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Posts by abesha100
Joined: Dec 29, 2010
Last Post: Dec 30, 2010
Threads: 1
Posts: 6  
From: United States of America

Displayed posts: 7
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abesha100   
Dec 30, 2010
Undergraduate / "Growing up" - Computer Science UPENN SUPPLEMENT-WHAT YOU WANT TO EXPLORE [4]

Thanks for checking my essay!
I think you started off REALLY well then just went on to make a long and tedious list. I presume what the people at Upenn want to read is a person that is sure about their future, goals, aspirations and plans.

Accordingly, I would put 'plan to study' instead of 'leaning towards', seems unsure.

You go on to list a sundry of activities without really delving into or showing your knowledge about any of them. It just seems superficial. You then go on to solidify your indecision by saying, "my decision may change..."

I think its better if you do a lot of research and find two or three programs and note how they will benefit you and you will benefit them. That'll probably work a lot better than a laundry list.

GOOD LUCK :D
abesha100   
Dec 30, 2010
Undergraduate / "A story with no conflict at all" - Stanford SOP [7]

If there is one thing I learned while reading all the college essay books I have in this stressful application it is to NOT EVER write about religion.

You can't even sound like you are trying to convert others.
Proselytizing does NOT work.
Even a slight hint that you think your religion is better that others and you are out.
Even if you are applying to a religious college it is ill advised to write about your discovery of religion.
I was very tempted to do this, but I had to go another route and suggest you do. This essay topic can lead you down a VERY slippery slope. However tolerant you try to make it seem it just does not look good. Don't do it.

I would strongly suggest another topic.

And just so you are aware here are some points in your essay that may cross some peoples boundaries:

"There was no god at all. If there was, there wouldn't be people suffering in the world, or hungry children on the streets,... "

...

"There at least had to be an epicenter of creation. How else could anyone explain the existence of anything? "
MANY people could explain it in MANY ways...

"If the answer was spiral nebulae leading to the big bang, well how could anyone explain the existence of the reason as to why the universe had to come into being using that approach? "

you risk offending people that believe in the big bang...

"Yes, there was an epicenter of creation. "
proselytizing?

"No one knows what it/he/she is, so let us name it/him/her "god". "

Let's just not go with this topic... As much as you try to make it acceptable with him/her/it/anything... someone it NOT going to believe what you believe... YOu don't want to risk offending a reaaders beliefs...

sorry for being harsh... :( really just trying to help...
good luck...
Hope you do well :D
abesha100   
Dec 30, 2010
Undergraduate / "the vivid gardens and foliage of Ethiopia" significant experience, its impact on you [6]

I really need help guys... My essay is really, really long... little over 800 words...
I've really tried to shave it down, but i can't seeem to think of anything else. :( HELP!
ANY critisim welcome :) be harsh please... i need it... lol

Also this is my extraciricular activity/work experience response... It was REALLY hard for me to work with the 150 word limit, so i used irregular syntax. Any suggestions?

again ANY criticism welcome, needed actually :)
THANKS!

Response:

Searching... It was under 30 degrees, freezing and I was searching...
It was the Blessfest an event to provide for the needs of the homeless held every Thanksgiving. I was in charge of providing the one thing that would last the homeless longer than the short day: clothing, specifically, men's jeans. I found a pair of jeans for each man that stood before me. One remains specifically poignant in my mind.

Still searching... So long... The man said that stop looking.
"I'll try to make due with what I have"
I wouldn't. Looking at his tortured face I knew I had to find a pair for him.
Finally, success my diligence was rewarded. I found his size! I would never forget what he said:
"You don't know how thankful I am right now... God Bless You"
His face showed a genuine gratitude that would fail to ever escape my memory.

PLEASE HELP ME!
abesha100   
Dec 30, 2010
Undergraduate / "academic achievements and all the reputation" - WHY RICE? [4]

Save the grammatical errors that you already have in the response you have given, you NEED a major topic change. You talked about the universities reputation (you aren't supposed to do this even if it's good but especially if it is bad!), beauty (they already know that, not helping your cause), and inadequacy of the name (Why?). These are all cookie cutter answers that will get you nowhere. Since flattery of the university is basically your whole essay start from scrap... You can come up with one MUCH better than what you have...

Now, you need to tell them what motivated you to apply, but what they want to know is why should they choose you. What you hinted at in your response about the cultural video may be a good angle. Elaborate on that, the rich cultural diversity you know about at Rice (research and note specifics to make it seem like you really know their university like "The Vietnamese folk music ensemble would be a great way to display my own culture and help it flourish in Rice therefore, adding to the cultural crossroads that Rice provides." note that was just an off the cuff example, I don't know about a Vietnamese folk music ensemble at Rice) and how you could expand and add to it.

You response should also include how Rice has the unique/right major for you, the unique/right courses for you, unique/suitable programs for you, etc.. and how you could contribute to their school. This is a much better way to go about writing your essay :DD

sorry for being harsh :(
abesha100   
Dec 29, 2010
Undergraduate / The Spare Tire Debacle - Brown Supplement [3]

You are a great story teller. Your essay displays a mature response to the posed question, and I infer it is exactly the type of answer they are looking for, but here are some little things I would change.

One problem I noticed was that you use "and" way to much in your essay. Your details are amazing, and concise, but this takes away from the essays structure. It makes for breathy sentences.

