Lesson
One: Future
Goals Essays
Please
select from the following sample application essays:
Note:
The below essays were not edited by EssayEdge Editors.
They appear as they were initially reviewed by admissions
officers.
SAMPLE
ESSAY 1: Georgetown, School Target
When I think of Georgetown University,
I think of Washington and world affairs. I do not know yet
exactly what type of professional career I will pursue after
schooling, but I do know that I wish to be inter-nationally
aware and involved, and that Georgetown would provide me with
a solid foundation for that goal.
I am glad I do not know specifically
what I want to do later on, because it should be an adventure
choosing which course I will take in life. Thus, I have time
to experiment and learn from a wide variety of topics. At Georgetown,
I am present with the opportunity to take any classes I want
and to be taught by some of the most learned and dynamic professors
in the world. I was once told that in college, I “will take
classes in subjects I had never thought or heard of, ” and
I am very excited to do this.
If I were required to pick a major
at this instant, I would choose history. If history were only
studying, memorizing and regurgitating events, facts, and dates,
I would be just as uninterested as most people. However, in
studying history, I get a chance to contemplate ideologies
and the nature of human beings. I believe that Georgetown University
is the best place in the world to study history. It is a school
located in Washington, D.C., the capital of the country, of
outstanding academic reputation and recognition; my resources
would be absolutely unlimited. Living in Washington, I would
feel the pulse of our world today. The United States is the
world’s dominant power and every issue of great global importance
is brought to the country’s capital.
I have been told that although Georgetown
has approximately 6,000 undergraduates, the students and faculty
alike feel as if the school is a small, interwoven community.
I believe that this sense of closeness is a vital aspect in
an outstanding college experience. We learn most from interactions
among other people, and the fact that this reputation of faculty
accessibility and student involvement-both in the immediate
Georgetown community and in Washington, D.C.-exists, is very
attractive to me.
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SAMPLE
ESSAY 2: Johns Hopkins, School Target
The college admissions and selection
process is a very important one, perhaps one that will have
the greatest impact on one’s future. The college that a person
will go to often influences his personality, views, and career.
Therefore, when I hear people say that “it doesn’t matter that
much which college you go to. You can get a good education
anywhere, if you are self-motivated,” I tend to be rather skeptical.
Perhaps, as far as actual knowledge is concerned, that statement
is somewhat valid. Physics and mathematics are the same, regardless
of where they are taught. Knowledge, however, is only a small
piece of the puzzle that is college, and it is in the rest
of that puzzle that colleges differ.
At least as important, or even more
important, than knowledge, is the attitude towards that knowledge.
Last year, when my engineering team was competing in the NEDC
Design Challenge, held at Hopkins, after the competition I
and a few friends talked to a professor of civil engineering.
What struck me is the passion with which he talked about his
field of study. At Hopkins, everyone-the students, the faculty,
the administration-displays a certain earnestness about learning.
This makes Hopkins a good match for me, as I, too, am very
enthusiastic about the subjects I study. I love learning, and
when those around me do too, it creates a great atmosphere
from which everyone benefits.
My enthusiasm and activeness extend
not just to academics, but to other aspects of life as well.
I am very involved in extracurricular activities, participating
in my school’s engineering club and math team, and I love sports,
having played on the varsity soccer and tennis teams for three
years. This makes Hopkins, with its great sport traditions
and a multitude of clubs and organizations, a great choice.
Further, while in college I intend to explore new activities.
Because of my school’s small size and dual curriculum, there
is a relatively narrow spectrum of activities available for
me. Hopkins affords a great opportunity for me to branch out
and participate in organizations to which I previously had
no access.
Another aspect of Hopkins that attracts
me greatly is its student body, diverse and multicultural,
but at the same time uniformly strong academically. Since I
myself am a refugee from Russia, where I experienced social
and cultural anti-Semitism, multiculturalism and acceptance
of different groups are very important to me, not to mention
that it allows me to meet people of different backgrounds and
learn of their varying perspectives. And this summer at the
U.S.A. Mathematical Talent Search Young Scholars’ Program,
I experienced the thrill of working in a group where everyone
is on the same, or higher, intellectual level as I. I think
that, given my academic and cultural background, I would fit
in well with the student life at Hopkins and contribute to
it.
Academically, too, I believe I would
fit Hopkins well. Though Hopkins is most known for its medical
program, its engineering school is also one of the best, and
that is the general area of study I intend to pursue. In high
school, I’ve most enjoyed my mathematics and science courses,
particularly physics, and I have participated in the engineering
school, so attending Hopkins’ engineering program would be
a natural extension of my high school interests. However, my
interests are not confined solely to the sciences. I enjoy
courses from all areas of curriculum, particularly unorthodox
and thought-provoking ones. Therefore, Hopkins, which according
to the viewbook “is geared toward educating students in the
fundamentals of their field of interest while illuminating
wider possibilities through interdisciplinary study” is perfect
for me.
Of course, none of those aspects
of Hopkins, neither their great student body, their world-renowned
faculty, their research centers, nor their clubs and extracurricular
opportunities, are worth anything unless one takes advantage
of them. That, however, is exactly what I intend to do. While
many people find the transition to college overwhelming, therefore
not participating in the student life fully the first year,
I hope to plunge immediately into the full array of possibility
and make as much use of them as possible. Though my soccer
and tennis skills might prove insufficient to earn me a place
on Hopkins’ varsity teams (though I hope that’s not the case,)
I nevertheless want to play sports at least on the club level.
Other than that, however, nothing is set in stone except for
one thing-to take as full and broad advantage of what Hopkins
has to offer as possible.
COMMENTS:
Both of these essays do a good job
of showing that the writers know the schools and have some
specific reasons for wanting to attend them. The first focuses
more on the academic environment and surrounding city. The
second combines several aspects such as academics, extracurriculars,
and a diverse student body. Both applicants also use the opportunity
to show that they would fit in by highlighting their own interests
and activities (an interest in history in the first and math,
tennis, and soccer in the second).
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