Unanswered [8] | Urgent [0]
  

Posts by br2pi5
Joined: Dec 23, 2012
Last Post: Jan 1, 2013
Threads: 10
Posts: 70  
Likes:

Displayed posts: 80 / page 2 of 2
sort: Latest first   Oldest first  | 
br2pi5   
Dec 30, 2012
Undergraduate / Education system in the US; Brown Sup; Academic environment [10]

Hello! I need help with my answer to this question:
Prompt: A distinctive feature of the Brown Curriculum is the opportunity to be the architect of your education. Why does this academic environment appeal to you? (700 characters)

After immigrating to America, I experienced a different educational system, one that gave me the flexibility and freedom to explore new subjects. The system in Spain, although effective, restricted/made me common/got rid of my individuality/generalized me considering my curriculum was decided by the government. What attracted me about Brown University, among other things, was that I would continue to design and take control of my education with autonomy and encouragement. I may know what I want to study but that does not define who I am. I am more than a science major student. I aim to take academic risks without fear of failure for I know I am self-directed. But if I do fail, I know I would have the options to rebuild it/my design.

I'm having trouble choosing the right words to say. I want this to be unique, personal and easy to read. If you have any suggestions, I would really appreciate it! This is my first draft so PLEASE feel free to be honest!
br2pi5   
Dec 29, 2012
Undergraduate / I'm a dork! [Stanford roommate supplement] [7]

I loved it and the joke you added made me chuckle :) don't worry about it, you have written a great essay that the admissions officers will I'm sure love as well.

If you have the time, could you please check mine? It's titled 'The Perks of Being Tenacious' (I need a new title). Thanks!
br2pi5   
Dec 29, 2012
Undergraduate / "Wake up, son; daddy's brought you a present." /University of Colorado Boulder [3]

overall a good and meaningful essay that highlights your talents, good luck!

I agree 100% with bzn456 on the changes he/she made. I really liked the essay you wrote. Very easy to read, good hook/intro, the only thing I would say is be a bit more specific when you mention the U. Colorado. A specific program, or something about their program and/or their university that is different than the others. It doesn't have to go into detail, just maybe a phrase in the last paragraph. Right now, it sounds a bit generic. But other than that, good job!

@bzn456 and @d125q Could you help me with my CommonApp essay titled 'The Perks of Being Tenacious.' I need to find a better name for it, and if you have any other suggestions I'd appreciate it! PLEASE let me know!
br2pi5   
Dec 28, 2012
Undergraduate / 'An Unexpected Journey and Winning the Green Card' Common Application [33]

Why did you have to leave?

This is pretty confusing but when you win the Green Card lottery, you're required to go back to the country you're from to have an interview. If everything's fine then you receive the green card so you can go back to the U.S. now as a permanent resident. But basically I had to leave to have the interview back in Spain. I didn't want to be too direct with this so I decided to skip it because my explanation wouldn't 'flow' with the essay I guess. Any suggestions?
br2pi5   
Dec 28, 2012
Undergraduate / High heels helped me battle my inner demons../UChicago Arch-Nemesis Supplement [6]

admission2012 - could you please help with my essay titled 'The Perks of Being Tenacious.' It would mean a lot!

pingupinga - I loved your essay. I liked your intro, it got my attention so I continued reading. I especially love your last phrase when you say 'As for my heels, they have found a very comfortable place in the back of my closet where they are no longer needed.' It's a very creative way of saying the usual I've grown and matured and now I'm better. I also didn't notice any grammar mistakes. Good job! If you have a moment could you also PLEASE read my common app essay titled 'The Perks of Being Tenacious.' It would mean a lot! Thank you!
br2pi5   
Dec 28, 2012
Undergraduate / I have been persecuted all my life.; Common APP [11]

Good luck ^^

This, I imagine, is also what the admissions officer wants to know.

The essay is good. It's easy to read but it lacks a key part: why? Every time you write about something, or use the 250-500 words they give you, ask yourself why am I writing this? Is it saying something about myself? It's great to describe things but other than that, write more about how whatever you're writing about relates to you. I feel that is lacking from your essay, and I agree on what the posts above mine say.

This is a great essay for something like, why are you interested in this major kind of question. Don't get me wrong, I liked it! but to write what the admissions officers want to know and answer the question, don't forget to be honest, personal and relate things to you. Write as if you're speaking to your parents' friend. Be semi-formal. Just some tips, hope I helped!

