rowliejohnflores
Nov 20, 2017
Undergraduate / Colgate Supplement - 3 word description - "bold, humble and happy" (250 W or less) [3]
Holt, I've rewritten the essay entirely and asked again for new descriptions and this is what I got so far: (It's exactly 250 words)
My best friend who I went to school with since the third grade would describe me as "loud, expressive and analytical." Every day in school, I would be the student laughing on a pun that someone said or a joke even when they aren't funny. She recurrently tells me I'm a weird child and often asks me, "Why are you so loud?" With the rise of her eyebrow, I often stop but will return to my loud self in several minutes. However, she says that she admires my sense of expression that I incorporate with my loudness. I later discovered that my expression is not limited to my loudness as I was able to show my expressiveness in leadership, with my best friend. With my best friend, I became the Hawai'i State Student Council representative while she became Student Body Government president, with the hopes of fixing problems in our school. Even though I'm a representative for state council, she was very accepting of my ideas and trusted my instinct in planning school events such as spirit week and homecoming. In addition, she also describes me as very analytical. When writing her college application essays, I was usually the first person she allows to proofread essays as I have established myself as a grammar police. Lastly, she frequently recalls my inability to comprehend simple jokes as I would often over-analyze what certain jokes mean before I find it funny.
Holt, I've rewritten the essay entirely and asked again for new descriptions and this is what I got so far: (It's exactly 250 words)
My best friend who I went to school with since the third grade would describe me as "loud, expressive and analytical." Every day in school, I would be the student laughing on a pun that someone said or a joke even when they aren't funny. She recurrently tells me I'm a weird child and often asks me, "Why are you so loud?" With the rise of her eyebrow, I often stop but will return to my loud self in several minutes. However, she says that she admires my sense of expression that I incorporate with my loudness. I later discovered that my expression is not limited to my loudness as I was able to show my expressiveness in leadership, with my best friend. With my best friend, I became the Hawai'i State Student Council representative while she became Student Body Government president, with the hopes of fixing problems in our school. Even though I'm a representative for state council, she was very accepting of my ideas and trusted my instinct in planning school events such as spirit week and homecoming. In addition, she also describes me as very analytical. When writing her college application essays, I was usually the first person she allows to proofread essays as I have established myself as a grammar police. Lastly, she frequently recalls my inability to comprehend simple jokes as I would often over-analyze what certain jokes mean before I find it funny.