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A Comprehensive
Admissions Essay Help Course (with samples):
Lesson Four:
Word Choice
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Don't Thesaurusize.
The second trap into which
many students fall is thinking that big words make good essays. Advanced vocabulary
is fine if it comes naturally to you, and when used correctly in an appropriate
context. After reading thousands of essays, admissions officers know which students
have come up with difficult words by themselves and which have looked them up
in a thesaurus.
Show,
don't tell. Too often, an essay with an interesting
story will fizzle into a series of statements that "tell" rather than "show"
the qualities of the writer. Students wrongfully assume that the reader will not
"get it" if they do not beat to death their main arguments. Thus, the essay
succumbs to the usual clichés: "the value of hard work and perseverance"
or "learning to make a difference" or "not taking loved ones for granted"
or "dreams coming true" or "learning from mistakes." Such statements
are acceptable if used minimally, as in topic sentences, but the best essays do
not use them at all. Instead, allow the details of your story to make the statement
for you. An example helps elucidate the difference:
In a mediocre essay:
"I developed a new compassion for the disabled."
In a better essay:
"Whenever I had the chance to help the disabled, I did so happily."
In an excellent essay:
"The next time Mrs. Cooper asked me to help her across the street, I smiled
and immediately took her arm."
The first example provides
no detail, the second example is still only hypothetical, but the final example
evokes a vivid image of something that actually happened, thus placing the reader
in the experience of the applicant.
Don't
Get Too Conversational. Slang terms, clichés, contractions,
and an excessively casual tone should be eliminated from all but the most informal
essays. The following excerpt gives examples of all four offenses:
You are probably wondering,
what are the political issues that make this kid really mad? Well, I get steamed
when I hear about my friends throwing away their right to vote. Voting is part
of what makes this country great. Some kids believe that their vote doesn't
count. Well, I think they're wrong.
In an essay like this one,
in which you must show that you take things seriously, your language should also
take itself seriously. Only non-traditional essays, such as ones in the form of
narrative or dialogue, should rely on conversational elements. Write informally
only when you are consciously trying to achieve an effect that conveys your meaning.
Don't
repeatedly start sentences with "I." It is typical
for the first draft of an essay to have many of the following type of sentence:
I + verb + object, for example, "I play soccer." If this kind of simple
structure is used too many times in an essay, it will have two effects: your language
will sound stunted and unsophisticated; you will appear extremely conceited --
imagine a conversation with someone who always talks about herself. The trick
is to change around the words without changing the meaning. Here is an example:
Before: "I started
playing piano when I was eight years old. I worked hard to learn difficult pieces.
I learned about the effort needed to improve myself. I began to love music.
After: "I started
playing piano at the age of eight. From the beginning, I worked hard to learn
difficult pieces, and this struggle taught me the effort needed for self-improvement.
My work with the piano nourished my love for music.
Don't
repeat the same subject nouns. When writing an essay
about soccer (or leadership), do not repeatedly use the word "soccer" (or
"leadership"). The repetition of nouns has much the same stunting effect
as the repetition of "I" (see above). Look for alternative phrases for your
subject nouns. For soccer, you might use vague synonyms ("the sport," "the
game") or specific terms ("going to practice," "completing a pass").
In the case of leadership, you could use phrases such as "setting an example,"
or "coordinating a group effort."
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Extra: Trimming the Fat
The following words and
phrases can usually be deleted from your essay without any loss of meaning. Just
as an athlete needs to work off the fat in order to perform well, your writing
needs to stay lean in order to pack more meaning into every sentence. Extra words
rob your prose of energy by making your language convoluted and just plain fluffy
(also known in some circles as "bull" or a stronger variant). The following
phrases are especially fattening because they invite passive constructions, those
that employ the verb, "to be."
I believe that, I feel
that, I hope that, I think that, I realized that, I learned that, in other words,
in order to, in fact, it is essential that, it is important to see that, the reason
why, the thing that is most important is, this is important because, this means
that, the point is that, really, very, somewhat, absolutely, definitely, surely,
truly, probably, practically, hopefully, in conclusion, in summary.
Also look for subtle
redundancies of the "X and Y" variety. Only a few examples of the many are
provided below. In each pair, the two words mean nearly the same thing -- so why
write both? Such redundancies show the reader that you are not thinking about
what you are saying. And, the more clichéd phrases make your essay sound like
all of the others. Instead of resorting to these sinister twins, think of more
precise language, words that really pin down your unique experience.
Hard work and effort,
teamwork and cooperation, dreams and aspirations, personal growth and development,
determination and diligence, challenges and difficulties, objectives and goals,
worries and concerns, love and caring.
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From
ESSAYS THAT WILL GET YOU INTO COLLEGE,
by Amy Burnham, Daniel Kaufman, and Chris Dowhan. |
Copyright
1998 by Dan Kaufman. Reprinted by arrangement with Barron's Educational
Series, Inc. |
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