritage without exaggerating its importance. Race/eth-
nicity play different roles in people’s lives, so there can hardly be a rule
for how much or how little to factor this into one’s essays. Perhaps the
best rule of thumb is to write about this to the extent that you feel nec-
essary in order to genuinely convey your most important point.
In Angelica’s case, the fact that she comes from a Hispanic family
is a backdrop to the more important point: she has a “hunger for knowl-
edge” that refuses to be set back even in her predominantly Hispanic
Chapter 7: Challenges 63
“Power of People”
Suzanne Arrington
Columbia University
AnAlysis
Suzanne begins her essay with a four-word sentence that is pow-
erful for its simplicity and frankness: “I believe in people.” She goes on
to explain why this assertion of her beliefs distinguishes herself from
the people around her. Several of the statements Suzanne makes are
Chapter 7: Challenges 65
quite grand; for example, she states that “humans strive for belong-
ing and community; thus, while loneliness and anger may always be
in existence, so will be togetherness and bliss.” Still, she avoids the
pitfalls of generalization by honing in on two specific examples: the
MS150 and Hurricane Ike. One minor point to comment on here is that
it is best to spell out all acronyms when first using them in an essay.
Most people probably do not know what the MS150/BPMS150 is, so
Suzanne could have made this clear by referencing a 150-mile benefit
bike tour.
The second paragraph does an excellent job of demonstrating what
Suzanne does for the MS150, her feelings toward the event, and her
personal motivation for participating in this “grueling” bike tour’s “two
days of torture” for four years. This description is particularly strong
because Suzanne not only relates her own experience, but also shows
that there are 13,000 other people dedicated to the same cause. This
adds evidence to the faith in humanity that she describes in the first
paragraph. When making broad claims, it is necessary to provide a
broad base of evidence and support. Suzanne certainly accomplishes
this in describing her fundraising achievements for the MS Society. Her
essay is made more compelling by sharing the story of her “constant
motivator,” her father.
The transition between the second and third paragraph is some-
what jarring. After the sentence, “The power of people will ultimately
help my father to receive better medical treatment, and maybe even
one day, be cured,” Suzanne could have chosen to write about her
future career goals in public health. This link makes more sense logi-
cally than the current sentence preceding her career plans, “People
truly desire closeness with one another.” Luckily, because Suzanne
referenced both the bike tour and Hurricane Ike in her introduction, the
paragraph about the Hurricane is not entirely incongruous. It would
simply have fit the flow of the essay better, had she chosen a more
specific and compelling transition sentence rather than “While writing
this essay, I was also able to observe and be a part of amazing human
efforts.”
The power of the Hurricane Ike story is similar to the strength of
the MS150 description in that Suzanne presents her individual per-
spective along with a sense of collective effort. Overall, Suzanne does
an excellent job of conveying two profound experiences to illustrate
her conviction that “With small deeds and cooperative effort, humans
can accomplish immense good.”
66 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
“self Mind”
Timothy Nguyen Le
Yale University
JULY 22 LAST YEAr wAS mEANT to be a typical Sunday. Just like every
Sunday, my mother and I were getting ready to visit my older brother at
his Waikiki apartment, where we would talk for a little while. But July
22nd was different. That chilly morning, we got a phone call from his
roommate telling us my brother was going to the emergency room. As
we drove to Queen’s Hospital, I didn’t know what to think. Although
I tried to assure myself that nothing serious could have happened to
him, anxiety clouded my mind.
My brother, Tyson, emigrated from vietnam with my mom and my
other older brother to the United States in 1990, with dreams of a new
life and fresh opportunities. He enrolled in high school with virtually
no knowledge of the English language. Even though he had to simulta-
neously manage a part-time job at McDonald’s, he excelled in academ-
ics and was the top of his class in calculus.
At 34 years old, he was the epitome of health: he ran marathons ev-
ery year, had a healthy diet, and never smoked or drank alcohol. When
I got to the Er and saw him lying in the hospital bed, he looked like
the Tyson that I always knew. nothing seemed wrong. He just seemed
tired, and he didn’t have the energy to speak.
However, coming back from an MrI scan, my brother seemed dif-
ferent. His eyes were unfocused and dazed, as if he didn’t see the room
in front of him. Uneasiness and fear rushed down my spine. I shouted
for help, just as my brother’s body started to spasm. I felt a profound
emotion surging up in me, one that I had never experienced before--a
wrenching sense of trepidation, laced with sickening adrenaline. The
seizure took control of his body, and he began to foam at the mouth.
His body seized up, but I was frozen still. I didn’t know what to do. I
felt useless and terrified.
Tyson told me, when I was just a kid, not to work while I was in
high school. I was young, though, and still wanted to work because I
wanted to make money, like him. During his high school years, he took
on a part-time job after school, even though it meant he had to come
home late every night. Often, he would stay up through the early hours
of the morning, determined to complete his schoolwork. He held down
Chapter 7: Challenges 67
the job, despite its exhausting physical toll, because he had to: he had
to assist with the bills and support my mom, so that she could take
English classes at the local community college. Tyson said that I didn’t
have to work, because he would always be there to support me.
While my brother was in the hospital, my mother and I went there
every day from before dawn to late at night, when the streets were emp-
ty. Tyson had developed severe brain inflammation as a result of the
seizure. He had dozens of tests done: X-rays, MrIs, blood tests, spinal
taps, a bronchoscopy, and even a brain biopsy. A labyrinth of Iv tubes,
wires, and cables were hooked up to his body, monitoring his life signs
and feeding dozens of chemicals and solutions into his bloodstream.
The doctors kept him constantly sedated. His brain inflammation was
life-threatening, and he caught a case of severe pneumonia. His doc-
tors had to place him on life support. In three weeks, my brother had
gone from being in the best shape of his life, from being a veritable
Superman, to laying on his deathbed.
When I was a kid, I was a crybaby. I cried when I didn’t get the toy
I wanted. I cried when I didn’t get the food I wanted. However, at some
point during my childhood, around the age of six, I stopped crying.
no matter how much I was teased or pushed around, I never cried. no
matter how much I was mocked about my clothes, or my ethnicity, I
didn’t cry.
August 11 last year was the first time since childhood that I cried.
It was the day that my brother passed away. And it was the first time
that I ever saw my mom cry. It was a traumatizing experience, and for
a while I was depressed that such a tragedy could occur so arbitrarily
to someone like my brother: someone who was strong, someone who
was healthy, someone who lived by a strong moral code and never sac-
rificed his values for material rewards. But after a while, I realized that
the circumstances of his death were not a refutation of his beliefs, but
instead, a reminder of their importance. Even though we cannot con-
trol the twists and turns of life, we must deal with them as best we can.
My brother, even though he didn’t know English, enrolled in school
and ultimately excelled. And at the same time, to help our mother go to
school on the side, he took on a part-time job. Certainly he must have
wished that he hadn’t faced those disadvantages, but he didn’t com-
plain. rather, he faced the realities of his situation head-on, and suc-
ceeded. Tyson’s death was a tragic reflection of the cold, random chance
68 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
In “Self Mind,” Timothy takes on the role of author and brother,
describing his brother’s death with poignancy and honesty. Utilizing
his gift for storytelling, Timothy shares the rawness of his emotions,
creating an essay that contrasts despair and hope, admiration for his
brother and devastation for his loss. Much of the essay is somber,
a tone that is apropos for the essay topic, but Timothy prevents the
heaviness from becoming excessively depressing by relating parts of
his past and Tyson’s past, along with the broader philosophical lessons
he learned from the painful experience of losing his brother. Timothy,
like Sarah in her essay “Unshakable Worth,” (Chapter 7) creates a
powerful essay from family tragedy in a way that invokes admiration
rather than pity.
The introduction of Timothy’s essay sets an ominous mood without
being overly melodramatic. We wonder why “July 22nd was different,”
feel the “chilly morning,” and share Timothy’s uneasiness as anxiety
clouds his mind. Timothy goes on to give us a sense of who Tyson is.
Without explicitly stating that he admires his brother, we can sense
Timothy’s respect for his brother’s ability to overcome language and
financial barriers as a newly arrived immigrant from Vietnam.
This narrative is particularly compelling because it combines differ-
ent styles of narration and different paces of storytelling. For example,
the first paragraph sets the scene for a specific day while creating a
mood of slight discomfort. The second paragraph describes one of the
crucial people in this story and takes a time scale of several years. The
third paragraph continues explaining Tyson’s story and brings us back
to the ER, to the immediacy and urgency of the situation on July 22
last year. In the fourth paragraph, the pace of the narrative changes
dramatically, especially when we arrive at this sentence: “Uneasiness
and fear rushed down my spine. I shouted for help, just as my brother’s
body started to spasm.” Timothy’s short sentences help create a sense
of paralysis as he describes how he felt at the time: “I didn’t know what
Chapter 7: Challenges 69
to do. I felt useless and terrified.” While it is true that long sentences
can provide the structure for complex descriptions, short and simple
sentences are effective in conveying powerful emotions.
Timothy’s essay uniquely bounces between the terrifying and dis-
tressing scene in the emergency room and paragraphs about Tyson’s
hard work and life philosophies. Timothy writes about both with vivid de-
tail and heartfelt sincerity. The interludes where we learn about Tyson’s
struggles help alleviate the emotional intensity of the situation.
Though death is often avoided as an essay topic in the U.S.,
Timothy writes about it with dignity and grace. In revealing that after
age six, he never cried, “no matter how much I was mocked about my
clothes, or my ethnicity,” Timothy shows us that he, like his brother,
also faced challenges as an immigrant. This intimate fact also crystal-
lizes Timothy’s grief when his brother dies. Amazingly, Timothy is able
to end the essay on a strong and optimistic note (just as Sarah does),
one that highlights his love for his family and his perseverance in the
face of adversity.
AnAlysis
“A Summer of Stem Cells” uses lively dialogue and careful de-
tail to show us how Ariela responded to a major setback during her
summer research at SIMR. The introduction, “It appears all your cells
are dead,” is gripping and mysterious. We subsequently learn of the
astonishing 170 hours Ariela has devoted to her research project with
human embryonic stem cells. Ariela’s colloquial tone serves to draw
readers in so that we sympathize with her plight. We also wonder how
Chapter 7: Challenges 71
in the world Ariela will make up for the lost time now that she is “back
to square one.”
Where “Scientific Sparks” (Chapter 5) used a straightforward
chronological narrative effectively, “A Summer of Stem Cells” provides
a refreshing twist by going back in time. This tactic also invigorates
our understanding of “170 hours.” Generally, numbers are more mean-
ingful when they are contextualized. Had Ariela not described how
she spent the 170 hours, this detail may have seemed like bragging,
or alternatively might have been dismissed. However, by describing
“fancy hoods, automatic pipettes, and high-speed centrifuges” and the
painstaking ways in which she used this professional equipment on
her “quest,” Ariela gives us a stronger understanding of her dedica-
tion and focus. She sets up suspense by writing, “I waited with bated
breath for the results,” a statement that invites the reader to share in
her nervous and eager anticipation.
By writing about the learning process in the lab with such careful
detail, Ariela shows us that she possesses the “great concentration
and coordination” necessary for conducting scientific research. We are
swept into her optimism: “Everything seemed to be going so well . . .”
Here, the ellipses provide a transition back to the moment when Ariela
discovers the devastating fact that her stem cells are dead. It would be
helpful to know who speaks to Ariela—Is it her lab manager? A voice
in her head?—to reassure her that she “probably didn’t do anything
wrong” and that “this sort of thing is common when working with stem
cells.”
This essay demonstrates that it is possible to write a compelling
essay based on experiences related to a circumstance that might be
deemed a failure or a project where performance didn’t reach one’s ex-
pectations. Ariela writes with admirable honesty when she admits that
her project was not completed by the end of the summer. However, we
understand that her perseverance paid off, as she was able to “pro-
duce valuable data.” Since the original essay asked about “something
that you have created,” Ariela might have explained in greater detail
what this “valuable data” was. However, her choice to show an experi-
ment that she created that did not go as planned is a unique response.
It is memorable because many people are afraid to admit their mis-
takes. By ending on a Thomas Edison quote, Ariela shows that she
is following the persistent spirit of the famous scientist-inventor in her
passionate pursuit of scientific knowledge.
72 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
hE’S IN mY ArmS, ThE NEwEST addition to the family. I’m too over-
whelmed. “That’s why I wanted you to go to Bishop Loughlin,” she
says, preparing baby bottles. “But ma, I chose Tech because I wanted to
be challenged.” “Well, you’re going to have to deal with it,” she replies,
adding, “Your aunt watched you when she was in high school.” “But
ma, there are three of them. It’s hard!”
returning home from a summer program that cemented intellectual
and social independence to find a new baby was not exactly thrilling.
Add him to the toddler and seven year old sister I have and there’s no
wonder why I sing songs from Blue’s Clues and The Backyardigans
instead of sane seventeen year old activities. It’s never been simple; as
a female and the oldest, I’m to significantly rear the children and clean
up the shabby apartment before an ounce of pseudo freedom reaches
my hands. If I can manage to get my toddler brother onto the city bus
and take him home from day care without snot on my shoulder, and if I
can manage to take off his coat and sneakers without demonic scream-
ing for no apparent reason, then it’s a good day. Only, waking up at
three in the morning to work, the only free time I have, is not my cup
of Starbucks.
We were already different at age fourteen. She gave birth to me and
went to an alternative high school; I established closeness with new
friends in a competitive high school. She and my then present father
were taking care of me; I was studying the environmental effects on
the onset of schizophrenia. She took her daughter to preschool, and
I vowed to never let anything get in the way of my academics. Even
though I’m taking courses that prepare me for a career in the medical
field, a path I would not pursue even at risk of spontaneous combus-
tion of Earth, there is no excuse for me to fail. After all, my family has a
reputation for failure, and if I don’t push myself, no one else will. When
I think of me not choosing the effortless Bishop Loughlin High School
and traditional fun with friends and preferring the intense courses,
dedication to achievement, and overall feeling of self-worth, I cannot
believe my mother still can’t accept my choice.
One thing I’ve learned growing up in Brooklyn is that disappointment
happens often. The bike I rode to school in the morning wasn’t there
Chapter 7: Challenges 73
AnAlysis
This essay opens with a conversation that abounds in conflict.
Though this unconventional opening poses a risk of being confusing
or unclear, it contains enough hints to pique the reader’s curiosity. We
wonder why the narrator feels overwhelmed. We sense the author’s
frustration at being encouraged to go to Bishop Loughlin instead of
Tech and wonder why her mother doesn’t agree with her. Finally, we
feel curious about the emotions and situations behind the outburst,
“It’s hard!”
Like Lisa’s essay, “Then and Now” (Chapter 12) and Jackie’s “The
House on Wellington Avenue,” (Chapter 15), the author does not com-
plain about the challenging circumstances surrounding her upbringing.
This essay is particularly striking because it doesn’t speak explicitly
about poverty or teen pregnancy in an abstract way, but the author
tells us the story of the direct lived experience: taming the “demonic
screaming” of a younger sibling, cleaning up a “shabby apartment,”
waking up at 3 a.m. to do schoolwork.
The paragraph that begins “We were already different at age four-
teen” could be more explicit about who comprises “we.” Eventually it
does become clear that the author is comparing herself to her mother.
The author uses striking visual language to render the stark contrasts
between her teenage years and her mother’s. While her mother spent
teenage years rearing children, the author chose “intense courses”
and dedicated herself to academic achievements. This essay resem-
74 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
75
76 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
This student’s introduction served its purpose. It probably made
the admissions officers curious. What happened when she made the
mistake of focusing on the technicalities of playing music rather than
the enjoyment of it? It probably made them want to read more to find
the answer.
As the author of this essay explains how she volunteered for Music
from the Heart, she also reveals her honest feelings—how she has
apprehension about performing and how she wasn’t sure if the seniors
were enjoying it because of their chatting during the performance. Many
students think that you need to present yourself in a light that makes
you appear almost perfect, but sharing these kinds of doubts actually
makes the essay more interesting, personable and honest. Being per-
fect is not very compelling, but letting the reader know that you have
minor insecurities adds some complexity. This also reveals a lot about
the way that you think and how you view your own personality.