If you have the time, could you please help me with mine?? It's called 'The Perks of Being Tenacious'
br2pi5   
Dec 28, 2012
Undergraduate / Bread freedom and social justice; Common app/ topic of your choice [3]

Hi malaikaiyer, could you please help with mine? (titled 'The Perks of Being Tenecious')

mahmoudjendy - I think you need to use the words they give you and definitely make your essay longer. Don't just state things but relate them to you. Be personal so that the admissions officers get a sense of who you are. I find it easier to write these essays if I just write whatever is on my mind as if I was talking to another person. Then edit it so that it doesn't contain any grammar mistakes, add better vocabulary or change phrases so that they are easy to read.
br2pi5   
Dec 27, 2012
Undergraduate / 'An Unexpected Journey and Winning the Green Card' Common Application [33]

thank you so much katev! I will definitely change the word adamant... I wasn't sure I was using it correctly. The thing is I quite liked the tone of my first draft. I found it more personal than this last one which I think I'm being a bit too direct and monotone/formal perhaps? I was trying to merge both of them but I don't know how exactly... If you think I left a phrase from the first draft behind that would make my final draft much better, please let me know!

Also, I'm over the 500 word limit with about 30 words I think, if you have the time to edit it I would really appreciate it!

I'm applying to BU, Brown, Pitt, Penn State, Northeastern, U. Michigan, Maryland College Park, Wisconsin-Madison, U. New Hampshire, U. Oregon. You?
br2pi5   
Dec 26, 2012
Undergraduate / 'An Unexpected Journey and Winning the Green Card' Common Application [33]

what about:
'It's difficult to leave the place you call home once, even twice, but the third time can turn you into an emotional wreck. I moved from Bolivia to Spain when I was seven years old, and from Spain to the United States when I was thirteen --right before the start of high school. Coincidentally, I had entered the so called 'freshman' year, and with 'Hello,' 'How are you,' and 'Goodbye' under my belt, I made it through my first day.'

leave coincidentally or delete it?
br2pi5   
Dec 26, 2012
Undergraduate / Be Born Every day; COMMON APP/ Person who had Significant Influence [6]

@willyfree could you please help me with my common app essay? It's titled 'An Unexpected Journey' thank you!

yes delete that line. it doesn't add to your essay and you already said which group you identify with and then go to explain why. so delete 'Just like salt formation is an intrinsic property of halogens (yes, I like to flaunt my limited knowledge of chemistry); ambivalence is mine.' You don't need it.

Also I would recommend you use spaces between paragraphs: it makes essays easier to read.

could you please take a moment and read my common app essay? I would really appreciate it!
br2pi5   
Dec 26, 2012
Undergraduate / 'An Unexpected Journey and Winning the Green Card' Common Application [33]

The book is 'The Perks of Being a Wallflower.'

I wrote 'Ironically' because I was a freshman in a new country. I don't know if that makes sense...

'Counterclockwise' because time kind of came to a halt for my plans of going to college and also counterclockwise because I would have to go back to Spain in reverse (from spain to us to spain) I don't know if that also makes sense...

'made of stone' as if I couldn't continue moving towards my goals. I'm using the stone, concrete thing because not knowing how to speak the language and being forced to leave the country my senior year just before going to college are obstacles that could make me unable to continue forward, HOWEVER I showed that these obstacles don't stop me. I learnt the language and now I speak it on a daily basis, and although I had to leave and postpone my plans of going to college I never stopped self-studying and moving forward with my education and now I'm applying to colleges... I hope I can make this message easy to understand, any suggestions??

'compromise to my future' because I wanted to make something of myself, go to college, go to graduate school (medical school) etc.
br2pi5   
Dec 26, 2012
Undergraduate / One of my top choices; Lehigh App [3]

@katev could you help me with mine?? (titled 'An Unexpected Journey')

overall, I agree with the changes katev made and the advice he/she gave you ;)
br2pi5   
Dec 26, 2012
Undergraduate / 'An Unexpected Journey and Winning the Green Card' Common Application [33]

thank you MiaB. Anyone else?? I would appreciate anyone taking the time to point out grammar errors (if any) or other suggestions. thank you!

thank you for all your help! is it easy to understand what I'm trying to say? Is it understandable what happened with the green card? Just making sure I explained everything without being direct. I hope I can make it into a great essay!
br2pi5   
Dec 26, 2012
Undergraduate / 'An Unexpected Journey and Winning the Green Card' Common Application [33]

Also I wanted to add to my essay the fact that I organized various work experiences in the medical field (I want to be a physician) shadowing doctors and surgeons for months, volunteering in different departments (ER, pediatrics) at a local hospital, self-studying for APs, SAT IIs, and the SAT during these two years after graduation. But I didn't want to be that direct. However, I want to show the admissions officers that I'm determined and even though there was an obstacle since the U.S. required my family and I to leave the country once we won the Green Card as part of the process for interview, I managed to turn this into a good situation for myself.

Any suggestions how to really make sure I get this point across will be much appreciated. Thank you!
br2pi5   
Dec 26, 2012
Undergraduate / 'An Unexpected Journey and Winning the Green Card' Common Application [33]

Hello! I need help editing and taking out a few words from my essay. But most importantly, I need to know what other people think of it, and if I have successfully made my point. Also any title suggestions? I'm not too sure I like the one I have at the moment. And lastly, should I choose Topic of your choice, or follow the prompt below from the Common App. PLEASE HELP!

