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Tips Beasiswa

Personal Statement Writing Tips
By Office of Undergradaute Grants and Awards, Villanova
University
While writing your personal statement is usually the
most challenging part of your application, it presents
you with an opportunity to distinguish yourself from
other candidates. It gives the selection committee a
glimpse of your thoughts, priorities, dreams, fears, and
inner voice that a transcript just can't convey. For
that reason, you have to make your personal statement
exactly what the name implies: personal. Your personal
statement should not be your resume in paragraph form;
it should be a compelling and intriguing invitation for
a selection committee to get to know you better.
Before you start writing, do some thinking. Who you are
and and who you want to be? Where have you been and
where you are going? Why and how do you want to get
there? This is naturally going to involve thinking about
your academic and career experiences. While you
shouldn't shy away from them, you do want to place them
in the broader context of you as a person. It's
wonderful if you can articulate your goals to study
medieval literature at Princeton with Dr. X; it's more
wonderful if you can articulate which particular aspects
of your personality and life experience draw you to
medieval literature, Princeton, or Dr. X. Some
intriguing prompts for this kind of thinking include Dr.
Jane Curlin's Willamette website and the Proust
Questionnaire. If you keep a journal, you might want to
review it to glean some insights and ideas. If you don't
keep a journal, consider starting one.
Give yourself plenty of time to write. No matter how
well it may work for you in some of your classes, a
personal statement is not something to dash off a few
days before deadline. As Ernest Hemmingway famously
noted, "The first draft of anything is **%#." Assuming
this is true, you probably do not want to hand a
selection committee your first draft. You shouldn't even
hand them a second or third draft for that matter. The
longer you let yourself write and revise, the more
compelling and revealing your personal statement will
become. Write early and often.
That said, don't be hard on yourself as you first set
down to write. Even Hemmingway didn't get it perfect the
first time around. Since it's only your first draft, you
don't need to worry about making mistakes, sounding
stupid, or even spelling correctly. Let your thoughts
roam and shut that imposing childhood grammar teacher's
voice out of your head for the moment. Just write.
Once you've got your ideas down on paper, run it by some
trusted readers. Professors (particularly those who are
writing your recommendation letters), advisors, and Jane
Morris are all excellent resources. Try to solicit
feedback about the ideas, structure, and coherency of
your essay rather than simple proofreading. Having other
people rewrite and rethink for you is not the idea;
having other people ask you questions that push you to
think more broadly is. If you're going to do this,
however, be ready act upon such questioning and
thinking. At this stage in the game revising often means
more than inserting commas and adding a paragraph here
and there; it sometimes means rethinking and revising an
entire essay. You may have to give your personal
statement a complete overhaul because you suddenly
discover a better structure, focal point, or slant. This
is normal. Do not despair.
As your thoughts become more and more polished, your
writing should too. Check out a writing manual for
guidance. Strunk and White's eminently readable The
Elements of Style is an excellent (and concise) starting
point. Kurt Vonnegut's short essay "How to Write with
Style" frankly and humorously speaks to what he sees as
the essential components of good writing. Call that
imposing childhood grammar teacher if you need help with
the mechanics of your essay, or find a friend with a
particularly good grasp of the English language. However
you accomplish it, your final draft must be free of
grammatical and spelling errors, and should be as
compelling and insightful as you can make it. It sounds
like a tall order, but you are more than capable of
doing it. Give yourself plenty of time, plenty of
reflection, plenty of revisions, and plenty of help from
trusted advisors, and your personal essay will do its
job: present an intriguing glimpse into your mind and
person.
Happy writing!
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