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Tips Beasiswa

Writing Your Statement of Purpose for Grad
School
By accepted.com
The graduate school statement of purpose is your chance
to demonstrate your unique qualifications for and
commitment to your chosen field by discussing those
experiences, people, and events that compelled you to
pursue it.
That's a lot to accomplish–especially in the typical
two-to-three pages allowed for your statement. You can
find the key to success by focusing on a few
illustrative incidents as opposed to giving a
superficial overview. Remember: Detail, specificity, and
concrete examples will make your essay distinctive and
interesting. Generalities and platitudes that could
apply to every other grad school applicant will bore. If
you use them, you'll just blur into one of the crowd.
Following "Ten Do's and Don'ts for Your Statement of
Purpose" will help you write a compelling, focused essay
— one that will transform you from a collection of
numbers and classes into an interesting human being.
Ten Do's and Don'ts for Your Statement of Purpose
The Do's
Unite your essay and give it direction with a theme
or thesis. The thesis is the main point you want to
communicate.
Before you begin writing, choose what you want to
discuss and the order in which you want to discuss it.
Use concrete examples from your life experience to
support your thesis and distinguish yourself from other
applicants.
Write about what interests you, excites you. That's what
the admissions staff wants to read.
Start your essay with an attention-grabbing lead — an
anecdote, quote, question, or engaging description of a
scene.
End your essay with a conclusion that refers back to the
lead and restates your thesis.
Revise your essay at least three times.
In addition to your editing, ask someone else to
critique your statement of purpose for you.
Proofread your personal statement by reading it out loud
or reading it into a tape recorder and playing back the
tape.
Write clearly, succinctly.
The Don'ts
Don't include information that doesn't support your
thesis.
Don't start your essay with "I was born in…," or "My
parents came from…"
Don't write an autobiography, itinerary, or résumé in
prose.
Don't try to be a clown (but gentle humor is OK).
Don't be afraid to start over if the essay just isn't
working or doesn't answer the essay question.
Don't try to impress your reader with your vocabulary.
Don't rely exclusively on your computer to check your
spelling.
Don't provide a collection of generic statements and
platitudes.
Don't give mealy-mouthed, weak excuses for your GPA or
test scores.
Don't make things up.
"This information is provided by Accepted.com, Inc.
Source: www.accepted.com
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