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Tips Beasiswa

Personal Assessment
By Scholarshiphelp.org
As we have already determined, scholarships are
available for all sorts of categories of people and
pursuits, from the fairly typical to the downright
unusual. One of your challenges is to match your
background, interests, future goals and/or family
connections to available scholarships.
Interests and Attributes Checklist
The following checklist is a “prompter, not an
exhaustive laundry list of organizations, majors,
interests, etc. If you need those prompts, you will find
them when you go to the on-line services. This is the
“stir the juices” list. Use it to begin to draw a
portrait of yourself for the judges.
Ethnic background, Religion, Parents'
employers
Hobbies/Special Interests, Volunteer work not mentioned
elsewhere, Parents' organizational affiliations
Extracurricular clubs-groups, Special courses of
study, Career Interests
Leadership positions, Awards/recognition,
Planned fields of study
Jobs you have held, Sports, Other
This list will allow you to match yourself against
possible scholarships. It will be a worksheet that will
help you to fill out on-line forms. It will also provide
the basis for additional searches in specific
categories.
A look Behind the Green Curtain – Just Who is the
Wizard?
This is the question the scholarship award judges will
be asking themselves as they review your application.
Your job is to introduce yourself as someone who is
deserving of the scholarship they will award. So, just
exactly who is behind the green curtain? If you’re not
sure, you will have a hard time explaining yourself to
the judges.
The following questions ask you to think about yourself
in relation to the rest of the world and to understand
how you relate and particularly, what’s special about
you. This is not essay practice. No need for neatness
and correct spelling. Instead, this is a good
opportunity to do a little soul searching. No one will
grade you. No one needs to know the answers except you.
How would you describe yourself?
How would your friends describe you?
How would your parents describe you?
How would your teachers describe you?
Which parts of these descriptions are similar?
Which parts of these descriptions are different and why?
Ideally, how would you wish for people to describe you?
What are the three most important events that have taken
place in your life? Why are they important?
What personal accomplishment makes you the most proud?
What are your three greatest strengths?
What three areas of your life need the most improvement?
What is your philosophy of life?
Why do you want to go to college?
How do you hope to be different when you graduate
college?
Describe yourself and what you want to be doing ten
years from now?
What has been your most interesting class in high
school? Why was it interesting to you?
What are the three worst mistakes you have made in your
life? Are you any different now because of those
mistakes?
Pick two or three extracurricular activities you
participate in. Why do you participate?
What are the three biggest obstacles you have overcome
in your life?
What person or persons have been influential in your
life? Why?
Everyone is special; what makes you special?
Now, pretend you are a stranger who has been given your
answers to these questions. That stranger has been asked
to write a supportive 2-3 paragraph description about
the person who answered the questions and then write a
paragraph about why this person should receive a college
scholarship. What would that stranger say? Try it, but
don’t write from your own head, write from the answers
that were given.
Hopefully the stranger was able to create a deeply
meaningful description of a person with many strengths,
who has seen and managed obstacles and who has some
special hopes and ambitions that can flourish with the
benefit of a college education. That’s just the sort of
person who should receive a scholarship.
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