During the crux of the story, we can see the student change from
focusing on how well she performs technically to sharing her enthusi-
asm for the music. She describes the internal dialogue that she has
with herself, trying to perform with as much enthusiasm as possible
when the seniors react to her playing. It’s easy to understand why she
enjoys playing for the seniors and how their smiles and thanks make it
worth the time that she spends each month.
For essays on community service, it’s critical to demonstrate that
you are not just doing community service because it looks good on
a resume or because a parent or your school is forcing you to, but
that you actually enjoy the work and put your whole self into it. From
this essay, the admissions officers could tell that this student gains as
much from the experience as her audience does, and that she’s likely
to continue such service in college and beyond.
“Precious Planet”
Pen-Yuan Hsing
Duke University
was always the quiet one sitting in the corner, the one who few people
talked to, the one out of the loop. I was the “local alien.”
I opt to join the Earth Science Club during my first year in Lishan
High School, as I always had an interest in astronomy, which happened
to be the focus of that year’s club activities. I didn’t know the weekly
gathering time of our club was also an elective Earth Science course
that students from other high schools could attend. I certainly did not
realize what a big impact this arrangement would have on me.
near the end of the first semester, I was approached by a girl from a
neighboring school who attended this earth science course. She asked
if I wanted to join her on an environmental survey of Taiwan’s Keelung
coast conducted by an organization called Taipei Wetnet. For a mo-
ment I hesitated, I literally had no experience in responding to invita-
tions. What suddenly came out of my mouth surprised me, “Sure, what
time?”
For the next three years I spent in Taipei Wetnet, I gained not only
a close friend, knowledge about the problems our environment faced,
but perhaps most importantly found a group of people who shared the
same convictions, who are passionate about the same thing, the plight
of our precious planet. A year after being introduced to this organiza-
tion, I was its coordinator and presented my first academic paper at an
environmental education conference. I learned that I don’t always have
to be the quiet one in the corner, that I do and can have things to share
with everyone else. I don’t have to fear.
I often think about how I managed to say yes on that fateful day.
Was it just because of a pretty face? Or maybe there has always been a
special part of me that wanted to get out, and she was instrumental in
“flipping the switch.” This eye-opening experience and what I learned
from it is what I desperately want to share with the world.
Perhaps, somewhere out there is another quiet person in the corner
just waiting to be found. A switch waiting to be flipped. You just have
to find it, flip it, and make the world a brighter, warmer place.
AnAlysis
Pen-Yuan begins his essay with an apparent shortcoming—not
being about to blend in as the “local alien,” “the quiet one sitting in
the corner,” “the one out of the loop.” This introduction is reminiscent
of Angelica’s essay, “No Longer Invisible,” (Chapter 7), in which she
Chapter 8: Community Service 79
“Cuddle Buddies”
Anastasia Fullerton
Stanford University
ThE coLd mId-AUGUST SAN FrANcISco BAY fog was just begin-
ning to roll in over Piedmont as I snapped the cover shut on Jennings
Burch’s book “They Cage the Animals at night,” the most recent addi-
tion to my “get ready for 7th grade summer reading extravaganza.” It is
a story about a young boy who lives in various orphanages and foster
homes with only his stuffed animal, Doggie, for companionship. My
cousin from Connecticut had told me that it was a fabulous book, but
little did I know how it would touch my life and the lives of others.
As I gazed across my room at the pile of stuffed animals I had been
collecting since I was young, an idea came to me. I would collect stuffed
animals for children like Jennings. First, I contacted local agencies that
support children suffering from abuse and neglect and told them about
my idea. They said that the stuffed animals would be very helpful in
therapy and would certainly lift children’s spirits.
I decided to call my project “Cuddle Buddies.” now I actually had
to come up with the “buddies”! I wrote articles for the local and school
newspapers, telling Jennings’ story and asking for donations of stuffed
animals. My phone rang off the hook; schools, families, local business-
es and toy manufacturers all wanted to help. Much to my delight this
project took the Bay Area by storm. By the second week my living room
looked like a zoo with animals tucked in every corner and on top of
each chair. Every time my mom and I made deliveries to the agencies,
the kids would be waiting for their Cuddle Buddies with their eyes
down, too shy to look but shaking with excitement.
Six years after its launch, Cuddle Buddies continues to expand.
Each year I solicit from more toy companies and communities. now
over 25,000 stuffed animals have been donated to agencies in the Bay
Area and Connecticut, emergency units, two orphanages in Africa
and one in germany. At the Saidia Children’s Home in Kenya, Simon,
a seven year old, whose parents died from AIDS, couldn’t sleep at
night. When the Cuddle Buddies were laid out for him to choose
from, Simon selected a grey koala bear and soon after was sleeping
through the night. My heart ached when I learned that a young girl
in Oakland had stopped cutting herself so she could get the big black
Chapter 8: Community Service 81
dog that she wanted so badly. I never dreamed that Cuddle Buddies
would be used in these ways.
Knowing that I would be going on to college and that others my
age could do what I have done, I decided to expand Cuddle Buddies.
To spread the word beyond the Bay Area I designed a website, www.
cuddlebuddies.net, and contacted newspapers and Tv stations across
the nation. The response was overwhelming. I heard from kids, par-
ents, agencies and even The girls Scouts. I am now helping to establish
two dozen Cuddle Buddies chapters from Utah to north Carolina.
This has been a great experience. I have learned how to follow
through on an idea, how to champion a cause and how to deal with
setbacks. But most importantly, I have learned how easy it is to posi-
tively impact a life and the joy that comes from it. I will go to college
with these lessons in mind and hope to continue my work with Cuddle
Buddies, even as I engage in a whole new set of exciting academic and
nonacademic pursuits.
AnAlysis
“Cuddle Buddies” chronicles Anastasia’s leading role in the de-
velopment of a social enterprise. This story is probably compelling for
admissions officers at Stanford, where there is a growing interest in
social entrepreneurship. Anastasia’s impressive story demonstrates
her creativity and commitment to growing a vision, a valuable asset
as a leader in whatever “exciting academic and nonacademic pursuits”
lie ahead for her.
The introduction draws us in with its careful attention to detail:
we can see the San Francisco fog, sense its chilliness, and witness
Anastasia’s passion for reading. The last sentence, “little did I know
how it would touch my life and the lives of others,” foreshadows the
creation of Cuddle Buddies. What is particularly remarkable about this
story is Anastasia’s young age—she is only in 7th grade. It is quite
a dramatic jump from the small scene in the book, They Cage the
Animals at Night, and the decision to provide animals for therapy.
Anastasia could have added a few more sentences to explain how
she started the ball rolling on her project. In particular, it is surprising
that she contacted local agencies—here it may help to specify which
ones—as one imagines that most teenagers might simply tell their
friends an idea and never actually act to make the vision a reality.
The third paragraph uses vivid imagery and active language to
make the reader feel a part of the creation and expansion of “Cuddle
Buddies.” Anastasia does an excellent job of using lively phrases so
82 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
that we feel we are also participants in the process as the phone “rang
off the hook,” the living room became “like a zoo” and the project “took
the Bay Area by storm.” It is impressive that this storm has hardly
abated six years later. Admissions officers often admire stories about
long-term commitment, especially when the author can demonstrate
continual growth throughout this process. As Anastasia’s third para-
graph shows, this growth has certainly occurred: personally, Anastasia
has learned management skills as her organization has expanded in-
ternationally, having donated 25,000 stuffed animals. Anastasia gives
a face to this statistic by relating the story of Simon with his gray koala
and the girl in Oakland who chooses the big black dog. This is con-
crete proof that this idea does “lift children’s spirits.”
The link to Anastasia’s website is an excellent way to distinguish
her from other prospective students. The website demonstrates her
professionalism, much as the business card in Jason’s story, “Birthing
a Business” (Chapter 14) shows his willingness to go above and be-
yond expectations. Anastasia wraps up her essay nicely by noting,
“I have learned how to follow through on an idea, how to champion
a cause and how to deal with setbacks,” skills she can apply as she
pursues her education after high school.
“Best Reader”
Manika
University of Pennsylvania
ThE GIANT BrowN BEAr wAS crEEpING quietly behind the bliss-
fully pink duck ready to wring his bare paws around her neck and
throw her into a pot of boiling stew.
We turned the page.
While I chuckled at the impracticality of a bear boiling water to eat
a duck, especially a pink duck, I lifted my head to find Matthew tip-
toeing about the room exhibiting the meanest, most ferocious look his
cute face could conjure. All the while, little Monica sat huddled next
to my arm honestly afraid to turn the page and find her favorite pink
creature in a bear’s “tummy.”
It was one of those moments of my hours spent reading with chil-
dren at the library when it dawned just how much, as a “grown up,” I
was missing.
I remembered the Thursday when victoria bounded into the reading
room showcasing in her small hands a golden certificate from school.
Chapter 8: Community Service 83
AnAlysis
The unconventional first sentence of this essay grabs the reader’s
attention and creates a double-take effect with its absurd and comical
juxtaposition of giant bear, pink duck, and boiling stew.
“We turned the page,” the even shorter paragraph that follows, re-
veals the context of the first sentence—a children’s book. Such child-
like and active language makes us feel that we are in the room, read-
ing over Manika and Monica’s shoulders. These sentences create a
sense of whimsy and wonder that help us see the reading room from
the perspective of a child.
Manika next contrasts childhood curiosity with a young adult’s per-
spective on life. Observing Matthew and Monica, she reflects, “It was
one of those moments of my hours spent reading with children at the
library when it dawned just how much, as a ‘grown up,’ I was missing.”
This single sentence feels a little choppy, even after the first two short
paragraphs. While using short sentences to indicate a change in mood
or pace is often an effective writing tool, it is best to use it sparingly.
Manika draws upon this style several times, including the single-sen-
tence paragraph that begins “taking her certificate in my hands” that
is set off by yet another new paragraph with the note, “my thoughts
were interrupted by Victoria’s chant.” In some ways, the short sentence
structure has limited Manika’s avenue for sharing details. For example,
Manika writes about all she is missing out on as a “grown up.” She
might have used more complex sentences at this point to elaborate on
her feelings and to give us a better sense of what the significance of
that moment meant to her.
Manika does an excellent job of explaining her volunteer work in
this essay. She manages to include other people’s perceptions of her
through her supervisor’s knowledge that she had a “patient disposition
and friendly way with children.” She also includes her person reac-
tion: “I had nodded vigorously, smiling, not only because I was proud
of the confidence they had in me, but because nothing would make
Chapter 8: Community Service 85
FaMily
“Box of Chocolates”
Alex Volodarsky
The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
87
88 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
then, I have needed little persuasion to start working on the next gift
project. Actually, I even look forward to these times, when my parents
find their inner children, and the trivial worries of life simply whisk
away. My dad, both figuratively and literally, ditches his office suit and
proper manners, and dons a red woman’s wig and high heels to practice
a scene. My mom stops scolding my sister and me, and joins us in our
ruckus, doing the jitterbug and blowing on a harmonica. These are the
moments in my family when there are no children or adults, just four
people who give in to their creative urges.
“How about throwing Dad a party, and making him a movie?” my
mom asks as I use my straw to fish for any remaining coffee at the bot-
tom of the cup. “Just think of a movie you like and we’ll parody it.”
A big fan of “the-life-is-like-a-box-of-chocolates” theory, I suggest my
favorite movie, Forrest gump. She smiles. “OK, but only if you play
Forrest.”
When we come home, my mom takes down a box, heavy with the
dust of age, scribbled with messy russian lettering. I peer over her
shoulder as she empties onto the living room floor the contents: my
dad’s life story in black and white. Within minutes, I am completely im-
mersed in the photographs I have never seen before. As I gape at a pic-
ture of a bearded teenager laughing with his friends, I do a double take.
Is this the same clean-shaven man who helped me to prove the theorem
that all right angles are congruent and always tells me to tuck in my
shirt? I shake my head in disbelief as I thumb through some pictures of
my dad and his friends with guitars in the forest singing songs around a
camp fire. My mom explains that the Soviet government didn’t approve
of these songs, so the woods became their only refuge. I am now start-
ing to understand why my dad, limited in what he could sing or say
as a youth, pushes my sister and me to ask probing questions, survey
news from all sides of the political spectrum, and watch controversial
movies. Looking down at one of the pictures of my dad in the forest, it
just hits me: the movie should be called “Forest guy.”
With each picture comes its own story, and collectively, they create
a collage of my dad’s past that I had never known. But even more sur-
prises await me as I watch documentaries about russian leaders in the
20th century. To truly parody Forrest gump, some “great” Communist
leaders must be part of Forest guy’s life, just as Kennedy and nixon
were part of Forrest gump’s. Coming up with bizarre ideas of how
Chapter 9: Family 89
AnAlysis
In this extraordinarily creative essay, Alex reveals a gift for sto-
rytelling that jumps nimbly from seriousness to humor, cavorts from
one surprise to another, and weaves in vivid descriptions, evocative
metaphors and historical references. Many people might find it hard
to imagine an essay that begins in a Starbucks and takes us through
Forest Gump and Stalinist atrocities to end with a metaphor about a
box of chocolates. However, Alex’s ability to tie all these memorable
details together coherently makes this essay stand out.
Alex opens with an introduction that stimulates our senses: we can
smell the fragrant “aroma of the coffee beans” and feel the “gentle
90 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
rays of the winter sun.” Effective descriptions detail not only the visual
scene, but also appeal more completely to our other senses. In de-
scribing his weekly Sunday “bonding time” with his mother, Alex gives
us a sense of the deep connection he has to his family. As the essay
unfolds, more clues reveal glimpses of Alex’s dedication and com-
mitment to his family. Touching and charming examples make Alex’s
family come alive for his readers. Instead of the nondescript labels of
“mother” and “father,” Alex provides tangible and memorable images
of these people—his father in a red wig and high heels, his mother
playing harmonica. These details perfectly illustrate “four people who
give in to their creative urges.” Though these family gatherings and gift
projects might not show up on a resume, Alex does a wonderful job
of showing us how they are central to his character. It’s important to
remember that a compelling personal essay may draw upon aspects
of your life that might not fall under standard ideas of academic ac-
complishments and extracurricular activities.
The paragraph in which Alex discovers elements of his dad’s past
in Soviet Russia is a creative way for Alex to show us an aspect of his
heritage. This paragraph could easily focus on Alex’s dad while leaving
out information about Alex himself. However, Alex wisely chooses to
discuss his dad’s relationship to himself: for example, we suspect that
Alex is someone who asks probing questions, surveys the news criti-
cally, and watches controversial movies. In this paragraph, Alex mas-
terfully weaves together elements of his own past and his dad’s past
while illustrating his personal interests and strengths. These seemingly
disparate pieces of information are brought together by the story of the
gift project, which itself is focused on film.
With rich detail, Alex describes the process of watching documen-
tary films and creating the “Forest Guy” film for his father. This section
is particularly interesting because Alex not only describes what hap-
pened, but also analyzes his own learning and emotional responses.
The range and authenticity of these emotional responses is impres-
sive (from stomach-throbbing laughter to tears on Alex’s dad’s face),
and makes for a varied and lively reading experience. The cultural ref-
erence to Forrest Gump is a clever one that helps Alex wrap up his
essay with a metaphor from the story. However, it is important to be
careful to use commonly known cultural references or explain their
context and not to assume that your reader will understand the refer-
ence. Jonathan Cross (Chapter 12) demonstrates this nicely when he
references John Nash.
Chapter 9: Family 91
“Dear santa”
Anonymous
Princeton University
AnAlysis
The author’s wit shines through in this punchy, concise essay. In
fact, her humor is immediately evident in the first paragraph when
shining expectations for a long-wished-for baby brother are thwarted
by the blunt sentence, “In retrospect, I should have named my brother
‘Ivan the Terrible’.” She uses italics and exclamation points effectively
in her writing to punctuate key words and to express her mood. For
instance, from the statement “Jason followed me everywhere like an
irritating shadow,” the exaggeration of “everywhere” heightens our un-
derstanding of the intensity of her irritation. The exclamation point at
the end of “What I saw enraged me!” underscores the author’s anger.