"I turned off the main street that would lead us to the highway and pulled into the parking lot of a pretty church before flinging the car door open and beginning my trudge through the snow."

wordy... I would change that to
I turned off the main street that would lead us to the highway and pulled into the parking lot of a pretty church. Flinging the car door open and I began my trudge through the snow.

"That's when it really sunk in: I had taken driver's training and read the test booklet from cover to cover, passed my exam with flying colours and been driving for months without an issue, but now, faced with a useless piece of rubber and the middle of the night, I was completely ignorant."

YOu also added an extra "and" Also I would use a semicolon. And its in the middle of the night not "and" ... I would go with:

That's when it really sunk in; I had taken driver's training, read the test booklet from cover to cover, passed my exam with flying colours and had been driving for months without an issue, but now, faced with a useless piece of rubber, in middle of the night, I was completely ignorant.

" After an hour and a half of twisting, prodding, kicking and freezing, a tiny black tire replaced the ruined original, and we could finally make our way home."

Another unnecessary "and" I think. I would take it out ans separate sentences for effect:
After an hour and a half of twisting, prodding, kicking and freezing, a tiny black tire replaced the ruined original. We could finally make our way home.

Also, I'm not quite sure what you mean in the last clause of your concluding sentence. "Invited?" elaborate...

Other than that your essay is GREAT. Hope I helped! Those were just some small suggestions.

Please check my essay! Thanks!
abesha100   
Dec 29, 2010
Undergraduate / "the vivid gardens and foliage of Ethiopia" significant experience, its impact on you [6]

Hey, this is my common application essay answering the prompt:

Evaluate a significant experience, achievement, risk you have taken, or ethical dilemma you have faced and its impact on you.

I know its REALLY long. Any suggestions on cuts to the essay would be greatly appreciated :D
Any other criticism and help would be amazing!

It was a beautiful sunrise over the skyline of Addis Ababa. I looked outside the window of my dad's low-rise apartment building and saw the vivid gardens and foliage of Ethiopia blend in perfectly with signs of modernization. I gawked at a humungous high-rise being built right beside my father's building. I marveled at a Mercedes-Benz pulling in to the driveway of a mansion. I witnessed a city sky-line that could rival almost any. I almost forgot where I stood, mesmerized by the views of sheer beauty and affluence. I decided that on such a beautiful day, with such unexpected sightings, I should explore the country I hadn't seen since my childhood. I stepped out of my dad's building ready to take in what I just saw from a higher vantage point, but, instead, reality hit me. I was in Ethiopia. suppose

My walk began and I noticed that I had entered a land of stark and horrifying contrast: the obscenely rich, in plain sight of the dirt poor. The all pervading poverty was clearly evident as I walked down the street in Ethiopia. I couldn't fathom how anyone could fix it. I was heading back home when I froze in my disturbed horror at the sight of a disfigured woman broken in pure misery. The skin on her back was literally peeled off to expose her inflamed, crimson flesh, beside ivory white bone. She was crouching on the side of the road in agony, much too tired to cry. A swarm of flies were surrounding her gaping wound, as she was crouching, listless with no hope whatsoever, no help whatsoever.

The sight of her forlorn form deeply affected me, for an irrevocable shift occurred in my heart. I needed to help her; I couldn't just leave her without some sense of comfort on the street. I walked to a nearby market to buy a blanket. With blanket in hand, I swiftly trotted back to the woman who stared warily at me. I shooed the swarm of flies surrounding her wounded back away and covered her glistening wound with the blanket. I gave her the rest of the money I had in hopes that it could help her, even just a bit doubting if it would really help at all. She stared at me with a gaze of gratitude that I would never forget. I stared back knowing that my small token of effort would not even begin to meet the needs of the woman. The following day, the woman was gone. The fact that I never knew the suffering that she went through and will never know what happened to her was devastating.

Walking home, I realized the privileged cannot merely stand idle; what I had just witnessed convinced me that I had an obligation to help. This lesson began my commitment to service to society. Back in the US, I joined the NHS chapter in my school and have made service to my community an essential part of my life. Yet, I still longed to aid people escape the desperate poverty I witnessed in Ethiopia. That's why as Treasurer of NHS I have solidified plans to raise money for the poor in third-world countries through an initiative called "˘hange for Change." I am also volunteering for the ECDC African Community Center at the start of the new year in order to better the chances for success for African refugees and immigrants that face daily challenges as they establish their new lives in the U.S. The day I saw that woman changed my perspective on life.

That unforgettable day in which I was obliged to help that calamitous woman that experienced upon so much catastrophe would forever shape my goals. I knew I had to help the poor in Ethiopia and the world, somehow, yet I knew merely caring for their individual needs would never really positively influence world poverty. Moreover, this issue is deeply personal as I hail from one of the most poverty-stricken countries in the world; it therefore, affects my own family. My intimate connection with this issue gives me an inescapable viewpoint on this crucial matter. I have come to a conclusion that much of the problem can be attributed to political corruption through my ongoing quest to have a greater grasp on issue that is so personal to me. My objective is to study global affairs so I am able to further explore the intricacies of world politics and diplomacy. My ultimate goal is to enter the Foreign Service, enabling me to have a direct and proactive influence on the politics of corrupt third-world governments. The Foreign Service would be the perfect medium to help spread the ideals of human rights, equality, and democracy throughout the globe, so the poor will be able to speak out on their own. I plan to use my education in order to fight the much-forgotten battle against what has become a systematic and sad institution: third world poverty.
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