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@alexasnotes
better__than
The "Secret" To Doing Well in School:
Start on day one and don’t stop until you’re done.
As much as you will want to go hang out with your friends the second you get out of class on the first day, resist it. Head to the library, your room, or wherever else it is you get work done and just do it. On the first day you will have such little work to do that it will seem too insignificant to start right away. However, this helps set up the rest of the semester for you. If you can get in the habit of this before the work load gets daunting then procrastination will no longer be an issue. Sit down after your classes and finish all your work (or make a plan on how to finish it) before you relax. Simple as that. Do that and cramming will no longer be your life. If you think that’s too overwhelming, try challenging yourself to do that for 30 days. After the 30 days it will become a habit!
But maybe you’re of the opinion that procrastination is fine and that you do pretty well regardless. That’s fine. But think of how much easier studying would be if you didn’t procrastinate. By the end of week one you would have all of week one’s material down pat. You would have the opportunity to quickly review in the coming weeks instead of still struggling to learn it all. Then come the weekend before the test you will simply be reinforcing what you already know instead of struggling to have complete knowledge of what you’ll be tested on.
Boom. That A is easily within reach.
The culture behind procrastination unfortunately only ends up feeding the habit. The idea that procrastination is just a thing that everyone does and jokes around about is the worst part. Well, it’s time to take it seriously! There actually is no secret to doing well in school! You already know what you need to do. So start doing it!
this is still one of my favourite posts on here
accidentally reblogged to my main lmao
TOP TIPS FOR YOUR PERSONAL STATEMENT
Hello! I’m about to start uni in a few weeks so I thought now would be a good time to share my top tips for writing a good personal statement. There is no ‘special formula’ for writing a good one but these are some tips I picked up from family, friends, online articles, teachers and universities themselves:
WHAT SHOULD I WRITE ABOUT?
you need to say why you want to study that course - how your interest developed, how you’ve pursued it (e.g. extracurricular activities), how you’ve drawn inspiration - basically demonstrate a lot of enthusiasm but be specific
give evidence that you’re right for the course - demonstrate with examples that you have researched it, understand what it entails and have the correct skills
say what you’ve done outside of the classroom - further reading and opinions (but try to be original - don’t talk about books that are really well-known in your subject)
explain why your experiences are relevant to the course and to a future career - reflect on experiences, don’t describe them!
give examples of transferable skills - teamwork, time management, problem solving, etc. and then expand on the most relevant skills - success in projects, how you grew from particular experiences, biggest challenges you’ve faced, etc.
also show you’re a critical thinker and mention long term plans
AN EXAMPLE:
as an example, here’s what I wrote about in my personal statement:
a public lecture I’d been to at a local university and how this inspired me (you could watch a TED talk online and discuss it)
how I was interested by the lab equipment and research I’d seen at a university when I went on a taster day
hobbies I have and how I was interested in my subject outside of school (books, magazines, podcasts I like and why)
a line about my EPQ and how this follows on from a podcast I listened to
how I’m finding my A level subjects (e.g. I enjoy science practicals)
how my AS levels helped me (e.g. AS history really helped me with essay writing)
what I learned from tutoring some GCSE students and volunteering at a charity shop
how I found shadowing a PhD student at a local university - how this inspired me and motivated me in my chosen subject
TRY TO INCLUDE:
paragraphs and GOOD GRAMMAR!!!!!
balance of academic and extra-curricular
evidence you’ve done research
show genuine engagement
lateral thinking - link to a more obscure theme that you find interesting
honesty and a desire to study
what you want from course
positivity
CURIOSITY!
make it interesting, thoughtful and personal - say what inspires you
DON’T INCLUDE:
academic achievements - unis know what qualifications you have and which grades you’re predicted so don’t waste your characters!
quotes - this is YOUR personal statement, not Winston Churchill’s!!
lists - you need detail and explanations
clichés - you have not wanted to be a doctor for as long as you can remember!
sweeping statements
‘passion’ and other commonly-used words
stilted vocabulary - use language that you actually use (but not slang)
exaggeration
humour - it’s a dangerous move to use humour
negativity
irrelevant facts - it’s not a school essay!
OVERALL:
show not tell - “I’ve been able to develop my communication skills by tutoring three GCSE science students” is better than saying “I’m a good communicator”
DRAFT!!!! you will not be able to write a good personal statement in one go - it took me months of regular drafting and re-writing to get mine even close to being finished!
get help! ask friends, family, teachers, etc. to read it and give feedback
don’t be too precious about it - you will have to cut bits out, shorten sentences, lengthen sentences, delete words, re-arrange the structure, etc. so try to stay open minded!
one uni I visited on an open day suggested using the ABC formula: A is for Activity (say what you did), B is for Benefit (say the skills you gained from the activity) and then C is for Course (relate it to the course and say how it prepares you) - I didn’t use this myself but I have friends who found it useful!
be specific! don’t say “I love French” - say “I love how learning new languages helps me to understand the world around me….”