Excessive use of word-stylization and punctuation can be distracting
in an essay, but thoughtful use can enhance writing. In her case, these
were particularly appropriate because her essay conveyed a more ca-
sual, informal tone.
Stylistically, the author also varies her sentence length to excellent
dramatic effect. In particular, the contrast between longer descriptions
of what was going on and short remarks such as “You’re going to
pay for this,” the thought of “What am I going to do?,” and the proud
conclusion, “Victory was mine” draw us into the immediacy of the
story. She chose to illustrate one very specific event from her many
“grievances” (from bedroom wall vandalism to goldfish murder)—her
brother cutting off her hair. This specific anecdote demonstrates how it
is possible to write an essay that doesn’t describe a transformation of
years or even a weeklong summer camp. Though the event the author
describes in this essay probably transpired in a matter of hours, she
still made this a meaningful topic for her paper. This shows us that
there’s really no “best” timeframe or topic for writing a personal essay.
The author’s essay takes a specific topic of a very short timeframe,
relates it to a longer timeframe (we know she has had long hair for
seven years and is sensitive about her appearance as many high
school freshmen are) and shows more generalized, almost “timeless”
if you will, aspects of her overall character. We can contrast this to
Jason Y. Shah’s approach in “Hurricane Transformations” (Chapter
15), in which he tells a story of change that occurs over many months.
Chapter 9: Family 93
The writing styles are different; yet, both essays effectively show us
positive traits in the authors’ characters.
The strength of this author’s essay is that she conveys a specific
event with a lively narrative pace and snappy dialogue then ultimately
creates a broader conclusion that helps us understand how this spe-
cific incident illustrates that she has “learned to adapt, to keep [her]
focus, and to solve problems with little or no resources.” Though the
overall tone of her essay may seem to focus on annoyance and an-
ger at her brother, ultimately she demonstrates her resilience and her
capacity for forgiveness in noting, “despite the craziness Santa’s gift
brings, Jason’s continuous surprises provide laughter to my life.” Her
comment that she preferred her new hairstyle further demonstrates
how she turns difficult situations into advantageous opportunities.
“Thanks, Santa” is a catchy way to end the essay. It can be tempting
to end with a long “summary” sentence, but she shows how even two
words can make for a memorable and satisfying ending.
mY FAmILY hAS TAKEN LIVING IN the big city as a reason for why
we should never give up. Here in Los Angeles there are countless indi-
viduals and families along all points on the immigration spectrum from
recent arrivals to recent citizenship. residing in this great city has pro-
vided me with diversity, opportunity, acceptance, and an abundance of
role models to follow through all troubles- big and small.
I always thought that I had it the worst out of all my family mem-
bers because I was never allowed to get anything lower than what my
brother or a cousin had gotten in a class. My parents figured if they
could do it, so could I, and if not on my own then with a little of their
help. It was not until recently that I realized the truth in this. In my
short life I have seen my father go from speaking no English, to excel-
ling in it. I have heard countless stories about migrant farmers such as
Cesar Chavez and my grandfather who had nearly nothing, yet per-
sisted and succeeded.
growing up hearing these stories of great injustices and misfortunes
has truly influenced my long term goals. I am going to go far because
there is no excuse for not doing my best, given all I have been blessed
94 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
with. When I had trouble speaking Spanish and felt like abandoning
my native tongue I remembered my mother and how when she came
to the United States she was forced to wash her mouth out with soap
and endure beatings with a ruler by the nuns at her school for speak-
ing it. When I couldn’t figure out tangents, sines, and cosines I thought
about my father and how it took him nearly a year to learn long divi-
sion because he was forced to teach it to himself after dropping out and
starting to work in the 4th grade. And when I wanted to quit swimming
because I was tired I remembered my grandfather and how no mat-
ter how his muscles ached if he stopped digging, or picking fruit, or
plowing he risked not having enough food to feed his family. Pursuing
technical fields such as math and engineering first seemed like work for
men to me, but the times have changed. All these people, just from my
family have been strong role models for me.
I feel that being labeled “underprivileged” does not mean that I am
limited in what I can do. There is no reason for me to fail or give up,
and like my parents and grandparents have done, I’ve been able to pull
through a great deal. My environment has made me determined, hard
working, and high aiming. I would not like it any other way. This is
how my Hispanic heritage, family upbringing, and role models have
influenced my academic and personal long term goals.
AnAlysis
This essay, like “All Worth It,” (Chapter 7), describes the lessons
the author has learned from growing up in an “underprivileged” com-
munity of immigrants in LA. The author of “All Worth It” learned from
growing up in Brooklyn to “just do it,” never accepting failure as an op-
tion. This essay similarly shows how the author came to believe that
“we should never give up.” Both essays are compelling because they
provide specific examples from their personal lives to give us a sense
of the unique circumstances in which they grew up. However, the au-
thor of this essay focuses on the positive elements of her environ-
ment: “diversity, opportunity, acceptance, and an abundance of role
models.” Reading these two essays in conjunction shows that there
is no rule for how to write about coming from a disadvantaged back-
ground. While “All Worth It” notes more of the negative aspects of the
neighborhood and “Lessons from the Immigration Spectrum” focuses
on positive lessons, both authors are able to give us a strong sense of
their perseverance and strength.
Chapter 9: Family 95
97
98 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
What makes the writer’s essay interesting is that he writes about
the conflict between his ethnic heritage and his American life. We
immediately sense that it is not an easy amalgamation between his
Korean and American identities. It might have enhanced his introduc-
tion to have provided a specific example of how these two identities
clashed. However, his description of this conflict is very powerful and
visual, and as the reader, we can tell detect the authenticity of his
internal struggle. He writes, “I felt that my heritage was a short anchor
against the relentlessly rising tide: I had to break free—or go under.”
The writer aptly shows the connection between his achievements
and his appreciation for his heritage. When he describes his efforts
to raise funds to attend the HOBY World Leadership Congress, he
demonstrates ingenuity as a creative entrepreneur. The admissions
officers must have admired his self-initiated fundraising efforts and
his development of a new market. His experience shows his innova-
tion, persistence and ability to adapt his product line to his customers’
needs.
In his example of the L.A. County Sheriff’s Explorer Academy,
he again addresses his heritage when leading an ethnically diverse
group of students. While you may write an essay about a project that
you worked on as a team or an experience that you had as a team
member, it’s always helpful to highlight your individual contribution. In
the writer’s case, he reveals his full responsibility for selling the Asian
medicine and explains his role as a leader of his platoon. You may not
be the sole leader of the group, but writing about your personal input
makes a more powerful statement than presenting the contributions of
the group as a whole.
Throughout his essay, the writer makes connections that are not
obvious. At first glance, there doesn’t seem to be much that ties to-
gether attending a student leadership conference or volunteering with
the sheriff’s department and ethnic identity. But the writer is able to
form links among these topics that result in a single cohesive essay.
His writing is engaging because, as readers, we can tell that he tru-
ly cares about his topic matter and he shares specific examples of
what he has accomplished. But perhaps most importantly, he takes
us inside his mind so that at least for a brief time we understand his
thoughts, emotions, and reasoning. This is something that admissions
officers always desire—to learn something new about the applicant
and to understand his or her way of thinking.
100 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
“Abuelo”
Angelica
University of Chicago
criticized by what it does not have but should be valued for what it
does have. I have found something in common with this photograph.
All along what this picture wanted from me was to find something fa-
miliar. That familiarity sets this particular picture apart from all other
photographs I have encountered and what has kept it vividly visible
after having come across it years ago. This is exactly what this photo-
graph longed for: to be found familiar and remembered.
AnAlysis
Angelica takes an unconventional essay prompt, “Describe a pic-
ture and explore what it wants,” and writes a short and creative essay
that not only answers the prompt in an unexpected way but also dem-
onstrates Angelica’s dedication to learning more about her history. The
essay opens with the surprising sentence, “At first glance, it seems
just a waste of a snapshot.” The reader immediately wonders, why
write about this photo then? Angelica goes on to show an aptitude for
vivid description, which she uses to illustrate the picture for those of us
who aren’t able to see it. We are also drawn into the mystery in won-
dering what meaning a photo of the back of someone’s neck, wrinkled
with brown and white hair, could possibly have.
Angelica states her answer to the essay prompt directly: “What this
picture wants is for me to imagine and to create a story.” She goes on
to explain why this process of imagining and creating a story is impor-
tant: the photo will have a chance “to prove itself as equally worthy as
any other photograph.” Angelica goes on to breathe life into this mys-
terious photo through a combination of sleuthing and guesswork. The
amount of information she is about to extract from small details like the
color of Abuelo’s skin demonstrates Angelica’s impressive imaginative
capacity and thoughtful analysis. Even as fine a detail as dust in the
wrinkles of the skin does not escape Angelica. She relates this dust
to familiar (and familial) knowledge: “. . . it is the kind of dust my father
gets when he is working with joint compound.” Angelica might have
clarified “joint compound” for those who are unfamiliar with the term.
Still, her descriptions are intriguing. Angelica’s eye for detail leads her
to notice a hole in the earlobe from a former ear piercing, and part of
a necklace. By linking these details to her father’s life as a compound
worker and also to her Catholic faith, we learn about Angelica’s beliefs
and her family life, as well as about her heritage.
Angelica summarizes the point of her essay nicely in her
concluding paragraph, when she returns to the original question
and answers it in a slightly different way: “All along what this picture
wanted from me was to find something familiar . . . to be found familiar
102 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
“Anything Goes”
Jean Gan
Duke University
greener than it had ever seemed. Some days, I came home with new
dance steps to show my parents. On other days, I drew the designs of
my costumes when my descriptions at the dinner table would not suf-
fice. The make-up artist tried three times to find the right blush, while
the hair team created a different style for me each night. Having to
think up a new hairstyle each time was parallel to my shifting opinion
of my life and self. Although participating in the musical was initially
petrifying, I discovered that taking such a risk was the optimal way to
grow and change.
now, I will not shy away from being in a musical cast because my
comfort zone is expanding. Soon it will encompass the grand scope
of my interests: from singing and dancing to throwing a sales pitch
in front of judges; from learning how to execute precision front-flips
to building my favorite piano repertoire; from designing a webpage
to arranging chamber music, or developing optics technologies. Such
passions will continue to define who I am and what I hope to achieve.
My character is being shaped and reshaped by my learning experiences
because I am an impressionable human being. As I continue to explore,
I know that my interests will solidify into a cohesive whole. Until then,
I seek to enrich myself with new opportunities and never look back.
AnAlysis
Besides being the name of the musical in which she participated,
the title of Jean’s essay, “Anything Goes,” also captures the “free-spir-
ited horse” within her that “ventured beyond the pasture of [her] com-
fort zone, and participated onstage in the high school musical for the
first time.” The “horse” metaphor not only captures Jean’s adventurous
spirit, but also ties to her Chinese heritage, as seen in her reference to
the horse in Chinese astrology. Like Angelica’s references to her heri-
tage in “No Longer Invisible” (Chapter 7), Jean’s mention of her zodiac
sign is a creative and subtle way to introduce her culture to readers
without her ethnicity becoming the core focus of the paper. Jean al-
ludes to her heritage again at the end of the second paragraph, when
she decides to “let go of [her] cautious Chinese approach to life.” Some
readers might take offense to this cultural stereotype; when writing
about culture, it is important to be mindful of distinguishing between
personal beliefs and stereotypes.
Jean’s second paragraph gives us an excellent sense of her in-
ternal debates over whether or not she should take a risk and play in
the pit as she swings between fear and confidence. Many successful
104 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
essays not only relate events but also one’s feelings and thoughts re-
garding the activity. Jean notes that she was “terrified” before the musi-
cal but shows her open-minded spirit when she “willingly embraced”
the new art form. She refers back to the mentions of horse and free-
dom when she writes, “I was a horse freely cantering around an open
meadow.” The specific examples that follow demonstrate the diversity
of new activities to which Jean is introduced and the eagerness with
which she embraces each one. Jean does a wonderful job of explain-
ing the horse-in-meadow simile with concrete, real-life examples such
as these: showing her parents dance steps, drawing costume designs,
and experimenting with new hairstyles.
In her concluding paragraph, Jean ties together the many ex-
amples she used in her essay to show us how her “comfort zone is
expanding.” She illustrates some of the contours of this comfort zone,
which she calls the “grand scope” of her interests: “from singing and
dancing to throwing a sales pitch in front of judges; from learning how
to execute precision front-flips to building my favorite piano repertoire;
from designing a webpage to arranging chamber music, or developing
optics technologies.” Illustrations like these can sometimes feel like
long lists. Jean might have chosen to list fewer activities so that what
she did choose to include could stand out more. The first line, which
contrasts singing and dancing with throwing a sales pitch, is most di-
rectly relevant to the essay since singing and dancing were new ex-
periences from the musical and throwing a sales pitch may have been
part of the leadership conference in New York City that she mentioned
briefly. In general, it is most compelling to use examples that are di-
rectly relevant to the essay to maintain a sense of focus. Bringing in
too many outside references—for instance, Jean’s comment on “de-
veloping optics technologies”—can seem incongruous and confuse
readers. Overall, however, Jean’s essay does a nice job of showing
the breadth of her interests as well as the depth of energy she is willing
to pour into creative pursuits such as the “Anything Goes” musical.
EVErY FAmILY hAS ThEIr STorY, ALL with aspects that brings them
together or drive them apart. I come from a Mexican family, where fam-
ily is the only thing we know. We share each other’s pain and misery
and we rejoice for our miracles. We learn and grow through each other.
Chapter 10: Heritage and Identity 105
When my mother was a child she had suffered a great amount. She
had become deaf in her teenage years. She lost complete ability to hear
in her right ear and partially in the left and to add to all the confusion
she was bound by a language. She was living in America with 4 of 5
senses and a tongue that many could not speak. Many would see this
as a huge dent in her life, but she managed to start a family. I could not
be any more proud of her and thankful for what she has given me. Her
“disability” placed a tremendous amount of pressure on my shoulders.
She was not able to go to the deli or to place phone calls when she
needed to. All of a sudden, all of this had become my responsibility. My
father was too busy breaking his back in order to support our family.
My mother’s personal translator, doesn’t sound too shabby? Standing
in the middle of the store, making hand jesters, mouthing out words,
or even yelling, does attract attention. In those moments I would feel
a surge of heat rush from head to toe, goose bumps in every possible
crevice of my body, and to top it all off I’d be seven shades darker than a
ripe tomato. Shame and embarrassment, how could I feel this way? All
this had become routine and the pain and embarrassment finally start-
ed to subside, a whole new feeling started to emerge, pride. My mother
made me strong. She allowed me to become the man I am today. And
after all the pain there are still countless nights that I lie in bed, crying
due to the burden that was placed on her and the tremendous lesson I
learned. Every sound, every beat, every photon, every little everything
has been absorbed into me one way or another, yet these experiences,
although insignificant to others, mean to world to me. All these events
run through my veins and pump through my heart. I am the passion
that is rarely seen. I am the walking story of struggle.
AnAlysis
This student’s essay conveys his devotion to his family as well as
his independence from it. He shares honestly about the story of his
parents and siblings so that as readers we can catch a glimpse of the
“pain and misery” and the “miracles” that he has experienced. This
student recounts many adversities, beginning with his memories of be-
ing a kindergartener who did not know English. He notes, “I struggled
throughout my years in elementary school. I went to resource and re-
ceived help with my schoolwork until fourth grade.” Here, the essay
would be clearer had he described what “resource” was and related
specific ways in which it gave him that “big push forward.” It is impor-
Chapter 10: Heritage and Identity 107
huMor
“Exit Door”
Fareez Giga
Stanford University
109
110 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
people get discouraged in their hectic and stress-filled lives, but some-
times you just need a dim-witted accident to occur to put everything
in perspective.
