Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Holding College Chiefs to Their Words

Reed College President Colin Diver suffered writer's block. Debora Spar, president of Barnard College, wrote quickly but then toiled for hours to cut an essay that was twice as long as it was supposed to be. The assignment loomed over Wesleyan University President Michael Roth's family vacation to Disney World.

The university presidents were struggling with a task that tortures high-school seniors around the country every year: writing the college admissions essay. In a particularly competitive year for college admissions, The Wall Street Journal turned the tables on the presidents of 10 top colleges and universities with an unusual assignment: answer an essay question from their own school's application.

Read the Essays
Barnard College's Debora Spar on daily routinesCarleton College's Robert A. Oden Jr. on getting lost -- and found -- in CairoGrinnell College's Russell K. Osgood on a historical figure that has influenced him.Oberlin College's Marvin Krislov on a historical figure that has influenced him.Pomona College's David Oxtoby on an experience that was 'just plain fun'Reed College's Colin Diver on an experience in diversityThe University of Chicago's Robert J. Zimmer on "Living the Question"University of Pennsylvania's Amy Gutmann on her autobiographyVassar College's Catharine Hill on an influential person in her lifeWesleyan University's Michael S. Roth on an influential person in his lifeThe "applicants" were told not to exceed 500 words (though most did), and to accept no help from public-relations people or speechwriters. Friends and family could advise but not rewrite. The Journal selected the question from each application so presidents wouldn't pick the easy ones. They had about three weeks to write their essays.

The exercise showed just how challenging it is to write a college essay that stands out from the pack, yet doesn't sound overly self-promotional or phony. Even some presidents say they grappled with the challenge and had second thoughts about the topics they chose. Several shared tips about writing a good essay: Stop trying to come up with the perfect topic, write about personally meaningful themes rather than flashy ones, and don't force a subject to be dramatic when it isn't.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124155688466088871.html

Though the essay portion of any test is still a major aggitant, there is a way that you can excell at the essay writing system. Visit www.freecollegeeducation.com for detaile.

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