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Posts by Yayz
Joined: Jul 21, 2010
Last Post: Oct 3, 2010
Threads: 10
Posts: 121  


Displayed posts: 131 / page 4 of 4
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Yayz   
Jul 23, 2010
Faq, Help / Question about becoming an EF Contributor [13]

If you do become one, how exactly would you go about explaining that on a college application? Is it well-known enough for colleges to instantly understand what this is or...?
Yayz   
Jul 23, 2010
Undergraduate / Ms. Lee - "Indicate a person who has had a significant influence on you" [14]

Thank you.

To be quite honest, I felt the same way. However, I felt uncertain about my misgivings--hence the posting. After reading your comments, I decided to read through my essay once more (I have a bad habit of not reading things after I write them, hence them many minor glitches in grammar or spelling) and, not as a result of your comments, felt compelled to add to the essay. Your comments only influenced me by giving me the impetus to edit my essay that I wanted/needed, a direction/place to start, & a limit (since I am prone to writing too much so without your specifics the essay may very well have ended up suffocatingly longer). Also, my essays generally tend to be weak in the organization department since I usually write in, I'll admit, a ranting style & get hungry--and therefore distracted--about halfway through. I'll still be editing/tinkering it for a while, anyhow & the initial post was actually my 2.5th draft so this helped me get to the third draft. Thank you for your warning, though. I'll keep it in mind, especially since I am a wee bit of a perfectionist & probably quite susceptible to that. The rant there was unnecessary, but there you go!
Yayz   
Jul 23, 2010
Student Talk / Hi everyone! Welcome at EssayForum thread. [413]

Thank you =) Well, I came to America when I was four and had to figure out the language in Kindergarden, I do not remember the experience but my mother said it was shocking for me. I am in 12th grade now so I have been learning it for quite a while haha :-)
Yayz   
Jul 23, 2010
Student Talk / Do colleges know about EssayForum? [39]

"Do not affect a breezy manner."

I didn't research that but just off the top of my head, I think that is a warning against trying to sound laid-back and easy-going out of arrogance. Consider that "affect" can imply an ostentaious attempt at appearing higher than oneself--like speaking in a British accent because you believe it shall make you sound elegant and refined. "Breezy manner" I assume to something like a person feigning to carelessly or contemptuously wave something off as insignificant or unimportant. All of this brings to mind, for me, a tall man walking through a horse stable in all of his shining, expensive horse-riding equipment and fashion, with his snooty nose up in the air, non-chalantly walking to his horse while assuming an air of superiority. As he and another rider, more humble in appearance and personality, ride up to the starting point, he falls of his horse. His facade has crumbled. In conclusion, do not, like this gentleman here, affect a breezy manner.
Yayz   
Jul 23, 2010
Student Talk / Hi everyone! Welcome at EssayForum thread. [413]

Hello, Tanya! I am from Ukraine, too!

I think it is great that you are taking active steps to help yourself and your English sounds quite good already! =)

I joined Essay Forum for help with my College Admissions essays X )
Yayz   
Jul 23, 2010
Writing Feedback / You'd find yourself at this spot each day! ; A Book and Coffee-shop [3]

Which of us does not have that special memory of a place and time when we would be sitting totally absorbed

and everything around us seemed right

You switched verb tenses here. From -ing to -ed. I think that is called present progressive tense and past tense, respectively, but the accurate terms are not the important thing here =)

Was it some Starbucks cafe, outside on a favorite table if the weather was warm, or indoors in some nook and the soft chatter of conversations, amidst aromas of coffee and cake.

"Was it" implies a question, yet the sentence does not have a question mark...

You had a book in your hand. Most likely a book you had searched for far and wide, and finally found. It wasn't likely some light reading either, but held, you believed, some knowledge that was vital for you to learn about . Something you had to know, to open a door for yourself, to let yourself into a world you would then see with fresh eyes.

As you approached the place, your mind would already be going over what you had read the day before, and the tantalizing questions you had would now come up.

Then you'd walk over to your favorite spot, from where you could see some green and blue of the sky and lake.

your mind intensified

Try something like intensified the ________ of your mind.

You wouldn't even have the exact memory

The exact memory of what? Clarify that you are referring to the page number :)

wished for, was waiting for you

The words written spoke gently to you

You felt then the power of knowledge

You felt a desire to linger here as long as you can.