AnAlysis
In this note to his future roommate, Fareez relates a humorous
anecdote to reveal the lighthearted side to his personality. This es-
say prompt gives students the unique opportunity to demonstrate how
they would relate to peers of their own age group, rather than an older
group of admissions officers. Fareez introduces himself as “mature
and focused” with “a strong commitment” to education, which at first
glance appears to be a rather hackneyed and unmemorable set of
statements. However, he quickly throws in an expected twist by allud-
ing to a humorous moment, thereby piquing our curiosity as he sets up
the scene in Las Vegas.
His anecdote not only shows us that Fareez “can laugh at [him]self,”
but also lets us see that he is close to his family, and especially his
sister. Fareez’s narrative is enjoyable to read because he includes
details to make the story more vivid, like mentioning his feelings to-
wards Las Vegas and describing his sister’s “convulsive” collapse from
laughter. Though hardly earth shattering, the “blooper” that Fareez
shares is nonetheless memorable—he walks headlong into an EXIT
door in front of a large crowd of people—and in particular his reaction
is noteworthy.
At the end of this short essay, Fareez ties the anecdote back to
college life when he alludes to “hectic and stress-filled” times. Fareez’s
ability to put things in perspective suggests that he will be able to cope
with the challenges of college life, and will bring joy and humor to
whoever is lucky enough to be his roommate. This essay strikes a nice
balance between a casual tone and a deeper analysis. Thus, the topic
and style of the essay are reflective of the content, which show us
both the silly and serious sides to Fareez’s personality. A short essay
such as this one is a wonderful opportunity to share a quirky story that
makes you stand out in the admissions officer’s huge stack of essays.
Chapter 11: Humor 111
AnAlysis
Lauren’s “Crime Scene Report” proves that there is no “standard”
format for a college admissions essay. This essay’s creative structure
completely breaks the mold. Not only is it written in letter format, it also
includes quirky NOTES in the body of the letter. While Lauren takes a
big risk in deviating from the standard introduction-body paragraphs-
conclusion structure, her essay is undeniably memorable. Lauren suc-
cessfully pulls off her caper—both in the fictional mystery story she
tells, and in her playful writing style.
The creativity of the “Crime Scene Report” probably attests to
Lauren’s personality. We see that she is not afraid to take bold risks in
her writing and stand out in a crowd. This unabashed attitude can be
seen in her audacious and hilarious ending: “She had hidden in the
incoming student body.” This is a completely unexpected yet confident
way to assert her strong belief that she deserves to be admitted to
Duke.
The clever way that Lauren infuses details about her interests
throughout her writing helps add more “serious” elements to the
mischievous format of her essay. For example, under the guise of
Chapter 11: Humor 113
an inFlu Ential
PErson
“John nash”
Jonathan Cross
Duke University
115
116 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
live for what is important. A trip that started with me “taking care of
him” turned into a trip of substantial personal discovery.
Children with special needs have powerful talents, and if we could
only open our hearts to hear their voices, we would learn what it means
to live without conventional boundaries. I have lived a week with a
genius, not only of the mind, but more importantly, of the heart—and
my life has been permanently changed because of Fred.
AnAlysis
Jonathan begins his essay with a reference to a famous figure,
John Nash, but wisely doesn’t assume we know who he is and men-
tions that he is a Nobel laureate. Then, the essay hooks in the reader
by throwing in a twist: this essay is not about John Nash at all, but
about someone named Fred. It’s obvious that Jonathan holds Fred
in high esteem, but it is initially unclear just who Fred is. However, as
we read about Fred, we not only meet someone who has influenced
Jonathan, but we are also introduced to Jonathan’s admirable ability
to be open-minded towards an individual even when others might be
dismissive. As Jonathan notes, “While our society may call him ‘chal-
lenged,’ I have come to recognize him as an unexpected role model.”
This is certainly not the typical role model story, where one might
name a family member or famous person. The parallel between Fred
and John Nash underscores Jonathan’s respect for Fred, and this un-
usual and unexpected comparison show us how Jonathan stands out
from the rest of society.
Note that Jonathan is careful not to get on a “high horse,” making
much over himself. Instead, he writes, “Fred is blessed with an acute
sense of purpose and caring that is unmatched by most—including
perhaps even the most altruistic among us.” The last part of this state-
ment adds a sense of humility so that Jonathan does not seem to be
judgmental toward us for not accepting people with autism or other dis-
abilities in the way that he is able to do. Generally, taking a moralizing
or condescending tone is alienating for readers, who want to be invited
into your story, not estranged from it. Indeed, Jonathan further avoids
a high-minded tone by describing his “initial anxiety and reluctance” at
rooming with Fred, even in spite of his previous experience in working
with special needs children. Jonathan’s honesty is impressive: many
people might not admit to such seemingly taboo or even discrimina-
tory thoughts of not wanting to spend time with special needs children,
even if these thoughts are true. However, Jonathan’s honesty helps
us understand why he sums up his time in Portland as “an incredible
journey . . . especially for me.”
118 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
with her remarkable ambition and intense passion for learning. From
growing up in the frigid winds of northern Mongolia, to becoming one
of three students to earn a full scholarship to China’s most competitive
university, to working as a government-sponsored chemist in goslar,
germany, my mother accomplished more before I was born than most
people achieved in a lifetime.
Unfortunately, I would not learn of the fabulous successes and ardu-
ous trials of my mother until much, much later. All I could understand
or not understand at five years old was why my mother was rarely
home, why I did not see her for three months during the summer when
I lived with my grandparents, and why I was forced to go to a daycare
owned by a tyrannical monster who would tell ghost stories to make
me cry. Even now, much of my knowledge about my mother’s early life
is something I am still piecing together. As was the case then, my full
understanding of her brilliant yet ill-tempered persona is continually
hindered by the simple troubles of life. Although now, they are the is-
sues of an eighteen-year old teenager rather than those of a five-year
old child.
I remember nights we would spend together when she was busy
with her research and classes; I would sit in a desk next to her, draw-
ing pictures and imagine that I was her personal assistant. I also re-
member times when I had to stay home alone because she had a
lecture to give or errands to run; I would lean against the window sill
staring down into the bleak, concrete streets waiting and watching
for the return of a petite form in a bright red jacket. Yet despite the
forlorn days and the lonely nights, I feel neither regret nor resentment
towards those early years or my mother. On the contrary, I am incred-
ibly proud and grateful for all the difficulties she endured in order
to raise me properly. Had it not been for my childhood experiences,
I would not have matured at such an early age or developed such a
strong sense of independence.
We moved to America in the spring of 1997. The transition of cul-
tures was daunting yet it failed to dishearten my mother. Like every
other experience in her life, she treated the move as an opportunity.
However, even my mother was not immune to the overwhelming cul-
tural shock, and despite her perseverance and accomplishments, she
continually struggled with the language barrier and the difference in
societal values.
120 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
With an impressive vocabulary and keen sense of reflection, Lisa
has written an essay that conveys the story of her unique upbring-
ing across two very different cultures. This essay weaves together
Lisa’s history and personality with that of her mother. Like Timothy’s
essay “Self Mind,” (Chapter 7), Lisa balances information about herself
Chapter 12: An Influential Person 121
issu Es
“sustainable Development in south Africa”
Steve Schwartz
Columbia University
123
124 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
Steve’s essay gives us insight into his experiences as a youth ad-
vocate in South Africa and youth representative for the WSSD. This
unique opportunity is obviously a great honor. Steve does a good job
presenting specific examples of his summer experiences and relating
the larger lessons he learned from them.
In his introduction, Steve might have helped contextualize the situ-
ation by explaining what it means to be a “youth delegate,” how long
the WSSD was going to last, why he needed to write a press release,
and what kind of lobbying he was doing. While impressive, the first
paragraph in this essay is almost overwhelming because it contains
so much information with limited explanation. Additionally, the refer-
ence to the SustainUS conference is confusing. It is unclear whether
the next two sentences about fundraising for the trip and witnessing
“the human spirit in its purest sense” refer to the SustainUS confer-
ence or the South Africa conference. Avoid the temptation to inundate
readers with information and make sure that what you do write is clear
and concise. Think of your college application as a package where
you can include information about yourself through many different av-
enues—the essays are just one channel for introducing yourself to the
admissions officers.
The second paragraph of the essay is strong because it focuses
specifically on Steve’s experiences in Soweto. The contrast between
the conference and the shantytowns is striking. Steve might have elab-
orated more on his experiences of meeting “poor Africans living in
shanties with limited access to water” to further demonstrate why “this
observation embedded in [his] mind the seriousness of [his] work in a
way that no statistic could describe.” Steve demonstrates his commit-
ment to helping others in his assertion, “I needed to work around the
clock while I was in South Africa to help these impoverished people.”
His essay would be even stronger if he could more explicitly relate
this lesson to what he learned from the International Youth Summit.
Clarifying the distinctions between the Youth Caucus at the WSSD, the
International Youth Summit, and the World Summit would help read-
ers be on the same page as Steve. The ease with which Steve uses
these terms clearly demonstrates his familiarity with government and
politics. However, it is important to remember that college admissions
essays are typically written for the general reader, rather than a spe-
cialist reader. Exceptions to this include essays that ask about specific
career paths.
The conclusion of the essay cleanly ties together Steve’s diverse
experiences and looks towards the future, where one suspects that
Steve will consider working towards sustainable development, both in
126 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
and out of the classroom. Had Steve applied to a school with a strong
international development or political science program, he might have
also referenced these specific university assets to tailor his essay for
that specific university.
AnAlysis
Ariela takes advantage of this optional essay to illustrate a unique
perspective on her life. While her other two essays focused on her
passion for science, this essay helps create a “thorough impression”
of other aspects of Ariela’s life, namely her commitment to public ser-
vice and experiences in local government leadership. This essay is
reminiscent of Anastasia’s “Cuddle Buddies” (Chapter 8) in presenting
an example of going above and beyond an assigned service task. In
Ariela’s case, she is delivering turkey dinners to homebound senior
citizens. Her compassion shines through when she notes, “. . . our brief
visits with them were filled with laughter, hugs, and the sharing of fam-
ily photo albums.” However, it is Ariela’s keen sense of observation that
helps her to notice “signs of loneliness and isolation”: dusty windows,
faded Christmas cards, single place settings. These evocative details
show that she recognizes a community need—“a way to better con-
nect with the seniors.” The contrast to the joy and laughter and the indi-
cations of loneliness make this first paragraph emotionally compelling
and clearly demonstrate the issue that Ariela hopes to address.
What makes Ariela’s story unique is that she is not content to rest
with this observation. Instead, she takes her concern to someone who
can help facilitate the change she envisions. By providing the dates
in her essay, Ariela shows us the compressed time frame in which
all of the actions and changes she created took place. This highlights
her ability to act quickly and suggests that she will be a mover and a
shaker in her college setting.
Ariela’s essay also stands out because she describes the chal-
lenges she encounters in the process of creating change. First, she
128 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
lEad Ershi P
“Birthing a Business”
Jason Y. S hah
Harvard University
AT mY AGE, FEw pEopLE cAN genuinely claim that they have had
a life-changing experience. After attending Leadership in the Business
World (LBW) at the Wharton School last summer, I became one of
those fortunate people to have experienced a life-changing academic
program. Four weeks of meeting business executives, working with
teammates through the night perfecting our professional business plan,
experiencing the independence and responsibility that will come with
college . . . none of this was advertised in the brochure for LBW, but all
of this is what made it uniquely meaningful to me.
The business leadership program centered on one culminating ac-
tivity: the prestigious LBW Business Plan Competition. As we prepared
for this, we heard from Wharton faculty members and many corporate
heavyweights including Brian roberts, CEO of Comcast Corporation.
Meeting educators, executives and entrepreneurs broadened my
knowledge of business, created a strategic network of connections and
proved profoundly inspiring; nothing motivates me more than see-
129
130 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
ing hard work and sharp thinking reach fruition. I vividly remember
when a managing director of a venture capital firm singled me out for
a networking demonstration. Expecting me merely to pretend to hand
him a fake business card, he was dumbfounded by impressed when he
glanced back as he accepted an actual business card from my tutoring
business. As my business card now rested in Mr. Kimmel’s rolodex
next to elegant cards from established businesspeople, a lesson was
ingrained in my mind about acting uniquely in order to distinguish
myself in a field of equally qualified and eager peers.
Despite the inherently competitive nature of LBW, I established
enduring friendships with students from far-reaching places, such as
Shanghai and Accra. We shared stories over meals in Houston Hall
about life at home and engaged in heated discussions about business
ethics. regardless of the origin of our passports, we became a family
while learning about each other’s cultures and future business aspira-
tions. The lessons of compassion and hard work from the business
plan competition also heightened my experience. Once when a fellow
marketing officer was struggling with determining channels of distribu-
tion for our product, I disregarded trying to seem individually superior,
and we cooperatively tackled the problem. Putting the team before the
individual was a concept that materialized itself during my experience.
The bonds between all of the students and advisors spurred my entre-
preneurial spirit as I experienced how friendship supports business.
I knew this experience had changed me forever when I triumphant-
ly concluded our team’s business presentation, confidently promoting
our product and connecting with a crowd of peers and venture capital-
ists. During the evening following the presentations, my fellow team-
mates and I beamed with boundless relief and pride when the vCs
announced our team, EnTECH LLC, as the first place winners of the
competition. Exploring and honing my business and entrepreneurial
skills was intimidating initially, yet with creativity, hard work and an
unparalleled group dynamic of cooperation, this experience cemented
my passion for business and opened grand doors of opportunity.
Chapter 14: Leadership 131
AnAlysis
This essay of Jason’s helps us appreciate the “entrepreneurial
and philanthropic endeavors” that Jason refers to at the end of his
Common Application personal essay “Hurricane Transformations,”
(Chapter 15). This type of cross-referencing or linking can be an ex-
cellent strategy for presenting yourself as well rounded without try-
ing to cram too much information into a single essay. After reading
“Hurricane Transformations,” college admissions officers are likely to
be curious about what Jason’s projects as a community leader are;
and this essay is the perfect answer to that question.
While the first sentence of this essay, “At my age, few people
can genuinely claim that they have had a life-changing experience”
may sound slightly patronizing and condescending, it does succeed
in piquing our curiosity as readers and hints at Jason’s maturity and
confidence. It is important to think about the tone that the overall es-
say communicates. Jason conveys a confident tone in his writing by
telling us about the “uniquely meaningful” experience he had through
the LBW program, one he clearly fashioned for himself. This contrasts
to the more contemplative tone in “Hurricane Transformations.” Varying
the tone between essays is a method to show different sides of your
personality.
Jason gave a brief description of the highlights of LBW’s event-
packed four weeks (“meeting business executives, working with team-
mates through the night perfecting our professional business plan,
experiencing the independence and responsibility that will come with
college”) without reading like a brochure. Then he wisely chose to fo-
cus on the culminating activity. Indeed, Jason shares how he learned
the lesson to act “uniquely in order to distinguish [him]self in a field of
equally qualified and eager peers.” This sentence shows us that Jason
is willing to go above and beyond what is expected and to leave his
comfort zone in the process, yet also demonstrates consideration and
respect for his peers. The anecdote about meeting Mr. Kimmel is also
an artful way to let us know that Jason has started a tutoring business
for which he even has a business card, a testament to his thoughtful-
ness and professionalism.
This mix of pride and humility is particularly fitting in the team-
work that Jason describes: “we became a family,” “we cooperatively
tackled the problem.” Jason is probably interested in studying busi-
ness and entrepreneurship in college, and the story of EnTECH LLC’s
creation through dedicated hard work demonstrates his ability to be
both a leader and a team member, highly valued traits when working
on a business team. What is striking about Jason’s essay is that it lets
us in on the journey that created EnTECH; indeed, even if his team
132 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
“All I know about leadership I learned from . . .” What items could a person
use to describe leadership qualities?
Inspired by the student council advisors at my high school.
