CorpusCallosum
Sep 3, 2009
Undergraduate / Transfer Admission Essay - a thoughtful commentary on your academic goals [6]
Hello again everyone. I am back with a revised (and hopefully better) transfer admission essay for review. As all of you have suggested, I have attempted to make it more streamlined and focused on the actual essay topic.
Please let me know your thoughts! Thank you!
I chose my communications major because I am fascinated with all forms of media and their connection with the human experience. I am looking for a university will offer me courses that not only give me background on every form a message can take, but also what the actual science of communications is. St. John's has a diverse communications program that features many topics of study. However, it is not specialized on the actual science of communication. After reading through the University of Connecticut's course bulletin and speaking with current and former students, I believe that I will be able to receive the specialized education that I am looking for.
My current university employs well educated and experienced professors; still, many are often inaccessible or impersonal. All of my major-related courses I took so far were in a classes of 50 or more students, and the professors barely knew who was absent without their attendance sheets. Strangely, I find that I am closer to my professors in my core courses, than I am with the professors of my major courses. This is a phenomenon that should be true the other way around. Major courses are critical to introducing and developing the mental tools needed for a student's future career. Current and past UConn students I have spoken with highlight that it is easy to meet with their professors after class and get help on topics one would like to further discuss, especially when it comes to the major courses.
Along with academic proficiency, I want to attend a respectable institution that can propel me forward without causing undue financial strain. The tuition at St. John's is quite expensive, and the financial aid I received still left a sizable sum uncovered. As a result, my parents and I had to cut corners where nobody should. There were times that my mother didn't pay the light bill or the water bill for weeks or months, just so I could stay in school. With whatever government grants I received and whatever money my family could scrape together, I had to take out student loans to continue my education. Due to my status as a full-time unemployed student, my sister has been my cosigner since my freshman year. If she did not help me up to this point, I would not have even made it to my junior year at St. John's. Unfortunately for us both, she filed for bankruptcy this year and will no longer be able to help me take out student loans to continue my education.
Admission into UConn means I can achieve personal and scholastic excellence. It also relieves the financial burden on my family now and greatly reduces the one on me in the future. With financial alleviation comes mental alleviation. If I had both, I would do nothing else but succeed. I want to be the proud woman I see when I close my eyes to visualize the future, and I sincerely believe that UConn can take me there.
Hello again everyone. I am back with a revised (and hopefully better) transfer admission essay for review. As all of you have suggested, I have attempted to make it more streamlined and focused on the actual essay topic.
Please let me know your thoughts! Thank you!
I chose my communications major because I am fascinated with all forms of media and their connection with the human experience. I am looking for a university will offer me courses that not only give me background on every form a message can take, but also what the actual science of communications is. St. John's has a diverse communications program that features many topics of study. However, it is not specialized on the actual science of communication. After reading through the University of Connecticut's course bulletin and speaking with current and former students, I believe that I will be able to receive the specialized education that I am looking for.
My current university employs well educated and experienced professors; still, many are often inaccessible or impersonal. All of my major-related courses I took so far were in a classes of 50 or more students, and the professors barely knew who was absent without their attendance sheets. Strangely, I find that I am closer to my professors in my core courses, than I am with the professors of my major courses. This is a phenomenon that should be true the other way around. Major courses are critical to introducing and developing the mental tools needed for a student's future career. Current and past UConn students I have spoken with highlight that it is easy to meet with their professors after class and get help on topics one would like to further discuss, especially when it comes to the major courses.
Along with academic proficiency, I want to attend a respectable institution that can propel me forward without causing undue financial strain. The tuition at St. John's is quite expensive, and the financial aid I received still left a sizable sum uncovered. As a result, my parents and I had to cut corners where nobody should. There were times that my mother didn't pay the light bill or the water bill for weeks or months, just so I could stay in school. With whatever government grants I received and whatever money my family could scrape together, I had to take out student loans to continue my education. Due to my status as a full-time unemployed student, my sister has been my cosigner since my freshman year. If she did not help me up to this point, I would not have even made it to my junior year at St. John's. Unfortunately for us both, she filed for bankruptcy this year and will no longer be able to help me take out student loans to continue my education.
Admission into UConn means I can achieve personal and scholastic excellence. It also relieves the financial burden on my family now and greatly reduces the one on me in the future. With financial alleviation comes mental alleviation. If I had both, I would do nothing else but succeed. I want to be the proud woman I see when I close my eyes to visualize the future, and I sincerely believe that UConn can take me there.