I hope this is helpful and good luck! Please feel free to ask me any questions you may have! :)
self evaluation translation
i realised flaws within my time management system: i left this entire project to the last minute, and now am filled with regret
i developed my independence when researching: my supervisor was fucking useless and had exactly zero input in this project
communication skills within the team grew: i hate these people. we argued for 3 days straight. why is my grade dependent on idiots
i used a variety of sources: everything is from wikipedia. the title is from wikipedia. this evaluation is from wikipedia. the staples are from wikipedia everything wikipedia wiki-
i first drafted a plan: i didn't draft a plan
How To Get A Job Fast As Hell
@owenabbott
Apply to a job, wait (1) day, then call. Give them your first and last name. Tell them you submitted an application and that you’re very motivated to find [Enter field name] work. Let the conversation lead you wherever it takes. Be very polite. Say” thank you for your time, I’ll be looking forward to hearing back from you.” Rinse, repeat. This is to force them to be looking out for your application.
When you get to the interview, shake their hand firmly, tell them your first and last name.
Describe your experiences as “ two years transcription and data entry” if you have a desk job interview and “ [however many years] costumer service, retail and stock” for your retail jobs.
Don’t use job “ buzz words” I stg they hear them all day. Say things like, “ I’m detail oriented and am very good at taking instruction.” “ I would like to work for a company with integrity and I feel that [ company name] would be a good fit”
When they ask you if you have “reliable transportation” say YES. don’t tell them what kind of transportation, just say yes. (if you don’t do this, you wont get the job , I’m telling you right now).
Research the company. Know what they do, why they do it, how OLD the company is. WHERE it was founded, and what kind of position you’re intending to apply for.
When they ask you “ give us a situation where you had to blah blah blah” Make one the fuck up. Make yourself sound good as hell, and like you put your company’s needs slightly above the customer’s needs, but make the customer happy.
If they ask you about being outgoing, Say you “like to focus on your work so you can concentrate on doing things right” (which buys you out of having to act friendly all the time)
Questions for after the interview:
1. Does this position offer upward mobility?
2. Do you enjoy working for the company? (if you’re not interviewing for a temp agency who will send you anywhere)
Then, shake their hand, Ask them to repeat their name (REMEMBER THIS) say thank you for your time, wish them a nice day and leave. write their name down outside if you have to, just remember the fuck out of it.
AFTER your interview, send a card directed to the name of the person who interviewed you (I’ll give you them) that says “Thank you for the interview, I appreciate the opportunity. have a great day” This shows that you have an understanding of professionalism, and will have them thinking of you kindly (or at least remembering you) when they’re shuffling through the choices.
DO NOT tell them you just moved to the city over the phone. In person, tell them you just moved to the city. Make it sound like the only reason you need a job is because you moved. Not because you’re desperate.
__________
The titles of each section are key words you can use to search for jobs on Snagajob.com and Simplyhired.
Data Entry:
http://citystaffing.com/job/data-entry-specialistsmailroom-clerk/?utm_source=Indeed&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=Indeed
https://www.roberthalf.com/officeteam/job-search/chicago-il/data-entry-clerks-needed/43517752?codes=IND
http://www.simplyhired.com/job/data-entry-specialists-job/chicago-transit-authority/jepfivkhjk?cid=udsowkxtausyzitcfeecaeuzoxkltmbl
https://jobs-theprivatebank.icims.com/jobs/3435/temporary—data-entry/job?mode=job&iis=SimplyHired&iisn=SimplyHired&utm_source=simplyhired&utm_medium=jobclick&mobile=false&width=792&height=500&bga=true&needsRedirect=false&jan1offset=-360&jun1offset=-300
Front Desk:
http://localjobs.joblur.com/jobapplication2/?jobid=99957&subaffid=300006&JobType=Food%20/%20Bev%20/%20Hosp&ix=1&c1=99957
https://jobs.ajg.com/job/-/-/109/1256110?apstr=%26src%3DJB-10280
https://pepper.hiretouch.com/job-search/job-details?jobID=32066&job=receptionist
http://accesscommunityhealth.hodesiq.com/jobs/default.aspx?JobID=5203566 (this one is close to the place you rented.)
http://ihg.taleo.net/careersection/all/jobdetail.ftl?job=R113601&lang=en&media_id=24863&src=Indeed&src=JB-10920
https://covalentcareers.com/employer/listing/86450f8517588197c9b04f5068ed4300/detail/?apply=1&ref=indeed&v=30&utm_source=indeed&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=indeed_optical
http://www.careerbuilder.com/jobseeker/jobs/jobdetails.aspx?APath=2.21.0.0.0&job_did=JHN0KY6823WBWZX21VM&showNewJDP=yes&IPath=JRKV0F
http://www.simplyhired.com/job/front-desk-receptionist-customer-service-sales-job/rosin-optical-co-inc/qaeoquzgdi?cid=ivdnhijkmxchdanahwfoupazcwisfnxt
http://www.simplyhired.com/job/receptionist-front-desk-job/all-us-jobs/fonj7wmldf?cid=trhyvmfcsgjltxkjxkemyinsjveewfjp
Other jobs you don’t need a degree for that aren’t retail:
Dental hygenist ( yeah, seriously, who knew!) They also make about 40,000 a year)
Stenographer-Court Reporter
Surveyer ( you need a certificate for this, but its something you can get while working a temporary job and doing this on the side. Also, they make like $55,000 a year sooooooo) https://sjobs.brassring.com/TGWEbHost/jobdetails.aspx?jobId=1406428&PartnerId=16023&SiteId=5118&codes=IND
Real Estate Broker
Purchasing agents, except wholesale, retail, and farm products ( basically you arrange to buy large things) they make like 60K
Claims adjuster
Loan Officer
Subway driver (trains) they make like 60K,
Duct Cleaner: http://jobview.monster.com/Duct-Cleaners-950-00-Weekly-Entry-Level-Flexible-Hours-Call-to-Apply-Job-Chicago-IL-US-161970321.aspx?intcid=re
The College Application Process
A guide by Eintsein
College application season is just around the corner. As a survivor of the grueling task of completing the application process, I know exactly how daunting, overwhelming, and downright stressful it can be. I hope that by giving you a little ‘tour’ of the college application process, you’ll have a much easier time navigating it. and hopefully you’ll be able to craft a successful application.