"Could" not "can," mind your tenses :-)
Yayz   
Jul 23, 2010
Writing Feedback / Cities need to preserve historic buildings or destroy and replace them? [4]

What exactly do you mean with "insinuate?"

historical events that happened
This site might help you out with some grammar bits like the use of that v. which:
grammarbook.com/grammar/whoVwhVt.asp

as symbols of

memorize the significant episodes

I think "memorize" is not being used correctly here...
merriam-webster.com/dictionary/memorize

Looking at the shabby Rome city

devastated temples and demolished palace

We can also acknowledge thatThese buildings were ruined after the kingdom was vanquished by the enemy; thus, historic buildings are one fundamental method by which we can learn about significant events in history.

an old Arabic mosque is more likely to have a

buildings with the modern one

isn't it similar with alternating our culture with the prevalent one?

I think this should be re-worded. Something like, "are we not abandoning our historic culture to rest solely on the modern one?" or getting rid of the question all together and making it a statement.

obligation to pass on all historical buildings

which is vague and inauthentic

tangible to the next generation.

Try swapping "tangible" for a word like "accessible"

capable of acquainting themselves with an

Neverthelless, maintaining historic buildings requires a tremendous amount of money and old buildings are easily destroyed by earthquakes.Still, the cultural value of a historical building is worth preserving even on economic grounds. To learn more about history, to more distinguish from other cultures, and for the next generations' sake,

stop destroying the historic buildings!

Do you really want to get this emotional? How formal is this essay?

Well, I hope my suggestions helped =)
Yayz   
Jul 22, 2010
Writing Feedback / I would like to meet Jim Thorpe, the 1912 Olympic Gold Medal winner. [4]

(This is my first time editing an essay here as well! =)

You switch between using Jim Thorpe's first and last names: you should probably try to stick to one after you introduce your subject.

When he walked past the track and beat the school's high jumpers with an impromptu 5-ft 9-in jump while still wearing street clothes.

That is a sentence fragment--you have a dependent clause that is lonely because it does not have a clause to help it =)
You can delete "when" and/or add a comma followed by an independent clause that adds detail to the whole sentence.

It was the 1912 Olympic game Jim wrote his legend.

Rewrite this for better flow. Something like "Jim wrote his legend in the 1912 Olympic game" or "The 1912 Olympic Game was the setting for the beginning of Jim's legend." Be creative! : )

In the game, he won the both ofthe pentathlon and decathlon game.andIn the decathlon, his recorded of 8,413 points stood for nearly two decades-- even converts to 6564 points on the current tables.This is still a very respectable score a nearly a century later.

The simply and honestly reply didn't like the one will be standing on the ceremony which great success can bring.

Are you trying to say that the reply did not sound like one which would come from someone with such great success? I had some trouble understanding that line.

If many repellent human traits surfaced during a tragedy, that tragedy willwould be absorbing and worth profoundly considering.
I like this idea!

Thorpe's story was one of these tragedies.

At that time the player should have been anbe amateur status according to the Olympic rule.

While Thorpe had indeed played professional baseball, what he was donedid what other college men had done .except that they did not use their own namesUnlike the other gentlemen, however, Thorpe used his real name .

Not for the first or last time

Try to be a bit more clear or concise here.

a sports organization stuck to the letter, not the spirit, of the law

Thorpe succeeded

As the United States was rife with racism during that era , he failed in enjoying real American freedoms.
Failed seems a bit strong, but I do not know enough to make a judgement call! ^^

One person with Such strong contrast succeed and fail , that fetches me deeply, if I can talk to him ,I would like to know his view of his life and let him know the IOC had acknowledged that they had erred, and declared you are co-champion.

Being a person with such a strong contrast between success and failure, Thorpe deeply fetches me (I do not know if you still want to use that verb, I merely rearranged the sentence)

If I could talk to him

declared you are co-champion.

You probably should not switch to first person at the end of the essay; try to stay consistent with your narration throughout.

=)
Yayz   
Jul 22, 2010
Student Talk / Strategy for Impressing Admissions Readers: Make up a new term or concept [15]

Sometimes I make up a new word in order to win an argument

I do that as well but I haven't actually considered doing that in my essays. It is definitely something I want to try. My fear, though, is that if I try to force it, it will sound unnatural and out of place. I suppose the solution to that is practice and improving general writing skills...Now then, I feel like the AOs will forget my essay because I did not make up a word X ) --I feel "perpluxed" =) ...not a great example, but I am working on it! :-)
Yayz   
Jul 22, 2010
Undergraduate / Ms. Lee - "Indicate a person who has had a significant influence on you" [14]

Thank you, Ershad!

I noticed that I left out "would" after I already posted the essay X ) -good reason for proofreading.

Can I fix the essay by relating what I already wrote to Ms. Lee's influence or if should just try to rework that whole section?

Would the conclusion to be the fourth paragraph or the last sentence? I was having some issues developing the conclusion...

I've edited the essay, does that middle portion flow better?