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

'An Unexpected Journey'

Lime green cover. Interesting choice of color. Chapter one. First line...

It's difficult to leave the place you call home once, and twice, but the third time turns you into an emotional wreck, I thought. I moved from Bolivia to Spain when I was seven years old, and from Spain to the United States when I was thirteen. Ironically I had entered the so called 'freshman' year, and with 'Hello,' 'How are you' and 'Goodbye' under my belt, I made it through my first day.

For the next four years, I learned to love a culture opposite from the two residing within me. Yet, my American identity co-existed with the two. I made a new home. Although this time, I did not expect to continue my life counterclockwise.

I returned to Spain from the U.S. after graduating high school. Life still wrapped me in its irony and when I had been given the right to stay indefinitely in the country I longed to remain, I was required to leave with a to-be-determined date of arrival.

Winning the Green Card lottery was a bittersweet feeling. My permanence was no longer a mystery and hypothetically I was to walk, jog and run as I pleased. But somehow I felt made of stone. My plans came to a halt. Though in my eyes, postponed.

In Spain, I was given a chance to rediscover myself. I never lived a life that wasn't constantly in the moving, and so made of concrete I started to move. I indulged in my education. I was the master of my present and future and I had a compromise to my future, so my present required change. I met people from different corners of the world who motivated and strengthened the benchmarks I had set for myself. I did not have floating goals and dreams -- I worked for them and I looked for and grabbed every opportunity that crossed my path. Most importantly, I grew as a person.

I took charge of my life independently. This time of uncertainty was no longer an obstacle.

Two years have passed since I graduated from high school and now, back in American soil, I think about the parallels of my life experiences. The times when I first came to the U.S. and learned the word mild too little too late at an Indian restaurant. Or the time when I mistook and, embarrassingly, mispronounced the word beach with its not so likable counterpart while doing a presentation in front of a full classroom. Both were situations that arrived from an obstacle I was facing but that I decided to learn from. The language which I could make no sense out of is now an essential implement that I use every day.

As my eyes flow left to right making my way down this book to start right back again, I quickly connect with my favorite character, Charlie. According to Charlie, 'even if we don't have the power to choose where we come from, we can still choose where we go from there.' I could not have agreed more.
br2pi5   
Dec 26, 2012
Undergraduate / Oh my god! We did? ; STANFORD Supp - Writing a letter to your future roommate [3]

I love your essay. You come off as a very likable, witty, quirky, funny person. I want to be best friends with you haha. Your essay will make the admission officers chuckle, I'm sure :) Good luck!

If you have a moment, could you please read my common app essay? It would mean a lot! Thank you!
br2pi5   
Dec 26, 2012
Undergraduate / Courses/Outing Club/Low student-faculty ratio; Vassar Supp/ Why Vassar? [4]

I really like it. By saying things like 'as one of your students' you connect with the reader and that will definitely help you. I also like that you don't just talk about general things that offers Vassar, or any other university, but concentrate on specific programs they offer and relate them to you. Good job! :) If you had a moment, could you please read my common app essay? It would really mean a lot.
br2pi5   
Dec 23, 2012
Undergraduate / Boston offers all important features to me; Boston University / Why BU? [11]

Essay 1: In no more than 250 words, please tell us why BU is a good fit for you and what specifically has led you to apply for admission? (Currently at 208)

I had never visited Boston before I flew from Spain to start high school as a freshman. Nevertheless, it didn't take long before I called the city home. Boston offers an environment that fosters culture, diversity and a sense of community -- all important features to me -- and that is clearly demonstrated in Boston University. Home of apt intellectuals displayed on its faculty and student alumni, BU evokes academic prestige -- a legacy of groundbreaking education that will motivate me to work to my fullest potential. I'm mostly captivated with the strength of BU's Department of Biology, offering a breadth of specialized courses while encouraging its students to participate in research in and out of class. This will give me the essential/fundamental foundation to continue to my graduate studies. Moreover, BU will offer me incomparable opportunities for internship positions in laboratories and the medical field with the possibility to intern abroad. If given the opportunity to become part of [lacking the exact word here, help!] and make/leave my mark contributing positively to society putting into good use the tools Boston University will make available to me, I would not think twice. Boston University is the university where I would gladly spend the next four years of my life.

Writing
Editing Help?
Fill in one of the forms below to get professional help with your assignments:

Graduate Writing / Editing:
GraduateWriter form ◳

Best Essay Service:
CustomPapers form ◳

Excellence in Editing:
Rose Editing ◳

AI-Paper Rewriting:
Robot Rewrite ◳