Before I get right into it, I’d first like to tell you a bit about myself in the context of college applications. I just graduated high school (in 2018) and I’m going to attend Cornell University in the fall. I plan to major in Computer Science and Economics, but I remain open to other courses of study that I may find interesting as I progress through my college career. I applied to a total of 17 schools: I was accepted by 8 of them and waitlisted by 1.
Disclaimer: I am not a college admissions officer and thus I am not certain that everything I write in this post will work. This is just what I experienced with my college applications. Also, I will only be talking about college applications in the US, since that’s where I applied to, but perhaps some of the tips are adaptable to other countries’ college application processes.
Stage 1: Pre-application
Drafting a college list
(before summer break - start of senior year)
Doing college research
Before starting your application, it seems pretty obvious that you should have an idea of which schools to apply to. And in order for you to do that, you should do a little research to make sure that you’re applying to colleges that you actually want to attend.
One of the first things you should do is list different factors that you think will affect your decision. Do you want to go to a college in the city or in a small town? A large college or a small one? A chill school or an academically rigorous one?
You should also consider the major/area of study you’re interested in–it doesn’t even have to be super specific. Your potential major can then be used to choose your colleges. For example, if I wanted to study CS and Econ, I would choose colleges that are strong in both areas.
On a side note, I don’t think you should choose an area of study just because you’re good at a certain subject, e.g. just because you’re good at English, doesn’t necessarily mean you should study English or Literature. Instead, choose a potential major based on what you enjoy doing.
When doing your research about these different colleges, reading all of the information on their websites can be tedious and boring. As an alternative, I’d recommend watching youtube videos or talking to alumni instead. When I was applying, the most effective way for me to get to know a school is through those “A Day in the Life of…” videos as well as Q&A videos because you not only end up knowing more about the school but also about the student body and the student culture at that university.
What colleges?
I recommend that you apply to a good mix of safety schools, match schools, and dream schools.
Safety schools: you exceed their requirements and you’ll definitely get in.
Match schools: admits have similar academic credentials to yours. You have a good chance of admission, but there’s also a (relatively small) probability that you won’t.
Dream schools: your scores or credentials fall in the lower end of the school’s average range for the previous batch of admitted students.You’d be lucky to get in.
All the colleges you apply to should be colleges that you’d be happy to attend.
How many colleges?
You should start with 6 schools: 2 safety, 2 match, and 2 reach. Then you can adjust the numbers as you wish. If you’re applying to more schools, I’d say the optimum reach:match:safety ratio is around 3:5:2, so if you’re planning to apply to 10 colleges, that would be 3 reach, 5 match, and 2 safety.
How to classify colleges
Generally, people categorize their colleges based on statistics, so things like test scores, GPA, and rank. Perhaps the easiest method is comparing standardized test scores. A good way to do this is to look at the 25th to 75th percentile range, which shows you the scores obtained by 50% of last year’s entering class. If your scores fall between the 25th and 75th percentile, you may have just found yourself a match school! But hold up, the lower percentiles may be reserved for special admits like athletes or donors, so in reality, a match school would be one where your scores lie closer to the 75th percentile.
Aside from standardized test scores, it might also help to figure out what kind of student the college is looking for–such as by reading accepted supplemental essays–and seeing whether or not you seem like the right fit.
Resources
Once you’ve compiled your list of colleges, it would help to have a table with information about them. This might include information like deadlines, median scores, availability of scholarships, interviews, etc. Here’s a link to (the blank version of) the spreadsheet I used for my college application. Feel free to modify it according to your needs, but make sure to make a copy before changing things!
Recommendation Letters
What are recommendation letters?
Recommendations letters are letters written by your mentors to provide insight into what you’re like as a student, e.g. your behavior, positive qualities, interests, achievements etc.
Whom should you ask for a recommendation letter?
It’s good to ask teachers who know you very well, either someone who has taught you for a long time or someone who has a multifaceted view of you, such as a teacher who has also advised you in an extracurricular.
Some people would also suggest that you get recommendations from teachers of different subjects to show that you’re a well-rounded student. I think it’s better to ask teachers who can write about your different positive qualities, i.e. one teacher could highlight a part of your character that the other teacher would not be able to.
You might also want to ask teachers who can write well. In my experience, letters from teachers in the humanities and social science departments tend to be more convincing and well-written than those in the science and math departments (I know not all teachers are like this; this is just a generalization). But again, it’s definitely better to ask teachers who know you well and can write about your qualities.
