The personal statement is a lot of work – it will probably end up being your longest essay, and it is certainly one of the most impactful ones.
In Step Four of our 6-step sequence for Juniors, we'll be discussing what the Personal Statement is and how to draft, write, and refine your own! Visit our summary post page for 5 other guides meant to guide Juniors to college application success, from creating a college list to preparing your first full application.
The personal statement is your main essay that gets submitted to every college. This means that it's crucial to talk about something that is key to you both as a person and as an applicant - something that is close to your heart, and will also touch the hearts of admissions officers. It's an incredibly important piece for making an impact on readers whilst also defining who you are. Personal statements should be special in some way, whether it's a unique topic or a common topic addressed in a unique way. Consider the context of the rest of your application and aim for your personal statement to:
It's no easy task to reach all of these goals, so use them more as guidelines than strict topic-choosing criteria. Moreover, ensure that you write effectively, are engaging, have good grammar, and overall create a good essay. The content might let you bake a good cake, but you still need icing to create the best package for admissions success - so get grammar edits and make sure your essay flows well. Presentation is one of the most important things in college applications, and that's especially true in your personal statement.
It’s crucial to spend ample time exploring possible topics: brainstorm, then write a bunch of different potential essays. After, find the one that resonates best with your application strategy and focus in on it. The other drafts can be used within the main essay you choose (combining multiple facets of your personality can be good!) or reapplied to college supplements later, so it’s a win-win situation to write out as many ideas as you’re able.
Brainstorming Tips:
When brainstorming, refer to the list of personal statement goals from the subsection above and try to think of things that can hit multiple bullets. After you've crafted a list of potential topics, it's time to see how well you can bring them to life. Try writing a little bit about each of them: this could be a hook or the intro, or even a body paragraph or the conclusion. You can also narrow down the list prior to drafting, but extra practice writing never hurts - any scrapped personal statement drafts can be reused for other supplemental essays!
It's worth talking to some friends, teachers, family, etc. to get opinions on which topics are effective and which aren't. Some topics that might feel very important to you could feel cliché to outsiders - take advice on how to spice up your personal statement into a deep look into your individual, unique experience.
Once you've got your topics narrowed down more, pick one (or more, if you have the bandwidth) to try writing a full draft of. It's much better to go over the word limit, since cutting down fluff and creating a more impactful essay is far preferable to needing to add fluff. Aim for at least 50~100 words over the max so you have room to work with, then begin refining.
Writing is a highly recursive process, and refining your personal statement is no different - in fact, you'll likely be going through multiple stages of refinement over months, right up until your first application deadline. You know you best, so it's easy to miss context or accidentally present something incorrectly. Getting multiple pairs of eyes from people who know you in different facets of your life is a great way to shape essays into something that admissions officers will enjoy reading.
Continue to get outside feedback on your essay as you write, but remain fairly stubborn in sticking to your own style: grammar edits and comments about the overall essay direction are helpful, but do not lose your voice and replace it with how someone else writes. Pretend you dropped your personal statement in the hallway at school, and a past teacher picked it up - they should be able to guess that you wrote it (even assuming that your name is nowhere on the page). Have the humility to take advice, but retain the self-confidence to make your personal statement truly yours.
Following is a real-life student example from an applicant's personal statement in 2020. The beginning of their essay addresses internal struggles with race before describing the personal growth, changed perspectives, and passion that allowed them to begin accepting their unique identity.
Original Draft:
"... it’s the stark truth of my middle school self, one tormented by not fitting in, not having a place to belong, not seeing myself in anyone. I was too brown for the white kids. I was too white for the Indian kids. I had too many cooties for the girls, even if they didn’t segregate as naturally as the boys. And I was too different to belong anywhere, at least not in those dark ages of prepubescence.
Being half-white, half-Indian, it's always been a bit hard for me to feel a cultural background. I have the uniquely American background all children who grow up in the United States has: I had fun speaking to my parents, but their English didn't help me learn another language; I ate a lot of different kinds of cuisine, but didn't experience the everyday ethnic meals other kids did; I did fun things, but without a cultural theme. This experience of being white, being Indian, but never truly feeling like either peaked in middle school. There were things I thought were cool, things I identified with, and things I wanted to talk about with my classmates, but I was alienated- not part of the in-group anywhere, not truly anyone's friend." (205 words)
Analysis (Original):
Revised Draft:
"I was tormented by not having a place to belong. I was too brown for the white kids. I was too white for the Indian kids. At lunch, I only understood “Namaste” and that I wasn’t welcome. On the bus, I only felt alone, regardless of how hard I was being pushed into the window. Why are my glasses being stolen? Why is my Pikachu keychain being ripped apart? Why am I being texted for the amusement of exposing secrets, when everyone else has real friends? It felt my differences were at fault." (93 words)
Analysis (Revised):
By following the writing tips and critically analyzing what's necessary to include in their essay, this writer cut down on words and made their writing more impactful overall. This change was gradual, however, over about 4 months - so remember that it's fine to take baby steps in refining your personal statement.
As one of the largest parts of any college application, it is critical for personal statements to provide a deep, well-written look into your life and motivations. It's a daunting task to sustain a longer essay with a strong narrative, but by drafting, following our writing tips, and refining your original rough draft, your personal statement will be ready for admissions success. Our summary post has all juniors need to prepare for applications, so consider giving it a read if this article was helpful! Up next is a look into planning for early applications.
Written by DB, PathIvy Content Team