STUdENT coUNcIL wAS A BIG pArT of my life in high school. I
have participated in it since my first year of high school. When I first
joined, I was quiet, naïve, and unwilling to participate in many activi-
ties. I was scared to meet new people and afraid to apply myself. This
all began to change. Half way through my first year in student council,
one of the advisors can up to me and asked why I did not participate
that much. I did not have an answer for her and did not know how to
respond. After this, I began to think of an answer. I became frustrated
and decided to change. I started to show up at events and had a great
time. I realized I loved this and wanted to start leading these activities.
In my sophomore, junior, and now my senior year of high school, I as-
serted myself and took on a strong leadership role in student council.
I did not figure out the answer to why I was so reserved until this year
with the help of this question.
When I looked up leadership in the dictionary, it said that it was the
capacity to lead and the act or instance of leading. These are two very
broad definitions of leadership. Many people have different notions of
what this word actually means. When I was challenged to use different
items to describe what leadership actually is, I thought this was going
to be a hard and obnoxious task. What could I learn from compar-
ing leadership to a stuffed animal or a rubber chicken? But when I sat
Chapter 14: Leadership 133
I was a freshman, I thought leadership was this. I did not know that I
did not have to be forceful and strict. I stereotyped a leader then. This
is where I went wrong. A leader is about being yourself and never let-
ting anyone change you. I thought I had to change to be a good leader.
Only when I expanded my comfort zone did I realize this was not true.
It only took three years and a silly question/game to figure this out.
AnAlysis
Vicky’s essay combines both playful metaphors and an honest ap-
praisal of her experiences in Student Council to demonstrate the evo-
lution of her thinking about leadership. Vicky begins by revealing some
of her weaknesses in Student Council: “I was quiet, naïve, and unwill-
ing to participate in many activities. I was scared to meet new people
and afraid to apply myself.” Vicky takes a similar tactic to Angelica in
“No Longer Invisible” (Chapter 7) by presenting an image of herself
before her transformative decision to take on “a strong leadership role
in student council.” This first paragraph could be strengthened by a
more detailed description of what Student Council is and what stu-
dents’ roles are. It’s best not to assume that admissions officers will
know about the groups and activities you reference in your essay, so
contextualizing clues are always helpful. Vicky could have explained
how many people were members of student council.
The most memorable part of Vicky’s essay is her act of looking up
leadership in the dictionary and not feeling satisfied with the definition
she found: “the capacity to lead and the act or instance of leading.”
This unclear definition, combined with a challenging question/game
to compare leadership to things like stuffed animals and rubber chick-
ens, compelled Vicky to discover that “leadership could be compared
to almost anything a person wants.” Another contextualizing clue that
could provide more clarity for this essay is to know the origin of this
game. Who assigned Vicky this “hard and obnoxious task”? One of the
key strengths in Vicky’s essay is her honesty about her thoughts and
emotions. You may be tempted to romanticize the truth in an admis-
sions essay, but writing honestly is not only ethical, it also allows your
authentic voice to shine through.
The third and four paragraphs provide creative comparisons be-
tween leadership and two unexpected objects: a calculator and a ball.
Vicky writes clearly how attributes of calculators and balls are also
qualities of effective leaders. Vicky does a good job of summarizing
the lessons she learned from this comparative exercise: “This activity
made me realize that being a leader is so much more than just hav-
ing authority and having the ability to take control of a situation . . .
Leadership is more than what the dictionary says it is.” In the final
Chapter 14: Leadership 135
PErsonal Gr owth
“Beauty”
Anonymous
Yale University
pEopLE SAY ThAT INNEr BEAUTY mATTErS more than outer beau-
ty. But when I looked into the mirror and saw my face covered with
unsightly blemishes, it was hard to tell myself that and believe it. By
the time I entered high school, my acne had gotten worse, and my
self-esteem was at an all-time low. So in the summer of ninth grade, I
embarked on an unexpectedly difficult and emotionally trying quest
for clear skin, an experience that culminated in one of my proudest
achievements.
My typical daily diet consisted of sugary cereal for breakfast; salty
turkey sandwiches, soda, and chips for lunch; a candy bar for snack;
and rice and fried noodles for dinner. I never thought that my diet
would be a cause of my acne, but the possibility first came to me when
I was reading a skincare article. Desperate for a cure, I searched “clear
skin diet” on the Internet. The websites that turned up all echoed the
same message: a balanced and healthy diet is crucial for beautiful skin.
The recommended foods listed included large portions of fruits, veg-
137
138 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
etables, grains, nuts, and fish; 8 glasses of water daily and only small
amounts of high-sodium, high-fat, and high-sugar foods. I researched
further and found out that the expensive chemical cleansers that I
had been using were not the answer—gentle face washes and a coat
of sunblock were inexpensive products that could reduce breakouts. I
knew that changing my entire diet and skincare routine would require
a tremendous amount of commitment and willpower. But determined
to improve my skin and my self-confidence, I began to transform my
lifestyle. I started by incorporating fruits and vegetables into my meals
and replacing sugary cereal with whole grains, chips with carrots, and
fried noodles with salmon. For a long, painful week, I stuck to this diet
and restrained myself from any junk food. My skin condition changed
gradually but substantially. By the end of the week, my skin was no-
ticeably smoother, clearer, and brighter. Yet I found myself relapsing,
unable to continue for long without indulging myself, unable to swal-
low the horribly plain salads and chewy carrots. Every time I stopped,
the acne came back. It came to the point where I despised the acne and
coveted the clear skin enough to force myself back on track. It became
an excruciating pattern of cravings and self-restraint. I struggled with
these two impulses until I became used to healthy eating, even enjoy-
ing it. now, two years later, my skin is better than ever and I have never
gone back to eating the way I had before.
I have no awards or medals to show for my particular achievement.
But no academic distinction in the world can match what I gained from
my experience with changing my diet: healthier skin, self-confidence,
and newfound mental strength. Above all, I realized that by improving
my outer appearance, I had enriched my inner appearance.
AnAlysis
“Beauty” provides an intimate portrayal of the author’s struggle
against acne. Most admissions essays tend to focus on resume-worthy
activities. As the author admits, “I have no awards or medals to show
for my particular achievement.” But this essay shows that accomplish-
ments in one’s personal life can also be just as successful as essays
focused on more prominent or recognizable activities. Other essays in
this book also use personal topics not obviously related to academics
or typical extracurriculars to give us a stronger sense of the author’s
personality, such as Alex’s “Box of Chocolates” (Chapter 9).
Chapter 15: Personal Growth 139
This essay stands out for its candor about the author’s feelings of
low self-esteem when she saw the “unsightly blemishes” she faced
each time that she looked in the mirror. The exacting details of the
essay help show us the ups and downs in the author’s “unexpectedly
difficult and emotionally trying quest for clear skin.” After sharing the
results of her extensive research, the author concludes, “I knew that
changing my entire diet and skincare routine would require a tremen-
dous amount of commitment and willpower.” The essay then goes on to
show the waxing and waning of the strength of this commitment. Like
other essays that share about weaknesses and strengths, this account
humanizes the experience, allowing us as readers to relate to the pro-
cess. For instance, we can admire the author for her restraint during “a
long, painful week” of a completely different diet. Anyone who has ever
failed to keep a New Year’s Resolution or other lifestyle transforma-
tion vow can sympathize with the statement, “I found myself relapsing,
unable to continue for long without indulging myself.” The author’s un-
savory descriptions of “horribly plain salads and chewy carrots” add a
humorous touch of detail to the essay while also underscoring the dif-
ficulty the author experienced in changing her diet. Rather than pres-
ent an easy problem-solution setup, the author frankly shows us the
cyclical nature of this journey by sharing such statements as this one:
“It became an excruciating pattern of cravings and self-restraint.” This
essay shows that essays need not describe rapid changes and eureka
moments; stories about gradual transformations and processes with
many setbacks or retrogressions can also be quite compelling. In the
case of this author, she struggled with cravings and self-restraint until
she “became used to healthy eating, even enjoying it.”
The conclusion nicely sums up the key lessons found in this essay.
Besides the obvious benefit of healthy skin, the author also gained
“self-confidence, and newfound mental strength.” The reference to
the classic expression about inner and outer beauty helps introduce
and conclude the essay. This creates a nice wrapped-up effect. The
author’s changing attitudes towards the belief that “inner beauty mat-
ters more than outer beauty” shows her transformation. At first, she
doubted both her outer and inner beauty; but after her two years of
determined lifestyle modification, she found her inner life enriched by
her improved outer appearance.
140 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
Listen. Smile. I could see her contemplating the emerging rhythm and
resonance of each successive pulse. Watching a budding musician feel
the delicate timbre of each drumbeat is a thrilling sensation.
I learned more from observing than I did through years of erratic
practice. Chaandni would eagerly listen to a musical piece, then strike
incessantly until she produced a matching pitch. When she stumbled,
she would sit patiently pinpointing her mistake. She didn’t speak; her
insight and emotion glowed through her music. For the first time in
my life I felt the depth of the drums. For the first time, I truly compre-
hended and loved the instrument.
She was indeed a special soul. Her curiosity was insatiable; her re-
gard for the drum was incomparable; her smile was inspiring. Her joy-
ful progress inspired me to perform in London this summer with my
guru. Driven by the spirit of a young girl who never let her disability
impede her innate talent, I played gracefully in front of hundreds of
spectators and cherished the inner triumph.
I am a living example of Brahma’s story. The combination of grace
and force on the tabla is my channel for communicating emotions. My
tale ends with the appreciation that the mind is a beautiful vehicle for
the drum.
AnAlysis
Using the drum story as an introduction, the writer draws in his
reader. Shreyans provides just enough detail to pique our curiosity as
we strive to understand the message; yet the plot is simple enough
that the story doesn’t overwhelm us. Many students make the mistake
of focusing too much on a related story and not enough on the main
purpose of the essay. Shreyans has just the right balance, ensnaring
the interest of the reader right from the beginning and then moving
quickly to the main body of the essay.
In the next three paragraphs, Shreyans sets up the main conflict
in the essay. The clever quote from his guru, “It doesn’t matter how
fast your hands can beat the drum if your mind cannot keep up with
them,” foreshadows the importance of thought as a part of musician-
ship. Shreyans explains that at first, he wanted to just play the tabla
with as much force as possible, without regard to the contemplation
that should empower the performance. By introducing us to the begin-
ning point of his process, he is able to set up the rest of the essay to
show us his growth.
142 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
“Hurricane Transformations”
Jason Y. S hah
Harvard University
AnAlysis
Jason’s essay provides a powerful story of self-transformation
from an introverted person to a community leader. The metaphor of the
hurricane—a catastrophic event that requires rebuilding afterwards—
makes this essay memorable, as we see how hurricanes related both
literally and metaphorically to Jason’s life. The hurricane provides a
vivid image that reminds us of the force of the challenges Jason faced,
both in witnessing Hurricane Charley and also in shouldering the “self-
inflicted adversity” of moving to Florida.
Self-transformation is an ambitious topic to write a single essay
on—after all, this is often the topic of entire biographies. Jason does
a good job of reigning in the vastness of this topic by providing spe-
cific details and identifying concrete events. For example, he paints
the image of a “cozy center-hall colonial” and shows us the “snowball
fights” and “lawn sprinklers” of his youth. Descriptions like these create
an evocative sense of the comfort and familiarity of Jason’s suburban
New Jersey home. This is much more memorable than simply stat-
ing that he has an emotional attachment to New Jersey. The contrast
between the cheerful scene in New Jersey and the “hollow hallways”
Jason imagines in his new school help us appreciate how challenging
the prospect of moving was to Jason.
In the third paragraph, Jason reveals an adventurous and risk-tak-
ing part of his personality that he connects to his heritage as the son
of Indian immigrants. As the narrative unfolds, Jason shows us how his
decision to move is hardly easy at first, but that his willingness to con-
front a challenge in order to generate personal growth demonstrates
courage and a commitment to learning. “I yearned for the chance to
write my own story,” writes Jason, who goes on to demonstrate how
he steps into that bold dream. “By fortuitous research,” he continues,
“. . . I learned more about innovative entrepreneurs who were shaping
our world. I have not looked back since.” Jason may have chosen to
elaborate more on what the nature of the “fortuitous research” was and
who some of these “innovative entrepreneurs” were, especially since
he refers back to entrepreneurship and philanthropy at the end of his
essay. While descriptions are helpful to set the context and scene, it is
important to spend time elaborating in pivotal moments, since these
are so critical to a narrative essay.
Chapter 15: Personal Growth 145
my studies. It was there that I would max out my library card to read
Harry Potter novels and sit at the wide tables with my head in textbooks
and magazines, searching for a better life. My mother knew the anger
I had for the house, as a result, she would indirectly encourage me to
channel out my negative feelings for the house into positive ones for
learning by dropping by the library after work with apple juice for me.
My appreciation for my mother is great because she still managed to set
time aside from her work to attend to my needs. My objective was to
gain all the knowledge I could, in hope of devising a plan to get us out
of the Wellington Black Hole. At one point, I spent a whole Saturday
looking for some sort of mathematical equation that would cure our
blight. Enriching my knowledge was my naïve way of trying to improve
and control our bleak situation. Fortunately, my mother’s relentless ef-
fort for work allowed us to move to a better part of Daly City.
When I finally got my driver’s license at the age of sixteen, after a
vigorous curriculum of driver’s education, driving lessons, and a driv-
ing test, the first place I drove my mother’s old Toyota Camry was to
the house on Wellington Avenue. The freedom of driving allowed me to
explore a place where I had been trapped in for so long. Crouched on
the warm cement, I glanced pass the faded wooden walls and peered
through the constricting vent to see the three year old that once sat on
the cold floor. As I stood with the sun shining on my back, I acknowl-
edged that my mother and I were given a situation that we did not
choose, but we ultimately became the ones who changed the course of
our lives. A photo of the Wellington house sits on my bedroom window
edge, casting a small shadow when sun light beams in. It serves as a
painful reminder of my background, and an inspiration to continue
excelling in life, even when unfavorable conditions dominate.
AnAlysis
Jackie’s essay is similar to Sarah’s “Unshakable Worth,” (Chapter
7) and Timothy’s “Self Mind,” (Chapter 7) in that it takes a family diffi-
culty—growing up in poverty with an absentee father—and transforms
it into a story of growth and personal strength. The beginning of the
essay conveys an oppressive and stifling mood with its description
of “The House on Wellington Avenue,” a title that in itself alludes to
the rich themes of immigration, coming of age, and poverty present in
Sandra Cisneros’ famous The House on Mango Street. Jackie’s details
are vivid and carefully chosen to evoke a sense of loneliness: the “thin
Chapter 15: Personal Growth 147
shard of sunlight,” the “windowless, cold, and cramped” room, the “suf-
focating” basement, the “stained carpet,” her single toy as she is home
alone. The comparison of this room to a “cell,” as in a prison cell, is
the pinnacle of this austere representation of her childhood life. Jackie
continues this sense of darkness when she later describes the apart-
ment as the “Wellington Black Hole.” These differing but consistent de-
scriptions bolster our understanding of Jackie’s feelings towards her
childhood home.
However, Jackie doesn’t spend the rest of her essay complaining
about this dire situation. Instead, in the second paragraph, we learn
about a moment where she makes a vow to improve her situation after
being robbed. Her mom’s “fragile arms” contrasted with Jackie’s deter-
mination make such a vow all the more impressive when the reader
realizes that it is an 11-year-old child who decides to become “rich in
knowledge” as an antidote to her family’s poverty.
In describing this quest for knowledge, Jackie demonstrates a
gift for choosing small but evocative details: Harry Potter, the apple
juice her mother brought her, a day spent “looking for some sort of
mathematical equation to cure [her family’s] blight.” Jackie writes,
“Fortunately, my mother’s relentless effort for work allowed us to move
to a better part of Daly City,” but she might also have given herself
more credit for supporting her mother.
The final paragraph strikes a balance between the victory of hav-
ing moved away from Wellington Avenue and the emotional scars that
remain in Jackie’s mind. Again, her keen eye for description evokes a
haunting, nostalgic mood when she writes, “Crouched on the warm
cement, I glanced past the faded wooden walls and peered through
the constricting vent to see the three year old that once sat on the
cold floor.” The sentence alludes to Jackie’s indomitable spirit, one
that will undoubtedly serve her well when she faces new challenges
in college.