The first recommendation letter I used was from my Economics teacher, who was also my MUN (Model United Nations) advisor - an extracurricular in which I was very active. My classmates and I also had a pretty good relationship with this teacher, especially since our class was only 3 students.
My second recommendation letter came from my Math teacher, who taught me for 6 years. Math is also my strongest subject, so that’s definitely a plus point (get it? :p).
Another letter that might be useful to submit is the additional recommendation. This is a recommendation from anyone other than your teacher, it could be your coach, another mentor, or even a friend. I think you should only consider submitting an additional recommendation if it highlights qualities that haven’t been covered in your other ones.
What do I have to do as an applicant?
Be prepared to answer questions your teachers may have about you so that they can write a more valuable recommendation letter. Compiling a resume or list of achievements and activities might help, or you could simply sit down for a conversation.
When should I ask for these recommendation letters?
Preferably before your senior year starts so your teachers have enough time to put some thought into what they’re going to write.
Standardized Testing
Do I really need to take standardized tests?
A lot of colleges recommend (read: require) you to take the SAT or ACT (and TOEFL if you’re an international student like myself), but remember that they are not your entire application. Just do your best in the standardized tests you take.
When should I take them?
I say whenever you’re ready, but no later than the deadline specified by the college (usually October of your senior year would be the latest to take the general SAT). I did my SATs in October during my junior year, my younger sister took it at the end of her sophomore year, and a lot of my friends took in October during our senior year, so again, it really depends on when you feel you’re ready.
How many times should I take them?
I don’t think you should do each test more than once unless you’re sure your scores will improve. Your application won’t look very good if you sat for the SAT 3 times and your scores decreased each time, assuming the college looks at all your scores.
Which scores do I send colleges?
Different colleges have different requirements for the submission of these test scores. Some only require the highest scores, while others would like to see all of your scores. On the CollegeBoard website, when you enter colleges to which you’ll send your scores, the site will also inform you of the requirements for those colleges.
How will colleges receive my standardized testing scores?
You’ll have to fill a form in the Common/Coalition App. In addition, some schools require you to send official score reports from the testing agency. I suggest that you send in your scores as soon as you know what colleges you’re applying to, just so that you don’t have to pay an extra amount to ‘rush’ your score sends (i.e. have it sent to colleges in 2-4 days as opposed to the regular 1-2 weeks).
The Rest of Senior Year
Take challenging classes and do well in them
Colleges look at the classes you take in high school and how well you did in them. You should consider taking classes that are both challenging and in the area of study you might want to pursue. Taking challenging courses allows college admissions officers to see that you’re taking initiative to further your education.
What if I catch senioritis?
If you’re a senior, you’ll definitely go through a phase where you don’t care about anything and just feel like having coffee and talking to your friends in class. I know I did. Senioritis is totally normal, but you should still try to put effort into your studies. Colleges can rescind your admission if they see a drastic fall in your grades, so keep your grades up and don’t overwhelm yourself with too many unnecessary activities.
Join extracurriculars
Extracurriculars show college admissions officers that you can manage your time well and that you have other interests aside from school. It also shows them that you are an active, contributing member of your community, and that you’re proactive in developing your passions and interests.
What type of activity counts as an extracurricular?
Well, it can be anything you do in your free time. It could be a school club, a club outside of school, an online activity, etc. Maybe you programmed an app in your spare time. Maybe you had a part time job. Or maybe you ran a blog that helps students navigate their academic lives. You just have to find something that matters to you and is significant and meaningful. It would be even better if the activities in which you participate can demonstrate leadership and commitment.
If you’re having a hard time picturing what that could be, I’ll give you a couple of examples. One of my friends expanded his love of reading by starting a hip hop literature club that has branches in Japan and in multiple states in the US. A junior of mine established a website that brings together people from all around the world, who are experienced in the MUN community, to give newer members advice and guidance so that they may thrive in the MUN world.
Stage 2: Completing the Application
The Application Form
Different Application Platforms
The first thing you should do after you’ve compiled a college list is to find out where you should complete your application.
1. The Common App
The most common application platform is the Common App, which is used by more than 700 colleges in the US. It’s super convenient if you’re applying to a lot of colleges, but the site does limit you to 20 colleges.
2. The Coalition App
Another common platform is the Coalition for Access, Affordability, and Success, which is a fairly new platform that has 132 members. It does have a cool feature I like, though: it allows you to compile a kind of portfolio by uploading documents and files to your “locker” on the website. Furthermore, the Coalition App is specifically aimed to help lower-resourced and underrepresented students, so the colleges listed there have substantial financial aid and scholarship opportunities.
3. Other Applications
Some colleges also have their own applications, such as the UCs and MIT.
Parts of the Application
You’ll have to fill in your
Personal information (This is probably the easiest part of the application, so even if you don’t have anything else ready yet, I recommend you fill this out just to get it over with.)
Extracurricular activities
Essays (the Common/Coalition App essay and supplementary essays)
Honors and awards
Disciplinary information
Standardized test scores
Your counselor will submit
Your high school transcript
Your mid-year and final transcript
The school report
The counselor recommendation
Your teachers will submit
Their recommendation letters
Now, even though you aren’t submitting every single thing on the form, you are the person responsible for the punctuality of these documents. Your teachers are busy and they might forget, so it’s your job to remind them.
