By EssayEdge.com
-
Our
Editing Makes the Difference
Even
seemingly boring topics can be made into exceptional
scholarship
essays with an innovative approach.
In writing the
essay you must bear in mind your two goals: to persuade the
scholarship officer that you are extremely worthy of
receiving college assistance and to make the officer aware
that you are more than a GPA and a standardized score, that
you are a real-life, intriguing personality.
Unfortunately, there is no surefire step-by-step method to
writing a good essay. EssayEdge editors at
EssayEdge.com
will remake your essay into an awesome, memorable
masterpiece, but every topic requires a different treatment
since no two essays are alike. However, we have compiled the
following list of tips that you should find useful while
writing your
scholarship
essay.
-
Answer the
Question
You can follow the next 12 steps, but if you miss
the question, you will not
win the scholarship.
-
Be
Original
Even
seemingly boring essay topics can sound interesting
if creatively approached. If writing about a
gymnastics competition you trained for, do not start
your essay: "I worked long hours for many weeks to
train for XXX competition." Consider an opening
like, "Every morning I awoke at 5:00 to sweat,
tears, and blood as I trained on the uneven bars
hoping to bring the state gymnastics trophy to my
hometown."
-
Be
Yourself
The scholarship committee wants
to learn about you and your writing ability. Write
about something meaningful and describe your
feelings, not necessarily your actions. If you do
this, your essay will be unique. Many people travel
to foreign countries or win competitions, but your
feelings during these events are unique to you.
Unless a philosophy or societal problem has
interested you intensely for years, stay away from
grand themes that you have little personal
experience with.
-
Don't "Thesaurize"
your Composition
For some reason, students continue to think big
words make good essays. Big words are fine, but only
if they are used in the appropriate contexts with
complex styles. Think Hemingway.
-
Use
Imagery and Clear, Vivid Prose
If you are not adept with imagery, you
can write an excellent essay without it, but it's
not easy. The application essay lends itself to
imagery since the entire essay requires your
experiences as supporting details. Appeal to the
five senses of the scholarship officers.
-
Spend the
Most Time on your Introduction
Expect
scholarship
officers to spend 1-2 minutes reading your essay.
You must use your introduction to grab their
interest from the beginning. You might even consider
completely changing your introduction after writing
your body paragraphs.
scholarship
officer need not read the rest of your essay.
-
Create
Mystery or Intrigue in your Introduction
It is not necessary or recommended that your
first sentence give away the subject matter.
Raise questions in the minds of the
scholarship
officers to force them to read on. Appeal to
their emotions to make them relate to your
subject matter.
-
Body
Paragraphs Must Relate to Introduction
Your
introduction can be original, but cannot be silly.
The paragraphs that follow must relate to your
introduction.
-
Use
Transitions
Applicants continue to ignore transition to their
own detriment. You must use transition within
paragraphs and especially between paragraphs to
preserve the logical flow of your essay. Transition
is not limited to phrases like "as a result, in
addition, while . . . , since . . . , etc." but
includes repeating key words and progressing the
idea. Transition provides the intellectual
architecture to argument building.
-
Conclusions are Crucial
The
conclusion is your last chance to persuade the
reader or impress upon them your qualifications. In
the conclusion, avoid summary since the essay is
rather short to begin with; the reader should not
need to be reminded of what you wrote 300 words
before. Also do not use stock phrases like "in
conclusion, in summary, to conclude, etc." You
should consider the following conclusions:
-
Expand
upon the broader implications of your
discussion.
-
Consider linking your conclusion to your
introduction to establish a sense of balance by
reiterating introductory phrases.
-
Redefine a term used previously in your body
paragraphs.
-
End
with a famous quote that is relevant to your
argument. Do not try to do this, as this
approach is overdone. This should come
naturally.
-
Frame
your discussion within a larger context or show
that your topic has widespread appeal.
-
Remember, your essay need not be so tidy that
you can answer why your little sister died or
why people starve in Africa; you are not writing
a "sit-com," but should forge some attempt at
closure.
-
Do
Something Else
Spend a week or so away from your draft to decide if
you still consider your topic and approach
worthwhile.
-
Give your
Draft to Others
Ask
editors to read with these questions in mind:
clichés?
-
Do I
use transition appropriately?
-
Do I
use imagery often and does this make the essay
clearer and more vivid?
-
What's
the best part of the essay?
-
What
about the essay is memorable?
-
What's
the worst part of the essay?
-
What
parts of the essay need elaboration or are
unclear?
-
What
parts of the essay do not support your main
argument or are immaterial to your case?
-
Is
every single sentence crucial to the essay? This
MUST be the case.
-
What
does the essay reveal about your personality?
-
Could
anyone else have written this essay?
-
How
would you fill in the following blank based on
the essay: "I want to accept you to this college
because our college needs more ________."
-
Revise,
Revise, Revise
You only are allowed so many words; use them wisely.
If H.D. Thoreau couldn't write a good essay without
revision, neither will you. Delete anything in the
essay that does not relate to your main argument. Do
you use transition? Are your introduction and
conclusions more than summaries? Did you find every
single grammatical error?
-
Allow
for the evolution of your main topic. Do not
assume your subject must remain fixed and that
you can only tweak sentences.
-
Editing takes time. Consider reordering your
supporting details, delete irrelevant sections,
and make clear the broader implications of your
experiences. Allow your more important arguments
to come to the foreground. Take points that
might only be implicit and make them explicit.
EssayEdge.com
will
significantly improve your essay's style,
transition, voice, grammar, and tone; EssayEdge
will also make content suggestions to ensure
your essay is unique and memorable.
|