16
talEnt
“A Dramatic Coup”
Fareez Giga
Stanford University
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150 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
exam, but also I came out of it with greater knowledge of theater than
I had when I started. I learned a great deal from taking these various
exams, most notably the age old lesson that hard work does pay off.
The personal splendor I felt was one that I had never felt before, and I
live to feel it again.
AnAlysis
Fareez shares a meaningful accomplishment in a small space.
He effectively explains the significance of the LAMDA Diploma with
Honors—an award that only one other person had received before
him—and portrays a sense of jubilation which reveals to the reader
his excitement. Fareez then describes how much work went into pre-
paring the four monologues, each from different time periods. Plus he
adds detail on how much he worked to perfect them, even humorously
revealing that his sister begged him to stop. He concludes with the
greater meaning that he learned from the experience, that hard work
pays off.
In this limited part of the application, Fareez accomplishes a lot
and touches on all the elements that highlight the achievement as well
as positive aspects of his personality. It’s important to remember that
admissions officers will not know the significance of most awards un-
less you tell them. Describe how few people receive the award or how
selective the competition is. Briefly explain the amount of work that
was involved or how difficult it was to prepare. Then, put the award
into perspective. What did you learn from winning? How can you apply
what you learned to your future endeavors? Why was winning impor-
tant to you? If you write about receiving an award, it’s important to do
more than just state that you did. You should also give context to the
honor.
AnAlysis
In “Music as My Second Language,” Jean writes about how “music
is a common language that connects [her] to others who share [her]
enthusiasm for creating it.” Jean packs a lot of information into a short
essay while keeping the topic tightly focused. The language metaphor
helps tie this essay together: Jean’s assertion that “musical tastes
grow more complex” parallels the growth of someone learning new
vocabulary when studying a foreign language. And just as learning a
152 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
“My Bedroom”
Fareez Giga
Stanford University
enjoyable. not only was the design process pleasurable, but also the
actual painting, nailing, and organizing itself was satisfying. I was also
able to bond with my father through the project. He joined me in my
most successful achievement of the room—the design and creation of
the headboard. This venture and this picture epitomize my success. I
consider my bedroom to be an elegant, contemporary work of art, and
this picture embodies all the work I put into my design as well as the
sense of achievement I received after its completion.
AnAlysis
Fareez’s introduction creates mystery in the very first of his sen-
tences that draws the reader in. We want answers. Why is he making
the bed? Why is he in such a rush? What is he hiding from his parents?
We want to find out what engages him in such totality.
In the second paragraph, Fareez explains the point of the es-
say—his creativity. This paragraph is a little general, and it could have
been strengthened with the use of details. He might have shared more
about the roots of his creativity, how he discovered and developed his
talent, or how he hopes to use his inventive nature and unique ideas in
the future. Still, we learn about a meaningful talent that he has, and we
can tell that he is incredibly passionate about having a creative outlet.
In the third paragraph, Fareez shares a specific example of how
he gets frustrated by a small defect. By describing how the palm tree
covers one of the pictures, he gives us a visual image and shows how
meticulous he is with his work. He keeps the tone positive by explain-
ing how he will use this as a lesson “the next time.” It is always best to
use a specific example rather than general terms.
In the last paragraph, Fareez illustrates the strong connection he
has with his father and how he enjoyed the physical work that went
into the project. This gives an additional dimension to Fareez’s work
by pointing out his ability to work with another person as well as his
obvious enjoyment in actually implementing his designs in a hands-on
way.
The strength of Fareez’s essay is that it presents an aspect of his
personality that is not easily shown in the rest of the application. There
is no place on the application to detail that he is creative, and he did
not receive any honors or awards for this project. His essay shows that
you can write about a topic that is not connected to an official activity,
award, or honor. Sharing something that you’ve done on your personal
time can give the admissions officers a glimpse into who you are.
Chapter 16: Talent 155
“A special Performance”
Anonymous
Harvard University
AnAlysis
The beauty of this student’s essay is that she opens herself up
to us, the readers. She starts with a catchy opening, explaining in
rich detail how she is standing behind the curtain and why the night
is especially meaningful to her. We can feel what she feels as she
stands there. She gives a detailed visual description and explains her
thoughts as well.
The author then explains the roots of her interest in music. By shar-
ing her childhood experience, she demonstrates how this has been a
lifelong passion for her. We can imagine her as a child with her friend,
putting on performances for the neighbors. Knowing how an author’s
interest in a given field of study began can add depth and dimension
to the reader’s overall characterization of the student.
In the third paragraph, our musician shares what goes through her
mind. This is valuable to admissions officers because they can see her
ability to analyze her thoughts and her level of self awareness. Self
reflection demonstrates maturity and the capability to take a step back
from a situation and see the deeper meaning of it. She explains why
she is so tied to music and why it is an intellectual experience for her to
recall her childhood song from memory and slowly piece it together.
Through her essay, we understand why this specific performance
holds such great meaning. We see the connection to her past and
to her mother. She makes several accomplishments through her writ-
ing—sharing an extracurricular interest, touching on her childhood
growing up in China, revealing the intellectual side of her talent, and
showing the connection that she has to her heritage and her family.
After reading this essay, the admissions officers probably felt that they
had a deeper understanding of who this student was and that she was
someone they’d like to get to know better.
17
trav El
“Extra Page”
Lauren Horton
Stanford University
YoU’VE GIVEN mE oNE morE pAGE to tell you about myself. Just
one. There are only eight boxes for extra-curricular activities, only three
lines to tell about my summers, just over two inches to write a note to
my future roommate, and only one page to fill in all the holes, to color
in all the blank space. Unfortunately both for me and for you, entire
lives don’t fit into boxes and personalities can’t be completely sketched
on paper. I have to do my best to show you who I am, and you have to
do your best to find me in all this black ink. So, best of luck to you. As
for me, I will write just one more page and hope it gives you a clearer
image of who I really am.
You have noticed, I’m sure, my list of extra-curricular activities.
What you can’t see is the struggle that went into compiling that list.
For one thing, my practice list was comprised of far more than eight
activities, so I was forced to group things together and to leave things
out. Every summer and winter, I travel with my youth group on a ser-
vice trip, sometimes within this country, other times around the world.
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158 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
The summer before my freshman year and again two years later, we
spent two weeks in Costa rica, living with families there and working
both helping build a renovation on a church there and playing with
children in a refugee settlement called Pavas. The year in between, we
ran a day camp for underprivileged children in San Antonio, Texas, and
the summer before my junior year, we did various kinds of service in
Columbus, Ohio. For our winter trips, we have done urban outreach
in new York City and in Miami, trying to use those experiences to help
our downtown church improve its outreach ministries. My service ex-
perience with church goes beyond these trips twice a year, though. I
spend several evenings each year volunteering in the homeless shelter
in my church’s gym both with youth group and with my family. We also
go as a family each year early on Christmas morning to serve breakfast
at the shelter and celebrate the holiday with the guests. These are pieces
of the categories I call “Central Presbyterian Church youth group” and
“Community Service” that I didn’t have space for in the box, but that
mean a lot to me and play huge roles in my life.
Another experience that I haven’t found a space for is the Maine
Coast Semester, the four months I spent on Chewonki neck in Maine
during the fall of my junior year. Although my essay provides one snap-
shot of the experience, it cannot possibly speak to everything the se-
mester meant to me. Moving out of my family’s house and into a cabin
with six girls my own age was extremely exciting for me, and what
I found when I got there was even better than what I had expected.
It was a place I could relate to. In science class, we would learn to
identify the trees and wildlife that were living just outside our cabins.
In the afternoon, working on the farm, we would lovingly tend the
animals and plants that we would then harvest, prepare in the kitchen,
and eat. Each of us realized our connection to every other member
of the Chewonki community and to the land itself, and learned to be
responsible with that connection. When I was assigned to collect re-
cyclables before breakfast for my morning chore, I showed up just as
promptly and with just as much energy as when my chore was to milk
the cows or to clean the bathrooms. Similarly, when a teacher asked me
to read an assignment for homework, I got it done, not simply because
I wanted to keep a good grade, but because the entire class depended
on each person’s individual preparation in order to have rich, meaning-
ful discussion.
Chapter 17: Travel 159
AnAlysis
Lauren makes perfect use of the extra page offered on the Stanford
application by addressing topics that weren’t fully fleshed out else-
where. The first paragraph is a little risky because there is such limited
space and often it doesn’t work to write about something not related to
the main topic of the essay. For many students, a seemingly unrelated
topic can become a tangent that doesn’t add much and that consumes
valuable real estate. However, because Lauren is a skilled writer, she
pulls it off, and she demonstrates her personality through the introduc-
tion. She uses creative phrasing such as, “Entire lives don’t fit into
boxes and personalities can’t be completely sketched on paper.” She
also demonstrates her sense of humor writing, “So, best of luck to you.”
The humor isn’t over the top but comes across as a friendly, slightly
irreverent challenge.
As Lauren progresses into describing her activities, she smartly
focuses on those that she was not able to fully explain elsewhere in
the application. In her synopsis of the Central Presbyterian Church
youth group, she writes about specific contributions she made with the
homeless shelter. It always helps to give examples with details of de-
fined individual contributions. This fills out her experiences and gives
context to what she’s done. Another approach might have been to pro-
vide greater detail about one specific activity rather than list the many
community service projects that she worked on through the church.
When writing about living on Chewonki Neck in Maine, Lauren de-
scribes not just what she did, but the greater knowledge she gained
from the experience. As the reader, you can easily detect her genuine
interest in learning and you can almost feel her excitement in studying
the wildlife and trees outside their cabins or growing her own food. This
authentic passion for learning is one that admissions officers admire
and want to see in students who are admitted, and the way that Lauren
presents this seems natural and not forced.
Finally, Lauren draws a connection between her experience with the
church and the Chewonki community by explaining how one allowed
160 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
her to serve the community and the other allowed her to form a bond
with it. She then applies this connection to her future plans. This is an
effective way to conclude the essay because Lauren illustrates her
ability to analyze her accomplishments and further explains how she
will apply what she’s learned to future opportunities.
I could have been born as an Indian native, because the new World
would have never been explored. Perhaps, I wouldn’t be looking at
the same photo, explaining its significance! Frankly, exploring Spain’s
history has enabled me to discover my origins. When viewing the
picture through my point of view, I see myself returning the roots of
my creation.
Spain also offers a vibrant history of literary works and significant
innovations in Hispanic literature. Similar to the exploration of history
leading to a clue for learning about myself, I have the ability to explore
the literature the Hispanic culture has to offer. Knowing two languag-
es allows me to discover the essence of ideas authors such as gabriel
garcía Márquez, Jorge Luis Borges, and Cervantes wanted to convey
to their audience. Since language is to a code for ideas, I can decipher
two different kinds of codes, English and Spanish, to understand the
author’s emotions placed into his or her literature. Spanish literature
also enhances Hispanic culture as a positive influence in the world.
reading literature in Spanish and English consequently has allowed
me to further search for clues about my cultural origins, since Spanish
literature is considered a voice among the people.
Perhaps my interest in these two subjects came from knowing I
come from a Colombian family. I am the first in our family to be born
in the United States, and as a result, I represent two different cultures.
Knowing I come from a culturally different family, I feel passionate
about exploring my family’s cultural roots because it is a method to
discover clues about my individuality, as well as the origins of my fam-
ily. In the USA, the last names of Aguado or granados are rarely found
among common Americans. When I traveled to Spain, I purchased
wooden plaques showing the coat of arms from my ancestors bearing
the Aguado and granados names. When I found these plaques com-
memorating my family, I had felt I found yet another clue to my per-
sonality, since my last names were found from Spain (similar to finding
a needle in a haystack). Finding my coat of arms on my trip proves my
origins lie within the history and culture of Spain. The trip to Spain
gave me the opportunity to explore my existence as a human being, as
well as knowing from where I came.
Based on my perceptions, my picture represents to me the complex
evolution of my personality, since I am constantly finding new clues
leading to the understanding of who I am. This picture is a part of my
162 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
Brian’s essay opens with a sentence that piques our curiosity, a
trend seen in several other essays, including Oana’s “A Different Kind
of Love” (Chapter 3) and Sarah’s “Unshakable Worth” (Chapter 7). A
first sentence that invokes a question in the reader—in Brian’s case,
the question is “How does Brian belong to royalty?”—is an effective
way to engage your audience right from the beginning.
Brian reveals the key to this mystery in the second paragraph
by tracing the history of Spain back to his family’s origins. As he ex-
plores the “chain of causality,” Brian demonstrates his “passion for the
study of Spain’s cultural history” by making references to Christopher
Columbus and the expulsion of the Moors. He also shows his skills in
imaging: “I could be speaking Arabic . . . I could have been born as
an Indian native” and, playfully, “Perhaps I wouldn’t be looking at the
same photo, explaining its significance!”
These details also relate to Brian’s interest in finding “clues to dis-
covering [his own] individuality.” The term individuality can have several
possible meanings. Brian might have shared his personal interpreta-
tion of the term in order to give us a better sense of what the “constant
search for [his] individuality” means to him. Remember to define the
key terms in essays if they are potentially ambiguous. Clarifying im-
portant terms brings personal interpretation to the written words and
also helps reduce redundancy. For example, Brian writes several sen-
tences that seem related to discovering his individuality and heritage.
“Frankly,” he explains, “exploring Spain’s history has enabled me to
discover my origins.” We gain other clues in these sentences: “Reading
literature in Spanish and English consequently has allowed me to fur-
ther search for clues about my cultural origins” and “I feel passion-
ate about exploring my family’s cultural roots because it is a method
to discover clues about my individuality, as well as the origins of my
family.” These might be more powerfully condensed into one concise
statement placed at the beginning of the essay.
Brian’s essay provides strong examples of his passion for Spanish
history and literature using the memorable metaphor of royalty, find-
ing his coat of arms, and discovering his metaphorical “crown.” Using
a single photograph, Brian was able to share about his heritage and
his personal passions. Many strong essays highlight one’s individual
interests and talents within the broader framing of a group. In Brian’s
case, his passion is Spanish history and literature, and the “group” is
comprised of his ancestors and the Spanish culture they represent.
18
viGnEtt E
“Polar Bears”
Lauren Horton
Stanford University
163
164 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
Many students think that their essays need to be about a serious
topic such as a current event, revelation about themselves or remark-
able achievement. Lauren takes a different route. While she describes
an accomplishment, it’s not a traditional one that culminates with a tro-
phy or hours of community service and not one with an easy-to-sum-
marize lesson learned. What makes her essay work, rather, is that she
Chapter 18: Vignette 165
“Moving”
Laura V. Mesa
Stanford University
ThE qUIcK rIppING oF ThIcK TApE and the heavy thuds of card-
board boxes echo throughout an empty, unfamiliar, and lonely house.
As the heavy boxes are slowly opened and their contents revealed, my
young heart jumps for joy. There, within that scant and unexpectedly
166 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
The framework for this essay provides a way to tie together a num-
ber of things that are important to Laura. She covers five different sets
of objects; and through each of these, she reveals a part of herself.
What makes this essay especially effective is that Laura works her
thoughts into the descriptions of the items. For example, she writes, “I
begin to place them, one by one, onto my familiar, yet strangely new
shelf.” By describing the shelf as “strangely new,” she reflects her ap-
prehension about having her possessions in a new setting.
Through Mr. Teddy we learn that Laura has moved many times.
Relocating is always difficult and requires acclimating to new sur-
roundings, choosing different friends, and perhaps even adjusting to
an unfamiliar culture. The admissions officers can conclude that Laura
is probably someone who is flexible in new situations, adept at making
friends, and willing to establish roots.
Laura shows her sentimentality when describing the lamp. We
can imagine that at one point, all the settings worked. Her description
makes us wonder for what adventures the lamp has provided light as
Laura worked to see her way through them.
