amh
Nov 26, 2012
Undergraduate / 'decisions concerning the DREAM Act' - COMMON APP Personal Statement [4]
I'm with you! Go dream act :) Totally going to find your blog.
K, my critiques are not with your prose (which is fine) but actually with the essay as a whole.
You have written a persuasive essay, and on that front I think that it would be advisable you spend a little more time addressing what the dream act is. Also, in any persuasive essay, it is important to address the thinking of the oppositions viewpoint. Why has the dream act been stalled? In order to write a truly persuasive essay, you must present more than one side of the issue.
And as for the fact that it is a persuasive essay. I did some research on what college admissions officers (and the common app) are looking for in your essay. It turns out, they are more interested in a personal essay than a persuasive one. Whether or not you believe in the dream act is probably not going to get you into college, and you probably not going to convince the admissions officer to think one way or another: they already have an opinion. They don't care about the facts about the Dream Act, they want to get to know you. You might want to think about focusing more on a personal story describing how you came to be such an adamant supporter of the act, a time when you questioned your commitment, or go into more details about your blog experience. This will allow the essay-readers to get to know you and here about your opinions.
I'm with you! Go dream act :) Totally going to find your blog.
K, my critiques are not with your prose (which is fine) but actually with the essay as a whole.
You have written a persuasive essay, and on that front I think that it would be advisable you spend a little more time addressing what the dream act is. Also, in any persuasive essay, it is important to address the thinking of the oppositions viewpoint. Why has the dream act been stalled? In order to write a truly persuasive essay, you must present more than one side of the issue.
And as for the fact that it is a persuasive essay. I did some research on what college admissions officers (and the common app) are looking for in your essay. It turns out, they are more interested in a personal essay than a persuasive one. Whether or not you believe in the dream act is probably not going to get you into college, and you probably not going to convince the admissions officer to think one way or another: they already have an opinion. They don't care about the facts about the Dream Act, they want to get to know you. You might want to think about focusing more on a personal story describing how you came to be such an adamant supporter of the act, a time when you questioned your commitment, or go into more details about your blog experience. This will allow the essay-readers to get to know you and here about your opinions.