For real though, one of my teachers forgot to upload his recommendation onto one of the external application websites. Fortunately, the university gave me and others in my position an extra 22 days to send in any missing documents.
The Essay (and other essays)
Ah, yes. The much dreaded Essay™. Probably the most challenging part of the application, and the one that sucks the life outta ya. There’s a reason for that, though. The essay is an important part of the application because it humanizes the applicant instead of merely showing them as a collection of statistics and facts. You should aim to showcase something about yourself that can’t be found in other parts of the application.
Planning
When should I start?
Ideally, you should start thinking about potential essay ideas over the summer, maybe come up with a rough draft if you can. But it’s really no rush, though. Sometimes the best ideas come later. I wrote my first common app essay over the summer. Completely scrapped it. Wrote a second one in like September-ish and used that for Early Action. Scrapped it again. The final essay I sent in was first written on December 17th. Sometimes life works that way.
How do I start?
One method that helped me is making a mind map about myself (my counselor recommended this to me). You’d start by writing down the things that define you: your personality, qualities, and values. Then, you’d think of activities, events, or other things in your life where you exhibited those traits or exercised those values. Since all college essays pretty much boil down to “What good qualities do you have?”, mind mapping your good qualities will help you answer all sorts of essays.
One important thing you should know is that your essay topic doesn’t have to be super deep or anything, just that it says a lot about you. And just because your essay is really personal, you shouldn’t divert your focus away from writing it well. You also shouldn’t write about something everybody experiences unless you can find a way to make it unique.
What next?
As soon as you have several topics for your essay, you can create outlines for each of them, and see which one would give a greater contribution to your application. If you’re not the outline type of person, start writing away, and see which one turns out to be more effective.
Writing
Start writing as soon as you have an idea. You don’t have to perfect it yet, just see where and how far the idea goes. You can always edit it or scrap it later. Or, if you prefer a more structured approach, make outlines for all the ideas you have.
How should I structure my essay?
When writing your essay, I would recommend using a narrative structure since people generally respond better to stories. However, if you think your essay would read better without the narrative structure, then use a different one.
What writing techniques are important?
Imagery is your best friend. You want your readers (the admissions officers) to be able to picture what you’re telling them so that they could understand more clearly and comprehensively whatever it is about yourself that you’re trying to convey.
Using an extended metaphor is also an excellent way to compose a memorable essay. Be aware that they’re fairly difficult to pull off, but if you have an idea, you should try and write it out first and see how that works out.
What are some common mistakes applicants make?
Some applicants make the mistake of sounding too preachy, you know, something like “We should make the world a better place!!” You might think, “but aren’t these types of essays supposed to be like that?” That’s what I thought, too, when I first wrote my essay. The admissions officers, however, are only there to get to know you, not to be preached upon. Instead, you should tie in the message you want to convey with your personal experience.
Lastly, you shouldn’t summarize at the end of your essay. It really isn’t as useful as you might think. In other words, you should write your essay so that it doesn’t need to be summarized in order for the readers to understand what you’re trying to tell them.
Revising
You should be prepared to write and rewrite and, like I said before, completely scrap essays. Don’t let yourself get attached to a particular sentence or phrase or even essay topic. Rewrite as needed. Write something else if you must.
After you’ve written your first draft, leave your essay for a couple days before coming back to it to edit. This is because right after you’ve written your essay, the ideal image of the essay is still the one you have written down, so you likely won’t make any meaningful changes.
What if I exceed the word limit?
If your word count is waaay past it, I’d suggest you write it from scratch without referring to the original draft. This helps eliminate the less important details since you yourself don’t remember them.
If you think you can simply cut down on a few phrases, there are several things you can do: delete redundancies, shorten your introduction/conclusion, simplify phrases, rearrange sentences, and use contractions, for example.
Should I ask other people to read my essay?
Somewhere along the road, you’ll also want to ask other people to read over your essay. I wouldn’t recommend asking a friend to do this for you since they might give a biased opinion. Plus, they know you too well. Instead, ask a teacher, your counselor, or even an acquaintance with whom you’re comfortable letting them read your essay.
Supplemental Essays
Honestly just refer to your mind map if you made one, or make outlines for each of your supplemental essays. Don’t be afraid to reuse essays, just make sure to change the name of the college if mentioned.
Some colleges also require you to write about an extracurricular. A guide to the extracurricular essay will be covered in the Extracurriculars section of this post.
Helpful links
College Essay Masterpost by @genericappblrurl
Prolly the most comprehensive guide to college essays bless u
Covers nearly all essay types
College Essay Masterpost (links) by @sootudying, includes
General essay advice
Each of the common app essay prompts
“Why college X?” essay guides
Extracurricular essay guides
Contribution essay guides
Influence in life essay guides
“Why major X?” essay guides
College Essay Masterpost (links) by @sequoia-studies, includes
General essay advice (articles + videos)
Ivy league essays
UC essays
Common app essays
Essay examples
How to Write a Bomb Ass Essay for College Applications by @education-tips
Extracurriculars
Colleges love applicants who are contributing members of their communities as well as those who are actively developing their passions and skills. The extracurricular section of the college application allows the college to see just that. As I’ve said before, an extracurricular activity can be anything you do in your free time, but one in which you hold a leadership position will pique the interests of the admissions officers.