As someone who keeps a journal, Laura shows that she is self
reflective. She is a person who is introspective and has a sense of
humor, mentioning Woody Allen. These are qualities that probably
piqued the interest of the admissions officers. They like to see students
168 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
who can take a step back to reflect on their actions and who can laugh
about life.
Through the Rosary and Bible, Laura shows her connection to reli-
gion and her family. We learn about her family ties to Colombia.
The heart of the essay is the soccer photo. Through the photo, she
introduces her background with the sport and how an injury stopped
her from playing. But she also reveals that when she did play, she
played hard and was good at it. Laura then shares that other activities
have filled the void of soccer. What makes this part of the essay work
is that she shares her feelings in an unguarded and honest way.
The flow of Laura’s writing is just right. She covers many aspects
of herself and highlights her values by providing enough detail in her
description of each item that it emphasizes its meaning.
Through this essay, the admissions officers learned a lot about
Laura—that she has made many transitions throughout her life, she is
sentimental about her past, she is introspective, she has strong con-
nections to her family and religion, and she is a person who commits
herself with passion. As you are writing your essay, keep in mind that
you have a similar goal—to reveal something about yourself or your
values to the admissions officers. They want to know what makes you
the person who you are.
19
169
170 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
Mathew’s short essay directly addresses the proposed question in
a way that provides plenty of supporting evidence without extraneous
details. The opening paragraph shows Mathew’s curiosity and knowl-
edge about neuroscience. He describes his higher goal for studying
neuroscience: “to help people overcome diseases and mental barriers
as a doctor, allowing them to achieve the highest possible quality of
life.” This sentence shows that Mathew is not only interested in acquir-
ing knowledge, but applying it as well.
The second paragraph begins with the comment, “Brown University
would also give me the greatest ability to help people.” It is not clear
what the “also” refers to in this sentence; a better transition sentence
might have provided a tighter logical structure. However, the subse-
quent sentence does an excellent job of conveying a specific reason
and explanation for choosing Brown. “With their deep community in-
volvement and famous neuroscience department, I would have an
outstanding opportunity to help people as I develop the utmost un-
derstanding of neurology.” To demonstrate greater familiarity with the
program, Mathew might have included names of particular faculty from
whom he was interested to learn, or aspects of the famous depart-
ment. Since most Ivy Leagues are high profile, it is usually a good idea
to cite more than just fame in explaining one’s reasons for applying to
a school. Mathew’s description of the “open curriculum” is an excellent
Chapter 19: Why Our College 171
“leveraging Potential”
Cameron McConkey
Cornell University
AnAlysis
Cameron’s essay revolves around the theme of a lever and ful-
crum, which he references numerous times in order to demonstrate
the balance that he strives to find in building a successful life. He intro-
duces the lever and fulcrum with a memorable quote by Archimedes
and then goes on to explain it in his own words. When using quotes
from famous people in an essay, it is best to explicate the quote using
one’s own words, or explain why this quote is personally meaningful.
Cameron does an excellent job of clearly explaining how the lever and
fulcrum provide a metaphor for his life: “Fulfilling oneself with passion
and values is to build and place a strong and stable fulcrum.”
This metaphor makes for a clear life vision, which Cameron cap-
tures in his statement, “In an effort to build a successful lever for my-
self, I have searched for these experiences and opportunities all of my
life.” He then describes a number of these experiences and opportuni-
ties. The transition between the fulcrum/lever metaphor to the second
paragraph in which he describes his experiences volunteering at a
local zoo may seem a bit abrupt. Even so, Cameron’s description of
the zoo and his “monkeysitting” story are unusual and memorable, and
they show us that Cameron is passionate about animal science.
The third paragraph begins to list numerous experiences in which
Cameron has participated. This is appropriate for a resume or CV; but
in essays, it is best not to list activities unless they are crucial to illus-
trating a bigger point. Compared to bullet-point lists, it is much harder
in the essay narrative to remember activities when they lack the tie to
a story line. In Cameron’s essay, the Japanese snow macaque is more
memorable than the list of accomplishments such as “NHS President,
Steel Drums Ensemble President, and Student Representative to the
School Board” because it is presented in a story-like way so that you
can almost visualize Cameron as he “monkeysits” for his boss.
One theme that appears throughout Cameron’s activities is his
dedication to science; however, he unexpectedly emphasizes the
leadership aspect of these experiences. The penultimate paragraph
lists examples of Cameron’s leadership experience, where again,
highlighting a single activity might have been more effective. As a tie-
in, Cameron refers back to his original metaphor in noting, “Leaders
are those few who do manage to balance the use of their ‘lever and
174 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
AnAlysis
When writing an essay about why a college is a fit for any given
student, it’s tempting to just regurgitate the information found on the
college’s website, discussed in its catalog or heard during a campus
tour. A greater challenge is to address specific reasons that the col-
lege is a fit for you, and what many students omit—why you are a fit for
the college. This student’s essay succeeds on both fronts.
She begins by explaining her academic and professional interest in
engineering with a clear, concrete example. An example or anecdote
is always welcome to readers because it is stronger to show than it is
176 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
to tell. In this case, the student’s actions strongly support her desire
to become an engineer. This story demonstrates that the writer is the
type of person who goes above and beyond, not just meeting the mini-
mum requirements, but far exceeding them. The admissions officers
could tell that this student does not merely do her class assignments
to get a grade, but that she actually enjoys the process of learning and
then applying that knowledge to real life. Genuine academic pursuit is
one of the key factors that admissions officers want to see in applica-
tions. They want to see that you are not just studying because you
have to or because your parents tell you to, but that you actually enjoy
exploring an academic field.
This student also showcases a unique talent that many other ap-
plicants to the university probably don’t possess—an artistic ability.
Admissions officers are always seeking students who have an out-
of-the-ordinary trait or skill to enhance the entering class. They could
easily envision how her artistic eye could help her develop creative
solutions that other engineering students without her talent might not
see.
This writer makes a connection between the project and her in-
terest in engineering, which eventually leads to her desire to attend
Caltech. This evolution makes sense, and the admissions officers can
easily see how her academic interest led to her professional interest
in engineering and her ultimate interest in Caltech. She also manages
to mention that she received the Caltech Signature Award—an award
from the Caltech alumni association—for her science performance as
a high school junior.
Overall, she addresses two critical questions: 1) what she will gain
from Caltech and 2) what Caltech will gain from her attendance there.
She does so in a way that also highlights her academic passion, visual
arts talent, and even leadership. The essay is very specific about her
inspiration and individual reasons for wanting to attend Caltech.
20
This is not an application essay, but it is a letter that Pen-Yuan wrote after
being placed on the wait list. Pen-Yuan tried to address topics not covered in
the Common Application and was ultimately accepted to Duke.
Mr. _____________, Dean
Duke University Office of Undergraduate Admissions
2138 Campus Drive Box 90586
Durham, nC, USA 27708-0586
Dear Mr. _____________,
Boy! Was I disappointed to receive your letter! However, I do wel-
come the chance to explain more clearly my values, passions and rea-
sons why I think Duke is my first choice.
My application and recommendation letters stated my scientific
accomplishments. The passive thermoacoustic cooling device we pre-
sented at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (Intel
177
178 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
ISEF) won the Best of Team Category and First Award, among numer-
ous other special prizes. We patented this device and are working with
Taiwan’s Compal Corporation, your computer could very well be using
parts built by them, to iron out a few more problems and to eventually
share this revolutionary product with the world. now I would like to
talk about more about just who Pen-Yuan Hsing is.
My education started in the US when I was 7. Having come from
Taiwan, faced with enormous cultural and language barriers, I had to
learn to adapt. Overcoming loneliness and self-conflict, I made lifelong
friends and English became in many ways my mother tongue. returning
to Taiwan in fourth grade mirrored this difficult transition. Some may
find me quiet and reserved, it’s because I learned to listen, and under-
stand. Yet when the time comes, I do take the initiative and let my voice
be heard, as my friends, teachers and parents can so often attest.
Years later, I was unanimously elected as the head of Taipei Wetnet,
a student-run organization that promotes environmental education and
awareness. We hold seasonal conferences on environmental matters for
students from all over northern Taiwan to participate. One story really
struck a chord in me.
For many years the Waimushan coastline was littered with thousands
of plastic beads used in the fabrication of plastic products. Wildlife
there mistook the beads as food and stuffed themselves to death. One
can see many half-decomposed animals filled with plastic beads in their
bodies. Our organization filed a report to local authorities requesting
an investigation. The mayor learned of this and bought truckloads of
sand to cover up the beach. This successful “cleanup” of the coast got
him re-elected a second term in office. Two months later, the extra layer
of sand was washed away by tides, re-exposing the plastic beads and
animals started dying again. We weren’t willing to settle for that. People
do not realize that whatever harm we do to the environment is ultimately
done on ourselves. This is what Taipei Wetnet tries to convey in all of
our activities. We started as just a few friends taking an excursion to the
beach, but now Taipei Wetnet has impact on the national level. We had
meetings on environmental policy and education with officials from the
presidential level. I am grateful to have been the head of Taipei Wetnet
during this extraordinary time. Of course, all my accomplishments, sci-
ence projects and environmental activities, do have their share of difficulties
and setbacks. It is through them that I learned the most.
Chapter 20: Wait List Letter 179
still 200 years from its destination. Steele’s vivid description of how
the character coped with loneliness and his determination to survive
resonated within me. This also happens when I listen to Chopin. I try
to rush home before 10 each night, the unofficial time limit for playing
music in our apartment, to play the piano. Chopin’s music, torn with
great strife and conflict, yet with a romantically optimistic touch, is
something I could relate to, that I can share my feelings with. I would
love to take a Piano Course if I may come to Duke.
My unique qualities and experiences, so diverse yet intrinsically
intertwined, allowed me to become the first Taiwanese student ever
to receive the Ministry of Education’s full scholarship award to study
abroad. With full backing of this scholarship, I strongly believe that
armed with a strong Duke education, I will be able to make a difference
in the world.
Finally, I would like to express my deepest thanks for all the time
and effort you have placed in the application process. My mother is a
professor at the national Taiwan University who is agonizing right now
over their undergraduate applications. This, along with my own back-
ground and experience helped me understand how difficult it must be
to make an admission decision, as it has the potential to change the
future of the world.
Sincerely yours,
Pen-Yuan Hsing
cc: Ms. ______________
Coordinator of International Admissions
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I came to regret this decision because I Sparknoted it, and it sounded really
awesome by chapter 24. I made an oath to myself after that to read every as-
signed book no matter what kind of hard work it took, even if the other kids
were getting better grades than me by reading synopses.”
—Colin Adamo, Yale University
Highlighting an Activity
“For my main admissions essay for Penn, I wrote about my experience at
the International Space Settlement finalist competition after my junior year.
The reason I chose this was because it was something that I could tell in an
interesting story format, and it wasn’t something that many people could say.
Also it was my main activity outside of school curriculum.”
—Mark Su, University of Pennsylvania
International Travel
“Penn had an option asking to describe a time when you had a new experi-
ence. I couldn’t deal with the open-endedness so I decided to choose some-
thing. I wrote about going to India my sophomore year and meeting my great
uncle. His children were wealthy but he still chose to live on a farm. I wrote
about being able to understand it. It was the first time I had visited the coun-
try in 10 years. India had changed a lot over those 10 years from the early ‘90s
to early 2000s. In Bangalore the IT industry blossomed and bloomed, and it
became overpopulated.”
—Ravi Patna, University of Pennsylvania
in Maine in December. It was definitely not your typical essay, but I think it
rounded out the rest of my application well.”
—Lauren Horton, Stanford University
few activities that I was MOST passionate about. A concern of mine is that
students feel that they have to do anything and everything offered within their
school and community in order to get into a top college, and I often found
myself falling into this trap in high school. I wanted to convey in my college
applications, that I would only dedicate time and energy to the activities that I
was MOST passionate about, and this passion radiated through the right mix
of sensory details and analysis of the emotional ties to the activities that I was
engaging in.”
—Shreyans C. Parekh, University of Pennsylvania
had happened and drew them into the story. By establishing a relationship
with the audience I could make my message more potent and much more
compelling.”
—Jonathan Cross, Duke University
A True R eflection
“With all my college essays, I wanted to give the reader a true reflection of
myself. I conveyed what lessons really stuck with me throughout high school
as well as showcased my activities and personality strengths. Even when I
read my essays four years later, I can still say with certainty that my essay is a
reflection of me as a senior in high school.”
—Anonymous, Princeton University
triumphing over adversity or a life changing event. Those topics are fine, but
really they just want to know about you as a person, and your essay doesn’t
have to portray you as someone who will solve world poverty or be the next
president. really you just need to show that you will be an interesting and
valuable addition to their network. A teacher asked me a great question when
I was brainstorming for my essay: What makes me different from the other
thousand people that are applying?”
—Anonymous, Harvard University
A Personal Topic
“I selected a personal topic because I thought it would have the most force
and leave the strongest memory possible in the admissions officers’ minds. I
chose a topic that I thought was unique and very personal to me and am con-
fident that no one could have said what I said in the exact same way—I knew
what I was sending would be powerful in its own right.”
—Sarah Langberg, Princeton University
India, Pakistan, the Middle East and the Balkans. Through the program, I met
Israelis for the first time. It was a very moving experience.
“For the first line of the essay, I wrote that I still remembered when I shook
hands with the most powerful man in the world. The admissions officers were
probably thinking, ‘Why is he meeting the President?’ They probably wanted
to read more. I linked the experience with my grandfather who had a strong
role in my development and passed away after a 13 years struggle with cancer.
The last paragraph was about learning I had won a scholarship from Egypt
that would allow me to apply to top colleges in the U.S. I ended with visiting
my grandfather’s grave and realizing that he was smiling from up above. It’s
important to make the essay as personal as possible. really be yourself.”
—Anonymous, MIT
A Blank Slate
“I chose the question that allowed me to pick my own topic. I thought this
was the best way for me to express my true self, and I thought it was what
UChicago was looking for based on their reputation.”
—Ashley Mitchell, University of Chicago
Analyzing a Character
“Most of the schools to which I applied were on the Common Application,
so from the list of possible topics, I chose to create my own. The summer
before senior year, I had performed for the first time as a cast member in my
192 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
A Love of Languages
“When I began writing my admissions essay, the first thing I asked my-
self was: what makes me different from all of the other thousands of people
applying to Stanford? Surely, they all had amazing grades and a full load of
extracurricular activities, so I needed something that was unique, something
that made me stand out in the crowd.
“From a very young age, while still living in my native country of romania,
I had developed an exceptional passion for the Spanish language. I thought
it would be pretty rare to find another applicant who had grown up half-way
around the world in Eastern Europe speaking one language, fallen in love with
another language from watching Tv at age four, and immigrated to the U.S.
where yet another language was spoken, in a matter of less than nine years.
So I decided to write my essay on my love for Spanish and the different hard-
ships that I had to endure in order to make sure that Spanish would always
be in my life.”
—Oana Emilia Butnareanu, Stanford University
Selling Yourself
“For the Common Application essay, I decided to choose the prompt: ‘A
range of academic interests, personal perspectives, and life experiences adds
much to the educational mix. given your personal background, describe an
experience that illustrates what you would bring to the diversity in a college
community or an encounter that demonstrated the importance of diversity to
you.’
“By choosing this topic, I was able to sell myself to the admissions officers.
The main question that people want to know is ‘What are you going to con-
tribute if we admit you?’ This prompt allows the readers to see who you truly
are. I really enjoyed this prompt because I was able to write about my personal
experiences. One of the easiest things to write about is yourself.”
—Enrique Vazquez, University of Chicago
Chapter 21: Advice on Topics from Ivy League Students 193
On Diversity
“I applied using the Common Application. I picked the essay on diversity
because I thought that would be the one I would be able to say the most on.
I talked about my experience as an Indian American. I thought that would be
the most effective thing to write on and would demonstrate what I’d be able
to bring to the university community.”
