Jump to page content

Apply to College

Student Tools

More Tools

Borrowing Tip

Never borrow more than you need. Remember, you're not required to borrow the full amount of loan aid your child has been offered.
More loan tips

Expert Advice

"The essay portion of the application is one way to find out if prospective students have one of the basic skills they'll need when they're here."
A. Stewart, Former Assistant Director, Hope College

Recipe for a Draft

Help Your Child Kick-Start the Application Essay

Sometimes the hardest part of writing a college admission essay is just getting started. Here's a quick exercise to help your child get pen to paper (or keyboard to computer).

Step 1: Think about yourself
What are your strengths and weaknesses? What are your best qualities? Are you a plugger? An intellectual? A creative type? Curious? Passionate? Determined?

Step 2: Choose a positive quality you'd like to convey to the admissions committee
Don't pick an event or something you've done. President of the Nuclear Awareness Club is not a personal quality. Focus on a quality of your mind or of your character. Complete this sentence: "I am a very _________ person."

Step 3: Tell a story
Set a timer for 20 minutes. Pretend you're taking an exam at high school and the question is, "Tell a story about an experience or time when you showed you were a very _________ person." Use the characteristic you identified in Step 2. Write or type non-stop for 20 minutes; force yourself to keep telling the story and what it reveals until the timer goes DING.

Your Child Is Done

Okay. That's it. Your child will now have a rough draft for his application essay. Look at the college application forms and see what questions they ask. No matter what the questions are, your child has already identified the important characteristic he wants to convey to each college.

This article is based on information found in The College Application Essay, by Sarah Myers McGinty.