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A Comprehensive
Admissions Essay Help Course (with samples):
Lesson Five:
Conclusions
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The
conclusion is your last chance to persuade the reader or impress upon them your
qualifications. Endings are the last experience an admissions officer has with
your essay, so you need to make those words and thoughts count. You should not
feel obligated to tie everything up into a neat bow. The essay can conclude with
some ambiguity, if appropriate, as long as it offers insights. The aim is for
the admissions officer to leave your essay thinking, "That was a satisfying
read." Here are some Do's and Don'ts as you develop your conclusion.
DOs
- Expand
upon the broader implications of your discussion. This could include the following
strategies:
- Consider
linking your conclusion to your introduction to establish a sense of balance by
reiterating introductory phrases.
- Redefine
a term used previously in your body paragraphs.
- End
with a famous quote that is relevant to your argument. Do not TRY to do this,
as this approach is overdone. This should come naturally.
- Frame
your discussion within a larger context or show that your topic has widespread
appeal.
- Tie
the conclusion back to your introduction. A nice conclusion makes use of the
creativity you used in your introduction. If you used an anecdote in your intro,
use the conclusion to finish telling that story.
- Try
to end on a positive note. You may want to restate your goals in terms of
how they will be fulfilled at the institution to which you are applying.
DON'Ts
- Summarize.
Since the essay is rather short to begin with, the reader should not need to be
reminded of what you wrote 300 words beforehand. You do not need to wrap up your
essay in a nice little package. It should be an ending, not a summary.
- Use
stock phrases. Phrases such as, "in conclusion," "in summary," "to
conclude," belong only in dry, scientific writing. Don't use them.
- Try
to Explain the Unexplainable. Your essay need not be so tidy that you can
answer why people die or why starvation exists -- you are not writing a sitcom
-- but it should forge some attempt at closure.
Before you move on to Lesson
Six: Editing and Revising, you should take a break. Let your draft sit
for a day or two. You need to distance yourself from the piece so you can gain
objectivity. If there is anything more difficult than trying to edit your own
work, it is trying to edit your own work right after you have written it. Once
you have let your work sit for a while, you will be better able to tackle the
final steps of editing and revising.
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Move on to Lesson Six: Editing and Revisin
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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