—Aditya Kumar, Brown University
Leadership
“I selected my own topic for my essay for University of Chicago. My topic
was, ‘All I know about leadership I learned from...’ I was having a lot of trou-
ble expressing myself with the suggestions the university gave so I decided
to create my own to highlight my strengths. I had been in student council
all four years of high school and have held leadership roles, so I thought this
would be perfect to write about. The idea was actually given to me by one of
my student council advisors as a joke. But after seeing that leadership could
be compared to almost anything, I saw this as a perfect topic to demonstrate
my creative ability and my student council experience.”
—Victoria Tomaka, University of Chicago
A Crime-Scene Report
“I applied with the Common Application, and I chose to write on a topic
of my choice. I spent weeks last year trying to come up with a good essay. My
junior English teacher told us that we needed to make our essays stand out.
Chapter 21: Advice on Topics from Ivy League Students 195
The admissions officers read hundreds of applications every day, and our es-
says needed to be unique. I wasn’t sure how to do this. I wrote one about a car
wreck, but my English teacher quickly rejected it as bland and uninteresting
(lots of people write about car wrecks apparently). A friend advised me to write
my essay about something I enjoy doing. At the time, I was taking a forensics
class which fascinated me. So, for my admissions essay, I wrote a crime-scene
report in which I am searching for my future self at Duke University.”
—Lauren Sanders, Duke University
An Influential Person
“My essay was about my childhood and the difficulties I faced growing up
in China with a single mother as well as the profound influence she had in
my life. I chose this essay topic because I wanted to write something ‘beauti-
ful’, something that I really absolutely cared about and could pour my heart
into. At first glance, you could say the essay topic is generic because it’s simply
about an influential person in my life, but I made it mine because I meant
every single word I wrote.”
—Lisa Kapp, University of Pennsylvania
An International Conference
“I wrote about my experience as a youth delegate to the United nations
World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, South Africa.
My participation in this conference was my most impressive achievement at
the time, and the conference happened to fall immediately prior to the start of
196 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
A Love of Music
“I wrote on music, specifically about my experiences in composition.
Seeing as music was my primary activity in high school (I was in band and
choir for four years, was the lead in the school musical, was a drum major of
the marching band, sang in the select vocal ensembles, was in all-state band
and choir) and music was what I planned to study in college, it was a fairly
easy choice. It was basically about how much I loved music and why it meant
so much to me; in retrospect, it was pretty cliché.”
—Samuel Linden, Harvard University
Family Responsibilities
“My general essay was about the struggles I have in Brooklyn which are a
bit out of the ordinary when juxtaposed next to someone across the country.
It comically mocked the ‘normal’ teenage life of working hard and discussed
the major role I have as the biggest sister to my ten month old brother, two
year old brother, and seven year old sister. I actually had no idea that I would
talk about how mature I am and chaotic my life is while juggling the work I
have to do with my siblings and the ton of work I have at Brooklyn Tech. My
most influential teacher told me I should write about my struggles because she
felt it would get at my essence. I did-and managed to keep a down-to-earth
comedy that kept my story light hearted yet significantly strong.”
—Anonymous, Cornell University
apart from the crowd is your journey—the steps and reasons for why you do
what you do.”
—Ariela Koehler, MIT
On Challenges
“I selected the essay that revolved around my life experiences and the chal-
lenges I faced because I felt that this question really helped connect me to the
admissions officers. They would get to read into my personal life and see how
hard I had worked to make it where I was. It would also a way to let them
know about me and sell myself, because every challenge was a chance for
failure, and maybe I did fail at times, but I managed to work hard and endure.
This meant that regardless of the challenge I would face, that Stanford would
be the place for me, because no challenge was hard enough that I could not
work though, as my life was a time of much challenge so far.”
Andres Cantero, Stanford University
Self-Improvement
“The first topic was about a risk you have taken. I wrote about my decision
to try out for We the People, a competition civics team. I talked about how
even though the program involved a lot of public speaking and I was very shy,
I wanted to be on the team to improve my speaking skills.
“The second topic was a free-choice one. I wrote about how I was eat-
ing very unhealthily and it was having a bad effect on my complexion (A bit
shallow, right? but it gets more than skin-deep. Pun intended). I completely
changed my eating habits and discovered that I could achieve something
198 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
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Communicate Your Personal Voice
“Speak. Do not simply record your thoughts on paper, but use your words
as a conduit for expressing yourself. The essay is the only opportunity you
have to communicate your personal voice. While the resume and the ques-
tionnaire may be unique in the sense that no one has the exact skill set or
range of experiences that you have, the language is dry and static. The essay,
on the other hand, is a dynamic narrative that has the potential to explicate a
personality. Your essay should capture some facet of your character, perhaps
through an experience or a philosophy on some issue or event. The presenta-
tion of your voice is delivered in a language unique to you.
“Do not assume that your essay should follow some model or structure.
Yes, it is important to have structure and a coherent flow (and be grammati-
cally flawless), but never feel that you have to copy another’s style to be suc-
cessful. The essay is a vehicle for your voice—and it should be in your own
language. Think of the admissions essay as a live interview with someone
hard of hearing. Instead of speaking, you must resort to writing. The degree to
which you activate your language, guide the reader along the contours of your
199
200 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
narrative, and deliver the raw electricity of your experiences will determine
your essay’s success.”
—Jonathan Cross, Duke University
Be Genuine
“Be confident and authentic about yourself; don’t try to be someone you’re
not or try to fashion yourself into someone you think the admissions com-
mittee will like. Ultimately the committee is looking to build a class, and you
never know if they’re looking for someone who is exactly like the genuine
you.”
—Anonymous, Yale University
Start Early
“Start early so you have enough time to brainstorm an idea that will be
enjoyable to write about. It’s very important to write about something that has
either made a big impact on you, that you love, or that shows your personality.
That way, it will be less of a chore, and it will really show through if the essay
is meaningful to you. Also, (a piece of advice I was given my junior year), if
you start early, you can write up the essay early enough to go back and look
at it after some time, returning with a fresh new perspective. This will help
a great deal. Finally, be fully aware of all the essay topics, due dates, and any
important announcements or changes, so that nothing stresses you out at the
last minute. The college application process is a stressful chore, so it is best to
be organized and have a good attitude from the beginning. Essay writing and
editing is a lot of tedious work, but if you give yourself enough time for it, it
can be a fun and transformative process as well.”
—Maya Ayoub, Harvard University
just the same as, the next guy/girl. Also, it’s much easier to write with impact
when it is about something that you have a very genuine interest in.”
—Mark Su, University of Pennsylvania
Tell a Story
“Tell a story, and tell it well. I believe that telling a story is the most direct
way of sharing a piece of yourself with someone else. I believe, however, that
the story should also be able to express growth over time rather than a mo-
ment of self-realization (ex. climbing a mountain).”
—Anonymous, Yale University
Anything Is Possible
“First of all, remember anything is possible. When I told my advisors that
I wanted to apply to Wharton with a 3.5 gPA, I got laughed at. I worked
all summer on my application and my essay, and in the end, I was the one
laughing. That being said, you really want your essay to be unique, not just
creative. You want to have a story that nO OnE else can possibly have. This
means don’t talk about being the president of a club, or about playing a sport.
Although I had a pretty impressive resume (I started a nonprofit to raise money
for children’s hospitals and did research with Caltech affiliated Jisan research
Institute), I still knew that there were hundreds of other candidates out there
who had done research and had been involved with non-profits. So, I decided
to write about a movie I made for my dad’s 50th birthday that was a parody of
Forrest Gump. I knew that even though this was completely irrelevant to any-
thing on my application, it would make me memorable and give the readers a
glimpse into Alex volodarsky the person, not the student. When writing your
essay, just remember: is it possible that there’s someone out there who can just
change the name of the sport/club/organization and turn in the same essay? If
the answer is yes, choose another topic.”
—Alex Volodarsky, University of Pennsylvania
that stands out. Also, keep a fairly narrow focus—don’t try to write about
everything that you’ve done in high school. Instead pick one thing that really
highlights what you can bring to that college.”
—Anonymous, Harvard University
Be Unguarded
“Write about something that you know is unique, maybe a bit person-
al, and powerful—either positively or negatively—to anyone who reads it. I
think it’s helpful to remember that your essay is quite personal and that no one
will ever put your face to your writing later on if you do choose to attend that
college. Share as much as you want and don’t have fear that others will judge
you for it or remember you for it later on in the game—they won’t. Think of
your essay as a powerful tool that you can use to get you in, but not something
that you have to be guarded about in the least—it’s pretty compelling to get to
shape this part of your admissions packet in its full entirety.”
—Sarah Langberg, Princeton University
and write about that. It is also important that this activity or event resonates
in the rest of your application. For example, my application essay on the emo-
tional paradigm shift I experienced resonated in the fact that I was a member
of several different bands (local, regional, and all-state) and music clearly per-
meated my life.”
—Devin Nambiar, Columbia University
it definitely comes easier if you love what you are writing about, it is just as
important to remember not to get too carried away with the topic. remember,
that you have to find a way to relate the topic to you—your personality traits
and your strengths. A lot of seniors choose great topics to write about but for-
get that the real purpose of this essay is to reflect who you are. You don’t nec-
essarily have to be direct in describing yourself (‘I am a wonderful person’);
you can imply things about the type of person (‘I tried twenty different times
and my perseverance paid off’), but make sure that you convey the important
things about who you are and why you’re a good match for the college.”
—Manika, University of Pennsylvania
college this year believe that an unnatural level of censorship is required for
their essays. never compromise your message to appear more clean-shaven.”
—Anthony Gouw, Duke University
Tell a Story
“I know they always say not to write about tragic events or make ‘sob
stories’ because everyone does it and the admissions readers won’t pity you.
However, I feel that you should write about an experience that is unique to
you (for me, this was my first time ever performing on stage in a musical
instead of playing in the pit orchestra or working as stage crew). Also, tell a
story! If you enjoyed your experience and were inspired by it, chances are
your writing will reflect that emotional aspect and reveal something new and
intriguing to you. The admissions officer will learn a lot about you, too!”
—Jean Gan, Duke University
Be Unconventional
“Use plenty of anecdotes, and be sure to start ‘in the moment’ to keep
readers engaged. Admissions officers are skimming hundreds of essays each
day, so you shouldn’t be afraid to be unconventional (within reason) to grab
their attention.”
—Steve Schwartz, Columbia University
Brag
“I would say not being concerned about bragging. You have done so much,
and this is your time to shine! Also, start early on writing the essays! It takes
a lot more time than you expect. I started my essays about two months in
advance, and I didn’t feel as it was enough time. As time goes on, you’ll learn
to re-use essays and tweak them to make them work for different colleges and
questions.
“Another good idea is to create a list of accomplishments, starting from
as early as second or third grade. This comes in handy when filling out the
awards/honors sections on the applications, although things really start ‘count-
ing’ from ninth grade on. In addition to accomplishments, I had every club I
Chapter 22: Advice on Writing from Ivy League Students 213
had ever joined, every award I had won in every competition, every leadership
position I held in a club, etc. It might sound far-fetched, but it is easy to forget
everything you have done in the hustle and bustle of application season. It is
much easier to have the list handy and to work off that.”
—Ariela Koehler, MIT
Reflect
“reflect. Think about what events in your life have shaped the way you
are today. Think about what is important to you, who you are, and how you
arrived where you are. Be authentic and creative. remember to not only tell
a story, but reflect on its meaning. And convey your thoughts and feelings
emotionally as well as intellectually.”
—Timothy Nguyen Le, Yale University
traits. I think what worked for me was talking about my weaknesses and
showing how they have made me stronger. What also helped a lot was reading
sample admissions essays from books like this one to get a feel for the writing
they expect.”
—Anonymous, Yale University
Evoke Feeling
“Write about what you care about and what you know well! Do not write
about what you believe the admissions officers want to hear. Instead, focus
on something that you feel strongly about and try to translate those feelings
onto paper.
“The best pieces of writing are those that evoke a feeling; I focused spe-
cifically on description and detail. I wanted to bring the reader into my essay
and let them live vicariously through me for five minutes. If you can take
the reader somewhere by means of the story you tell it will undoubtedly be
memorable.
“One thing that helped me to begin writing after I decided upon the gist of
my essay was writing down verbs and adjectives that came to my mind when
I thought of the subject I was writing about. In my case it was the woods—I
imagined it beyond aesthetics; I thought of smells, textures, and feelings. I
wanted to make my writing as specific as possible.”
—Mollie Mattuchio, Brown University
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What Makes Me ME
“The way I brainstorm is to just start writing and throw a bunch of ideas
onto a paper, then toss out what I don’t like and start over until I am satisfied.
Sitting down and thinking about ‘what makes me ME’ was a really rewarding
experience and helped me gain a lot of confidence in knowing what made me
exceptional.”
—Robert Lee, Columbia University
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216 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
Discovered Passion
“After I wrote my essay I thought, wow, I’m definitely not that deep—I
wrote in a far more passion-filled and emotional tone than I normally think,
feel, and live my life, but in the end, as I re-read the essay four years later, I
am confident that the strong and perhaps out of the ordinary tone left a lasting
impression on those who read it. I learned that I do have the power to create
strong words and paragraphs, but that I don’t necessarily have to live my life
in such a passion-filled way at all times.”
—Sarah Langberg, Princeton University
of the process of writing your essays. There’s a lot of self discovery. You want
to tell people who you are, what you want, and what you like.”
—Anonymous, MIT
Looking f or Yourself
“Sometimes you need to be looking for something to find it, and a lot of
times you won’t be looking for yourself until you try to write about it.”
—Anthony Gouw, Duke University
An Epiphany
“My essay did turn out to be largely a reflection about my experience in the
ensemble and what I gained from it. The piece tells my story of how I changed
218 50 Successful Ivy League Application Essays
Evaluating My Goals
“The admissions essay provided a great opportunity to evaluate my goals
and to really understand my passions in life.”
—Jackie Liao, Stanford University
Believing in Myself
“I think the most important thing I learned from writing this essay is to
stop doubting, believe in myself, and trust that I am making the right decision.
When some of my family members read my essay, they scoffed at it and told
me that if I wanted to get into Stanford, this was far from being good enough.
I remember them saying this was nothing to be proud of, because there are
millions of people in the U.S. and around the globe who speak Spanish, and
having this ability is nothing unique and out of the ordinary. Usually, I was
very keen on listening to what others had to say, but this time, I was sure that
they were mistaken and that my love for Spanish would get me far in life. So
despite their objections, I sent in my essay and proved them wrong.”
—Oana Emilia Butnareanu, Stanford University
Reflecting on My Family
“I never really wrote about my family and my upbringing in such detail. It
allowed me to really reflect on the uniqueness of my family and appreciate the
values that my parents instilled in us.”
—Anne McPherson, Yale University
Being Thankful
“You know you have written a good essay if you go through a period of
self-reflection. I learned about myself in the sense that I explored my indi-
viduality and what life meant to me at that moment. The essay forced me to
Chapter 23: What I Learned from Writing the Essay 219
A Positive Attitude
“I learned that even though I never participated much in extracurriculars
or made many friends in high school, I still had grown a lot and (to my sur-
prise) had a relatively positive attitude about life.”
—Mathew Griffin, Brown University
A Numbers Person
“I learned that I do not like the stress of writing a perfect essay. I am more
of a numbers person. I always think everything I write is not good enough or
could be better. I stressed myself out. It turned out ok because I got accepted
to college but I would much rather take a multiple choice test than write an
essay.”
—Victoria Tomaka, University of Chicago
Reflecting on Changes
“With the completion of any major task, there’s always a sense of accom-
plishment. However, finishing my college essay was different because it just
felt right. It really made me reflect on my life and how much it’s changed and
how grateful I am for everything that has happened to me.”
—Lisa Kapp, University of Pennsylvania
even if college would be a struggle itself, that I had made it so far all right, and
that I could definitely continue to do the same.”
—Andres Cantero, Stanford University
Scrutinized Myself
“I definitely learned something about myself when writing the essays.
These questions really made me scrutinize myself and my life in order to pick
out the most important events that best shows the person I am.”
—Anonymous, Yale University
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