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Posts by ttina
Name: Tina Tran
Joined: Mar 15, 2016
Last Post: Mar 16, 2016
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ttina   
Mar 16, 2016
Writing Feedback / TOEFL for immigration purpose - to be or not to be independent? [2]

Hi Jiajing!

You are doing very well for a 30 minute time frame. However, I think you should be more specific in certain areas.

"and I will explain the reasons in the following paragraphs." For the introduction paragraph, I think it would be better if you list out the reasons; let the readers know which direction you are approaching, and then be more details and elaborate more in your body paragraphs.

"Firstly, it does bring positive impact to the society as one." what is "it"? Be specific. Try to use examples that somehow related to you, or connected to the readers. "drug transporter" sounds a little too negative. Ex: limited capacity to earn money = might drop out of school= no education= many problems.

Avoid using "this is because", just get straight to your reasoning. Explain more, why do young adults can't earn enough income?

"According to research" What research? Be specific (whom, what, where, when). If you are not sure, don't write it.

"their maturity could be easily affected without the guidance of their elders." Well they are young adults right? Shouldn't they be mature enough to be responsible for their actions? Maybe it would be better to say that their inexperience in life could affect their judgement and their decision making. By staying a little longer with families, they could slowly adjust to their new life and get advice when needed.

"they will be able to get well-rounded development." Improve would be a better word choice.

"Other than that" Use finally since you started with "firstly".

I think your reasons are a little weak. I think the best way to write your response for this kind of prompt is to think of it as an argument, and you are trying to persuade the readers to be on your side. Ask yourself questions that you might get ask and incorporate your answers into your reasoning. How can young adults learn to be independent when they are living with their families at home? What are their responsibilities?

Also take into account the cultural differences too, like how most Americans parents encourage their kids to be independent while most Asians parents would love for their kids to stay with them as long as possible.

Young adults should be in plural form since that's what stated in your prompt, and you are using "they".

The conclusion should be a summary of your essay. Remind the readers of your reasons.
ttina   
Mar 16, 2016
Writing Feedback / Transfer Essay: Page "87" of your autobiography: "I am a pencil" [2]

Please give me feedback. I want to improve my writing. Thank you!!

I am a pencil and life is the paper on which I will write my own story.

It has been six years since I took my first step into this strange country, the place my parents referred to as our "nine-years-waiting heaven on earth." My parents threw away their life time accomplishments and abandoned everything they loved, to come to this so-called land of dreams for their children to have a better future. I was thrilled and excited to start a new life in the United States, one of the world's wealthiest countries. Without much preparation for the language barrier, I learned English from scratch, starting with beginning level in ESOL, the English program for second language students. To my astonishment, I completed the five-levels-program in just two years. It was supposed to be beneficial, but the transition from being an outsider, back to the English mainstream, was harder than I expected. I struggled. I was frightened to talk; I didn't know what to say to my new American teenage friends. We had nothing in common. Besides the language barrier, the cultural differences, the homesickness, and the discrimination, there was always the money. The list of differences between me and my peers was as long as a trip around the world.

As it turns out, my family life wasn't as heavenly as it appeared. My parents worked 7 days a week just to put food on the table. Poverty was always looming over our head, but I was determined to overcome these obstacles to make my parents proud. I slowly came to realize that I had many supportive teachers and friends around me all the time, and with their help, I finally wandered outside of my comfort circle. I joined the Marching Band and Math Honor Society; I found my standing ground in Red Cross club and Women in Math club. I felt my sense of acceptance and importance.

As if life as an immigrant hadn't been hard enough, my eldest brother passed away during my senior year in high school. I questioned God; I was upset because his future was cut short, because our family did not deserve this. I blamed myself for not spending enough time with him and because every moment I spent with him was emotionless. I felt guilty because I didn't lend him money when he asked for it. I was not depressed, but the guilt was almost unbearable at times. Just when I finally cracked my shell open, the shock forced me to close it up again. This was the start of my freshmen year in college. Hopeless, I looked to my dad for answers, and he only said that the guilty one was my brother, because only when he moved on, he can truly see how many people loved and cared for him. It was then that I reminded myself of how lucky I am, of all the hardship my parents went through, of all the sacrifices they made for our future, not just his. I turned my guilt into a commitment that I will carry on my brother's incomplete life and future with me. It gave me motivation to pick myself up, and started to carve my way out of the shell again.

I have always carried with me not only my dream, my future, but also the hopes and wishes of my parents, the expectations of my family, the role model image to my cousins, and my brother's dream. My parents said I own my dream and that my future belongs to me. But they were wrong, because without their sacrifices, I wouldn't have a future at all. I own my future, but it makes up from their blood, sweat and tears. I am not oblige to prove to anyone anything, but only to myself that I am worthy of my parents' sacrifices. I wish my brother was here to share these weights with me; I wish he was there when I graduated from high school; I wish he was here to pat me on the head and say good job. If he was here, I would give him anything he asked for and never ask for anything in return.

This is a pencil who is writing the pages of her life. This pencil does not have a special appearance or talent, but she has a strong will, courage, responsibility, not yet confident but perseveres within herself. Her time is not here yet, but she will strike with all her might when it is; because that pencil is me.

I am forever in debt to my parents. They made me as if with linden wood, ordinary but strong. They lined me with consistency and they made sure I held well. Life can break me in half, but it will never break my purpose. I will smile at every broken lead it throws at me because I know I don't own all the problems in the world. Failures only give me a scratch on my paint-cover, but they are the lessons that'll never fade. Nothing can stop me from writing my story because life sharpened me well. I am The Pencil and I'm here to stay. I'm here for the long run.
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