How many activities should I list?
The Common App gives you 10 slots for extracurricular activities (the Coalition gives you 8). However, it’s completely fine if you don’t have 10 activities. For the most part, colleges prefer to see quality over quantity, so having a few activities you’re passionate about and to which you made significant contributions would be better than filling all 10 slots with activities that you don’t care about all that much. The best combination of activities would be 1 - 3 significant activities with a large number of hours and several others with a lower number of hours.
What if I have too many activities?
Choose the activities that you invested the most time in and gained the most experience from. You can also combine multiple activities into one slot. For example, I organized quite a few events and fundraisers when I was in the Student Council, so instead of writing “Organized and volunteered for sports cup”, “Designed and produced school merchandise”, and “Organized a charity festival”, I wrote them all under “Student Council”.
Note: Extracurricular activities aren’t the same as Honors and Awards.
What activities should I include?
As I’ve stated previously, colleges prefer quality over quantity. However, you can aim to be either “pointy” or “well rounded”. Some students have activities that are only in one area of study (”pointy”). This shows colleges that you’re focused and have an intense desire to pursue a single passion.
Despite this, being more “well-rounded” and having a diverse range of activities can also be beneficial since it shows that you’ve gained a lot of experience, and that you aren’t afraid to try different things.
Your activities don’t even have to be conventional extracurricular activities either. Two of the extracurricular activities I listed were 1) this studyblr; and 2) my instagram poetry page. I mean, I am a Gen X kid; I’m bound to spend large amounts of time on social media. Fortunately, it turns out I made a pretty significant contribution, I would say, and also learned a lot from the experience, so they definitely count as extracurricular activities.
Describing the extracurricular activities
This blog post from College Vine is super comprehensive and helped me a lot when I was writing about my extracurriculars. I’ll sum up some key points below:
Select extracurriculars that will present the best image of yourself
Use action oriented verbs (e.g. “facilitated”, “managed”, “maintained”)
Quantify your accomplishments as much as possible
Certain activities will look better if you emphasize the valuable skills you learned instead of what you did
Be specific
Some colleges will require you to write an essay in which you reflect upon a particular activity you did: what you learned and how you grew. This post from College Essay Guy covers pretty much everything I have to say about the extracurricular essay. Main points:
Use active verbs
Write a good clear sentence about what the activity meant to you
Show a little, but not too much
Start with a problem to be solved
Focus on specific impact
Write it long first, then cut it
But which extracurricular activity should you write the essay about? Here’s a helpful link that tells you just that.
Honors and Awards
The honors and awards section is another component of the application that can help you stand out from other applicants. These are basically any achievement, award, or recognition you’ve received in high school.
The common app limits you to 5 honors/awards, and I would recommend that you choose your most impressive honors, e.g. an international competition would be more impressive than one within your school.
Sometimes awards are directly tied to an activity, such as winning Best Delegate in an MUN conference. In this case, you should mention your award in the activities section. Awards that aren’t tied to an activity should be listed in the Honors and Awards section. These might include scholarships, academic awards, etc.
If you have too many honors to fit into the form (lucky you!), you might want to consider sending in a resume. Some colleges provide this option, while some merely have a section for extra information.
Interviews
Interviews are another way the college can see you as a whole person. Some colleges might provide you with an option to take the interview or decline it, but if given the chance, go for it!
What is the interview, exactly?
For me, this was probably the most nerve-wracking part since you’re practically telling things about yourself to a stranger (can you tell I’m not into socializing?) and it’s like you’re being evaluated and you don’t really know what to expect.
But honestly they’re basically regular conversations where you talk about yourself and the things you love. They’ll ask about your school, your family, your aspirations, your hobbies, but the conversation can lead anywhere–food, human rights, pop culture.
It’ll probably start with an open ended question like tell me about yourself and then branch off from there.
There might also be another type of interview where it’s more like a Q&A about the school and you get to know the college through an alumni (Cornell’s “interview” was like this).
A bad interview really won’t hurt your application, unless of course you fail to answer why you want to go to that university.
It really just gives you an extra boost and another factor to consider when the university decides whether or not to admit you.
Plus, you get to elaborate on things that you didn’t on your application.
Interviews can be anywhere from 15 minutes to 1.5 hours, so don’t worry if you think it was too short or too long.
General Tips
Arrive early. It helps to take a few seconds to breathe and take in your location and surroundings before you start your interview.
Wear something comfortable. I wore a plaid shirt and trousers to most of my interviews. In my experience, Western people tend to be more lenient with clothing, so if you wear a t-shirt, it’s fine. Indonesians (and some other Asians) kinda want you to dress at least semi-formally, maybe a button up and formal pants or a skirt.
If your interviewer asks if you want to order anything, go ahead, they won’t mind, and you’ll get free food or a free beverage. I would usually order coffee or tea.
What should I prepare?
How to answer the question tell me about yourself.
How to answer the question why do you want to go to this school?
How to answer other common questions. Don’t script your answers though. Just think about them so you know what the focus of your answer will revolve around.
Your resume, in case they ask for one.
Research the college and prepare some questions to ask the interviewer.
Research the interviewer, e.g. what they studied, what their job is, anything you think would be important to bring up, like one of their research projects or theses.