I feel slightly apprehensive about the length of the third paragraph-should I split it up or is that unnecessary?

With this improvement my essay will be 803 words...should that be a concern? If so, can I have some help shortening it?
Yayz   
Jul 21, 2010
Undergraduate / Ms. Lee - "Indicate a person who has had a significant influence on you" [14]

"Influence" Common Application essay. Schools I will be appplying to include Johns Hopkins, UPenn, UVA, Northwestern, U of Miami. Hello, I would really like to get some feedback on this essay. The only requirement was a minimum of 350 words. This is 518 words.

"Bow down to the ground. If I see the whites of your eyes, you will receive an 'F' for your participation grade," proclaimed Ms. Mary Lee, ninth grade World History teacher, as she swept across the large classroom, carrying away her own piercing brown eyes. To add depth to her students' understanding of the Middle Ages, Ms. Lee devised an interactive activity that would bring the social stratification of this period into the modern High School. Each student applied for and received a role ranging from peasant to Pope and was obliged to interact with others according to the demands of their status. For instance, a knight must carry the books belonging to the queen. At the pinnacle of the social hierarchy was God-played by Ms. Lee. The rather peculiar assertion of her authority as God clearly presented the vast importance religion possessed during the Middle Ages: God held supreme and ultimate authority.

Ms. Lee's use of unconventional demonstrations highlights her overall brilliance as an educator and as a beacon of light guiding my quest for knowledge. Textbooks and other traditional educational tools have always been available, but having teacher with a remarkable ability to demonstrate information in a unique, memorable way is a precious gift. I shall never forget the Middle Ages activity from this World History class. Likewise, I shall never forget the importance of religion and the idea of God during this time period, as well as its great influence on the lives of everyone; after all, for some people complying with the dictates of contemporary religion could be the difference between life and death-or a good grade in class.

Moreover, Ms. Lee's general teaching style had as significant of an impact on me as her specific methods. Her approach to teaching was to show her students the path to knowledge, thereby allowing students to reach comprehension on their own. This teaching fashion developed my own way of thinking: independently. Nonetheless, the greatest change to my thought occurred when I discovered the nature of Ms. Lee's approach on my own and understood her favorite phrase, "There is a method to my madness": a paragraph in the World History textbook introduced me to Socrates and immediately my curiosity was sparked. Noticing that this explanation was similar to Ms. Lee's manner of instruction, I endeavored to ask her if she was indeed attempting to emulate the famous thinker. This was precisely what she sought to do, Ms. Lee gleefully informed me. Her warm reaction encouraged me to approach her with my burgeoning philosophical inquiries. Thus, frequently, after the class was dismissed for the lunch break, I would stay behind for a few moments to converse on a point made in the lecture. This would soon transform into a satisfying existential debate or argument; nevertheless, I would leave the room with an ever greater abundance of questions beating upon my mind, piquing my devotion to philosophy-the art of questioning. I sought to find the answers by, like Levin from Anna Karenina, vehemently delving into the works of esteemed philosophers and referencing Ms. Lee for guidance on my search. Ms. Lee not only taught me the importance of passion in learning, but also the value of assisting others-a lesson I continue to prize and attempt to follow.

Ms. Lee provided an example of a successful maturity of philosophical thought, psychological understanding, and personal contentment. Hoping to stumble along my own path to this state, I found my sleep to be often delayed for hours as I pondered subjects such as happiness and existence. Though nearly weak and weary from the weight of my insatiable curiosity, I found the greatest joy and source of energy in my burning pursuit of essential meaning. Therefore, Ms. Lee enlightened me by revealing an amazing source of happiness: philosophy. My development of a deep appreciation for this avid process of examination was, in fact, an aspiration to become Walt Whitman's "noiseless patient spider," a blissful creature that has formed a bridge to something concrete: a soul that has found meaning and understanding.

In addition, Ms. Lee vividly expressed the matter of psychology in class lectures and our private discussions, intensifying my fascination with the subject; again, I turned to the classic figures in the field. My search began by reading through primary works such as "The Ego and the Id" and "Beyond Freedom & Dignity" by Freud and Skinner, respectively, as well as modern psychological perspectives that combine various theories. While Ms. Lee's in-class demonstrations-for instance, her mild versions of Ivan Pavlov's canine experiments-continued to enhance my understanding of psychology, her personal relationship with the subject inspired me with a desire to acquire the same tranquil mastery.

Though Ms. Lee did not see "the whites of [my] eyes," she did affect the depths of my soul.

For the last two sentences in the second paragraph here I was having some difficulties deciding on a structure because they are related but combining them into one sentence seems to be too much. Any thoughts?

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