Unanswered [1] | Urgent [0]
  

Posts by sm9453
Joined: Oct 7, 2011
Last Post: Oct 15, 2011
Threads: 2
Posts: 4  

Displayed posts: 6
sort: Latest first   Oldest first  | 
sm9453   
Oct 15, 2011
Undergraduate / 'to continue my passion 4 scientific research' why applying to that specific college [2]

*Tip: when you say "not only - but also -" you either put it as "not only will I do this but I will also do this" or you put it as "I will not only do this but also this"

Anyway, nice response. It's well written and descriptive of what you like in UMich :)
I would appreciate it if you could also give me some feedback on some of my essays!
Good luck with the application process!
sm9453   
Oct 15, 2011
Undergraduate / 'Passion for Singing' - Common Application Brief <1000 char Response [3]

Please briefly elaborate on one of your extracurricular activities or work experiences in the space below (1000 character maximum).

As I lift my head and open my mouth, my voice escalates with every tune that comes out. I subconsciously allow the songs of Indian tradition flow from my gut, letting the Sanskrit words fall off my tongue or the Telugu alphabet come together to form poetry that escapes my lips. My passion for South Indian classical music, or Carnatic music, comes from deep within my heart, mind, and soul. I tap into my physical self, stretching my vocal chords to deliver a specific sound or nuance, as well as my spiritual self, singing the songs of my culture and religion. During my nascent beginnings as a student of Carnatic music seven years ago, I was told that I had a very strong and apt voice. To date, I have given many concerts, won city-wide competitions, and learned from renowned musicians. However, Carnatic music represents something far greater than a source of respect and pride for me. I discovered myself through this great art of my ancestors. It is a source of my heritage and identity.

----

Comments or critiques?
sm9453   
Oct 15, 2011
Undergraduate / A Passion to Last A Lifetime -- CommonApp EC Activity [3]

I agree with above - I don't see the point in including the bit about Patient X since this doesnt really have as much importance in your response. What I got out of the essay written was a short description of a something of personal importance between you and your grandfather, and the inclusion of Patient X makes it a bit confusing.

His face beamed with a sort of unrealized foresight, and I could never quite manage to conceal the smugness I felt upon telling him that our team won the summer league tournament. (just a suggestion - it sounded just a little awk at first)

During that summer, I slowly saw less and less of the grandfather I once knew as his life ultimately became claimed by Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases. (you dont need a comma there)

Yet buried beneath the sadness surrounding his illnesses was a seed of curiosity. From that seed grew a passion and yearning to understand that has not only led to my involvement in a clinical study involving patients suffering from neurological diseases but has also given me the chance to meet some truly courageous and inspiring people in the process - people just like my grandfather. Together, Patient X and my grandfather have fostered a passion that I am sure will last a lifetime.

This was a very good essay nevertheless! You convey your message effectively. Good luck with the application process :)
sm9453   
Oct 14, 2011
Undergraduate / Volunteerism: Working in an Orphanage - Common App Essay [3]

Hi everyone, I just finished my second draft for my common app essay. Its just over a page (3 sentences over a page or so)...so I would like to know where I'm rambling/talking unnecessarily.

please feel free to comment and critique it as harshly as you like. I'm open to all criticism! :)

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

"So," I asked the one hundred and five girls sitting in front of me, "what do you want to be when you grow up?"

Eager chatter spread across the group of children. I heard them all calling me at once. "Akka, akka, guess what I want to be?" One little girl raised her hand, stretching it as far as she possibly could so it could be seen in the midst of the restless group. Her name was Manasa, and she was eight years old. She was rather short for her age, so she struggled to be noticed in the crowd. She flailed her arm back and forth to catch my attention. Once I saw her, I told everyone to quiet down. As the children came to a hush hushed, Manasa put her arm down and answered my question with a wide smile across her face. "I want to be a doctor, akka," she said slowly, "because I want to save lives and make my parents in heaven happy."