After the Interview
Send the interviewer a thank you note/email
Thank them for interviewing you
Recall something memorable from the interview
Relax. Then relax some more.
Helpful links
15 Questions to Know for College Interviews by @solustudies
The 14 College Interview Questions You Must Prepare For by PrepScholar
Other General Tips
Check and recheck! Everything! Like actually tho, I typed in my friend’s TOEFL score instead of my own on one application, and on one essay, I wrote the wrong name of the university. I fixed them, though. But yeah check, recheck, and have someone else check it for you too, if possible.
If you’re strong in the arts, send in an arts supplement! I sent in some poetry samples (although I don’t actually know if they’re good haha) to demonstrate my extracurricular interests.
Just be your honest self in all parts of the application. Don’t try to mold yourself to fit the university you’re applying to. I’m sure the admissions officers will be able to tell if you aren’t being genuine.
And some links…
A Masterpost for Applying to College by @science-is-golden
College Application Timeline by @applicantmusings
A College Student’s Masterpost by @eruditekid
Uni Application Masterpost by @study-early
Stage 3: Post-Application
Relax! You deserve it.
Enjoy your senior year, but again, keep up those grades. Don’t be consumed by senioritis.
Spend more time with your friends since it’s probably gonna be your last year together. Actually spend more time with everyone around you and join activities you normally wouldn’t. But again, don’t overwhelm yourself.
Even though you’re having fun, remember to check your email regularly. Colleges will update you about things, e.g. if you’re missing a component from your application.
Prepare to view your admission results.
Final Notes
College applications are tough, and you’re amazing for being able to put up with such a daunting task. It’s meant to be hard, so applaud yourself!
Also remember not to wear yourself out! Take breaks and revitalize because you’re going to craft a much better application if you have a clear mind and a healthy body.
And when announcement day arrives, be prepared for whatever result you’ll get. Congratulations if you get into your dream school! And if you don’t, that’s alright; maybe the school wasn’t a good fit for you after all.
That’s it for now. Hope you found this post helpful, and best of luck for your college applications!
I managed to find my masterpost of my favorite resources I made a while ago on my original blog. I’m reposting it here so it’s not lost forever and I can begin to salvage whatever of my original content I can find. :)
Study Tips
The Five Day Study Plan by brandi-studies
Finals Study Tips by kimberlystudies
Achieving your full academic potential: Things to Avoid Doing by portiastudies
How Should I Study? by reviseordie
Best Study Apps for iPhone by apprecommendations
Tools to Help You Focus by strive-for-da-best
How Do I Study For ___ by ladykaymd
Reasons Why You Just Can’t Focus On Studying by mydeskcoop
Tips For Effective Study by kimberlystudies
7 Day Study Challenge by studyingstudent
Memory Tips by brain-exercise
How To Stay Focused by studyblr-royals
How I Create a Study Guide by retrovyrus
Time and Task Management by pensandmachine
12 Creative Study Techniques by kimberlystudies
Guide to Kicking Booty on Exams by studyign
Note Taking Tips
How to Take Notes: from a Textbook by staticsandstationery
Sketchnote Tips by studyspoinspo
How I Take Notes by academicmind
Taking Lecture Notes by strive-for-da-best
theorganizedstudent‘s Note Taking System
Organize Your Life: Note Taking Edition by vsdharris
How I Take Notes by wonderfullifee
Ashley’s Tips for Notetaking by studyconfident
Note Taking Systems by kimberlystudies
Typing Your Notes by study-well
On note taking… by studyingwithclass
How studyign Makes Cause and Effect Diagrams
More of studyign‘s notes
How to Make Organized Notes by mindofamedstudent
College Tips
How to Study Like a Straight A Student by collegerefs
University Success Tips by stressandstudying
College Scholarship Masterpost by jesussbabymomma
saralearnswell‘s Guides to College Success
What to Do During Your Senior Year by applicantmusings
Advice on Writing the Common App Essay by collegeadmissionbook
Microsoft Office for College Students Free
Scholarships: How to Find Them and Apply by futurecristinayang
Advice for College Labs by hexaneandheels
College Prep Timeline by collegeessayguy
tisaybitch‘s College Masterpost
The Tiny Anthropologist’s Advice for College
Ultimate College Packing List by kimberlystudies
thestudyaesthetic‘s College List Template
How to Prepare for College During Your Senior Year of High School by kimberlystudies
5 Things to Know About the Transition from High School to College by kimberlystudies
The Perfect Resume for Someone with No Experience
How to Write a University-level Essay by healthyeyes
Free College Textbooks
Things No One Told Me Before College by delthenerd
University Writing Resources by seystudies
Math
How I Prepare For Math Tests by sabitcher
English
Annotating Fiction and Nonfiction by collegerefs
How to Annotate by wandering-writing
Novel Annotation Tricks and Tips by justhitthosebooks
How to Succeed in English Without Really Trying by studylicious
Synonyms for “Suggests” in Essays by justkeeprevising
100+ Legal Sites to Download Literature by itsrosewho
dukeofbookingham‘s Tips for Reading Shakespear
Shakespear Plot Summaries by cheshirelibrary
Helpful Literature Studying Tips
Alternatives for Overused Words
Transition Words for Your Essays by soniastudyblr
Commonly Misused Words by englishpracticenow
Stuff You Need to Write Essays by studyign
Foreign Languages
Language Pod Company
Language Learning Masterpost by z-co
AP Psychology
Get Ahead in AP Psych by stylizedstudying
AP Psychology by studyign
Summer Productivity
Ultimate Summer Masterpost by studyable
Get Shit Done During Summer by studyforthata
Summer Productivity by revisicn
How to Have a Very Productive Summer by studyign
Other Resources
Free SAT and AP Prep Materials by raincoffeebooks
Online Study Guides by back-to-school-series
How to Google More Efficiently
How to be a Google Power User
Ten Tips that Will Make Your School Year Easier by warmvanillabookworm
Productivity Resource List by lifting-books
Learn Things for Free by girl-havoced
Internet Resources for Your Education by studyign
SAT Help by studyign
Miscellaneous Masterposts
study-well‘s Exam Master-post
Giant School Masterlist by blazeluke
Everything You Need: Masterpost for Students by strive-for-da-best
The Masterpost of Masterposts by revisionmate
Back to School Masterpost by doitforthea
toolazytostudy‘s Ultimate School Masterpost
What the Heck is a Bullet Journal by studyign
Stress Reliefs by studyign
Study Music Masterpost by kimberlystudies
study-well‘s Masterpost of Tips
Study Help by keepziam
Studying Masterlist by soph-studies
Everything You Need to Succeed in School by studyign
A Very Long List to Help You Survive School by listsandmasterposts
studeezpo Masterpost
Happy studying!
