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Pay attention to the purpose throughout the
statement so that extraneous material is left
out. |
 |
Pay attention to the audience (committee) throughout
the statement. Remember, your audience is made
up of faculty members who are experts in their
field. They want to know that you can think as
much as what you think. |
Determine the content of your statement
Be sure to answer any direct
questions fully. Analyze the questions or guidance
statements for the essay completely and answer
all parts. For example: "What are the strengths
and weaknesses in setting and achieving goals
and working through people?" In this question
there are actually six parts to be answered
1) strengths in setting goals,
2) strengths in achieving goals,
3) strengths in working through people,
4) weaknesses in setting goals,
5) weaknesses in achieving goals and
6) weaknesses in working through people. Pay attention
to small words.
Notice: This example question
says through people not with people, if it says
with people, answer that way.
|
| Usually graduate
and professional schools are interested in the
following: |
 |
Your purpose in graduate study. This means
you must have thought this through before you
try to answer the question. |
 |
The area of study in which you wish to specialize.
This requires that you know the field well enough
to make such decision. |
 |
Your future use of your graduate study. This
will include your career goals and plans for your
future. |
 |
Your special preparation and fitness for study
in the field.
This is the opportunity to relate your academic
background with your extracurricular experience
to show how they unite to make you a special candidate.
|
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Any problems or inconsistencies in your records
or scores such as a bad semester. Be sure to explain
in a positive manner and justify the explanation.
Since this is a rebuttal argument, it should be
followed by a positive statement of your abilities.
|
 |
Any special conditions that are not revealed elsewhere
in the application such as a large (35 hour a week)
work-load outside of school. This too should be
followed with a positive statement about yourself
and your future. |
 |
You may be asked, "Why do you wish to
attend this school?" This requires that you
have done your research about the school and know
what its special appeal is to you. |
 |
Above all this, the statement is to contain
information about you as a person. They know nothing
about you that you don't tell them. You are the
subject of the statement. |
Determine your approach and the style of the statement
There is no such thing
as "the perfect way to write a statement."
There is only the one that is best for you and
fits your circumstances.
There are some things the statement should not
be: |
 |
Avoid the "what I did with my life"
approach. This was fine for grade school essays
on "what I did last summer." It is not
good for a personal statement. |
 |
Equally elementary is the approach "I've
always wanted to be a __________." This is
only appropriate if it also reflects your current
career goals. |
 |
Also avoid a statement that indicates your interest
in psychology is because of your own personal
psychotherapy or a family member's psychological
disturbance. While this may have motivated many
of us to go on to graduate study in psychology,
this is not what your audience is necessarily
looking for in your statement. |
 |
These are some things the statement should do:
|
| |
 |
It should be objective yet self-revelatory.
Write directly and in a straightforward manner
that tells about your experience and what
it means to you. Do not use "academies"
or jargon. |
 |
It should form conclusions that explain
the value and meaning of your experiences
such as:
(1) what you learned about yourself;
(2) about your field;
(3) about your future goals; and
(4) about your career concerns. |
 |
It should be specific. Document your conclusions
with specific instances or draw your conclusions
as the result of individual experience. See
the list of general "Words to Avoid Using
without Explanation" listed below. |
 |
It should be an example of careful persuasive
writing. |
|
CONSIDERATIONS ABOUT FORM: |
 |
Keep to the Page Limit Number!!! Reviewers have
to read hundreds of these applications, don't
overburden them with extra pages. |
 |
Do not leave in typographical errors. You don't
want to be taken less seriously due to a typo,
rite? (laugh) |
WORDS TO AVOID USING WITHOUT EXPLANATION
Significant; invaluable; appealing to me; interesting;
exciting; excited; appealing aspect;
challenging; enjoyable; enjoy; I like it; satisfying;
satisfaction; I can contribute; it's important;
rewarding; valuable; fascinating; gratifying; helpful;
appreciate; meaningful; useful; helping people;
meant a lot to me; feel good; I like to help; stimulating;
remarkable people; incredible. |
GETTING
STARTED |
| Recalling and analyzing
experience - write short paragraphs on the following:
|
| |
 |
Pick a memorable accomplishment
in your life. What did you do? How did you
accomplish it? |
 |
What sort of important activities
have you engaged in? With whom? What role
did you play? |
 |
What work experiences have
you had? What was your job? Responsibility?
How did you carry it out? |
 |
Now look over your paragraphs.
What skills and qualities do you see that
you possess? For example, consider working
with others. Were you a leader? important
"team" player? |
 |
Looking at what you have
found, you can now look for skills and qualities
that will help you in graduate school. What
factors stand out? |
 |
NOTE: You will undoubtedly
have more material than you can use. This
is good, but you need to make strategic
choices. |
|
Your
career goals - write two short paragraphs:
|
 |
What career have you chosen? What factors formed
this decision? |
 |
What evidence shows that this is a correct
choice? That is, how can you show that this choice
is realistic? (Personal experience in the field
is a good place to begin.) |
 |
How do you compare with other students? How different
are you? |
 |
Will you succeed at the school? |
 |
Are you serious about your academic pursuits? |
 |
Do you express yourself well? |
 |
Different viewpoints, interesting/distinct backgrounds
and interests. |
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Will he or she contribute and enrich the program?
A diverse and interesting student body could make
a great difference to the academic experience for
the school, students, faculty and administration. |
From the applicant's perspective : |
 |
You want to stand out among applicants with similar
grades, scores, work background. |
 |
Show them the real "you" beyond numbers. |
 |
Show that you are a serious student and a clear
thinker. |
 |
You want to demonstrate that you have done some
serious thinking. |
 |
You want to give the admissions officers a clear
understanding of where you've been and where you
choose to go. |
Dos: Be
honest, real, distinct, establish the personal
connection and be articulate
Take stock of yourself: |
 |
Assess your background, experience, abilities
and goals. |
 |
Reflect upon your advancement over the years. |
 |
Show what is distinctive and important about
you. |
 |
You want to demonstrate maturity, depth of character,
ability of think logically and professionally. |
 |
Essay your thoughts in your own style. |
 |
Voice your thinking and values. |
 |
Discuss how a specific experience contributed
to your values, outlook, ambition. |
 |
Write coherently. |
 |
While talking about yourself, talk about strengths,
limitations, what has made you a better person,
confident, better suited for your career. |
 |
Discuss aspirations. |
 |
Articulate professional contributions since schools
are interested in motivated students who will represent
the school well. |
 |
Showcase your strengths beyond GPA and scores. |
 |
Since GPAs and test scores do not provide the
complete picture, evoke a mental image of one's
persona with imagination, spirit, sense of humor. |
 |
Evaluate your experience in terms of who you
are as a person now . |
 |
Reflect upon key words. |
Some mistakes to avoid:
DO NOT: |
 |
Replicate the resume. |
 |
Prepare a work of fiction. |
 |
Recount experiences - instead talk about what
you gained from those experiences, incidents etc. |
 |
Write a canned essay. |
 |
State obvious reasons for choosing the school
e.g instead of talking about reputation, strong
faculty, endowment, extensive research facilities,
discuss why these are important towards meeting
your goals and interests. |
THE ULTIMATE TEST |
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Is this an essay that only you could write? |
 |
Take a highlighter and mark sentences that could
have been written by another applicant e.g. your
classmates. |
 |
Bring it down to a more personal level and
establish that personalized connection |
 |
Proof read your essay and critique it.
|