For five weeks, I worked at the Chinmaya Vijaya All-Girls Orphanage in Guntur, India as a part-time caretaker and tutor. I taught during study hours every day from 5:30 a.m. to 6:30 a.m. and from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. I remember reciting the English alphabet at least twenty times a day not to reinforce my failing memory of the alphabet but to hear the fervent echo of the children after every letter I uttered. I remember that "eleven" was the toughest number to spell, and the word "slipped" was the hardest to pronounce. And I remember each of their smiles distinctively. I remember the wide beams of accomplishment each pre-school orphan showed me when she recited the alphabet and numbers up to twenty without mistake. I also remember the satisfactory grins of the older girls when they finally understood the abacus system of numbers and counting. They learned with interest, passion, and dedication. From my experience at the orphanage, not a single protest was voiced about school. Not once did I hear that a child did not want to complete her homework or prepare for a test. They were teeming with questions and curiosities, constants bombarding me with their inquiries. Their passion to always learn was prominent and it drove them forward as students.

What used to be a hundred and five strangers became a family to me. What used to be a mere teacher-student relationship quickly transformed into a sister-sister relationship, and soon I found myself looking upon all one hundred five girls as my own siblings. We shared laughter when we were together and tears when we were to part. I created a bond with these people that will never bend or break.

As I walked away from the orphanage in July, I began to question my outlook on life. Why are these girls in India, with nothing but cracked cricket bats, always laughing and smiling, while my friends and I, with our comfortable houses, video game consoles, and computers, are always wishing to have more? Why is there such a sense of community and family in a group of orphans, while I often feel alienated and alone? Why did I never see them shed a tear about their heart-wrenching pasts when I often find myself upset over trifling matters?

They never took anything for granted; they happily played outside with rubber balls, bent hula hoops, and crumbling pieces of chalk. They found the greatest joy playing with rocks in the middle of the road under the blazing Vijayawada sun, inventing complex games every day. They ate their meals without wasting food because they cherished the luxury of being given meals every day. They treated their education dearly because they would have never had a chance before coming to the orphanage. Despite their distressing histories, they lived each passing day with smiles on their faces.

Although I was the tutor at the orphanage, I was taught a very important lesson from these hundred and five girls. Happiness is about how one interprets what is in front of him or her. It is how proud one is of the way one lives his or her life and how willing you are to enjoy simple pleasures, even if things are not perfect. I have not always done this well, but from now on I choose to focus on the good-both in the world and in myself.
sm9453   
Oct 14, 2011
Undergraduate / The language of the universe- comonapp extracurriculars essay. [3]

I am not ashamed to say that a beautiful symphony can make me weep like a child. Music brings out emotions in me that I did not believe existed. I am a singer, and music to me is as fundamental as breathing. Songs , rhythms and harmonies are simply other ways of communication for me. My first solo stage performance was at the age of six. I can remember with dazzling clarity exactly how I felt that day: the trepidation intermingled with barely-suppressed exhilaration; the taste of anticipation tinged with a warm sense of comfort, like that was where I belonged; the rush of air entering and leaving my lungs in preparation for its imminent task. But above all - joy. I remember these emotions so clearly because I feel the same way each time I step on a stage. Music defines me beyond my extracurricular participation in choir, or playing at concerts, or being co-founder of the Music Society and lead singer of the school band. It gives me the confidence to be myself.

------------

Great response! The only thing I would say is that the last sentence is a little bland as an ending. Maybe you could end with a fuller/more powerful statement?

Just a suggestion.

Great work! :)
Need Writing or Editing Help?
Fill out one of these forms:

Graduate Writing / Editing:
GraduateWriter form ◳

Best Essay Service:
CustomPapers form ◳

Excellence in Editing:
Rose Editing ◳

AI-Paper Rewriting:
Robot Rewrite ◳

Academic AI Writer:
Custom AI Writer ◳