The question is:
Rochester students represent many different points of view. Each student constructs an indenpendent study and research plan. Describe what you will contribute in Rochester's diversity in ideas, experiences and identities. If you can, incorporate a positive past experience where you chose your own learning path, or a negative experience where you wanted to exercise more independence.
Here's the answer:
Individuality and independence are some of the qualities I greatly admire. It is in fact, a result of a personal experience in the past. In my freshman year in high school, I easily swayed between other people's decision. Somehow I seemed to believe that it was fine to selflessly respect other's opinion even though it meant that I had to yield mine. I was very conscious of what my friends thought of everything. For example, when I chose clothes in a store, I stopped and thought if most teenagers would have liked them as I did. However I started to realize that I kept concealing my true self and it would impede me from achieving my desires if I continued. This belief was confirmed when I read Ayn Rand's "The Fountainhead"; it stressed the importance of being a unique individual. I think students in Rochester are all very unique in their own way of thinking, learning, and experiencing. By expressing my own thoughts and beliefs and sharing them with others, I would also contribute to this uniqueness as an individual.
I was kinda lost at the end
becuz somehow it doesnt answer the question well...
i need some advice
please and thank you ;]
Rochester students represent many different points of view. Each student constructs an indenpendent study and research plan. Describe what you will contribute in Rochester's diversity in ideas, experiences and identities. If you can, incorporate a positive past experience where you chose your own learning path, or a negative experience where you wanted to exercise more independence.
Here's the answer:
Individuality and independence are some of the qualities I greatly admire. It is in fact, a result of a personal experience in the past. In my freshman year in high school, I easily swayed between other people's decision. Somehow I seemed to believe that it was fine to selflessly respect other's opinion even though it meant that I had to yield mine. I was very conscious of what my friends thought of everything. For example, when I chose clothes in a store, I stopped and thought if most teenagers would have liked them as I did. However I started to realize that I kept concealing my true self and it would impede me from achieving my desires if I continued. This belief was confirmed when I read Ayn Rand's "The Fountainhead"; it stressed the importance of being a unique individual. I think students in Rochester are all very unique in their own way of thinking, learning, and experiencing. By expressing my own thoughts and beliefs and sharing them with others, I would also contribute to this uniqueness as an individual.
I was kinda lost at the end
becuz somehow it doesnt answer the question well...
i need some advice
please and thank you ;]