wrap up post for last week!!! next week is going to be the last week of the term and I’m getting so busy my journalling is a little sloppy ☄️ I hope everyone’s week goes well!!! ☺️
ig: studylithe
Dope Researching
Categorizing Notes:
No matter what you’re researching, you’re going to need to refer back to your notes. Because of that, it makes sense to organize them based on a common type. For history, SPICE (Society, Politics, Interaction with the Environment, Culture, Economy) is pretty good (imo) if you’re just starting out.
For me, I separate my notes into six categories (which, honestly, may increase):
History:
This one is a bit of a no-brainier; anything that has to do with the history of a place/event goes into this category. Formation of nation/events leading up to The Event, what happened during the time of the nation/Event, major turning points, yada…..
People:
This part is for major figures that pop in whatever you’re researching. Government Leaders, Game Changers, Important Leaders, or Cultural Changers go here.
Culture:
If it has to do with culture-religion, customs, beliefs, traditions- it goes here. Careful that you’re not just listing everything as culture; make it sure that it actually served a function or a majority of the population did it.
For places like the Ottoman Empire or the Persians under Cyrus the Great, I recommend having Overarching Culture and {group’s} culture.
Myths:
!!!!Depending on what you’re researching, you may or may not have this part.!!!!
Anyways, this is where you’ll put notes that have to do with myths of a culture/religion. This is more so for quick references, and in a way, you might be able to understand/analyze the culture a bit more by knowing what their stories are.
Society:
This is where you’re going to put notes that have to do with how the society was: hierarchically, were there slaves, was there a class system, how was the class system done, who were Lower and who was Higher gender-wise or was it egalitarian, etc.
Government:
This is where notes on politics go: what laws were there, who were the allies (and maybe why they were allies), who was in charge, what type of government system was there…. and, were militaristic things would go: what was the army like, what wars were fought etc.
Smoothing out the rough parts:
This is pretty much the part where you’re going to get down and dirty with our notes.
You need to be real with yourself at this point: Did what you took notes on help you, or was it just a complete waste? If it was a waste where the information you got was pretty shit, take it out. You don’t want to keep around information that is essentially useless because, well, it’s unnecessary too.
Also, I suggest rewriting your notes in your own voice; I would assume the majority of us would copy verbatim the source we’re taking notes on. Rewriting it in a way that sounds like you is going to show you whether or not you actually understand what you wrote or if you need to go back to the source and re-read it.
Bias and creditably:
This is another part where you have to be super real with yourself.
After reading a source, take a moment and think: did the writer have a super obvious bias, or did you feel there was a lot of favoritism on one side, or was there a lack of information on a topic? If the answer is yes, you might want to note that by your source. Understanding that there is bias to your source is going to help you think of how good your notes are, and whether that information can be trusted. Imo, everything is going to have bias so you want the works that aren’t disgustingly bias.
Another thing is creditably. Where the source come from and who wrote it? I have an essay on here about the Perception of the Sex in the Near East. I can’t lie and tell you all that it is a creditable resource; it isn’t for two reasons. First, I have no degree or training in studying the Near East-all of my work comes from my own personal research. Second, this is not a website where there are editors or people who would check to see if there was an error with my information; there is no consequence for me misinforming someone. Both of these reasons makes my essays low on the creditably scale.
How much experience a person has with a topic increases their creditably along with their medium.
I would recommend checking the persons’ sources also.
Keeping a diary:
Keep a record of your questions and your thinking as you research. This is honestly going to help you decide where you should go and keep you aware of what you are understanding, while also perhaps exposing your own personal bias.
Personally, I would even say it helps with making connections.
Talking about it:
Honestly, if you want to know if what you’re saying if making sense talk to your friends about it. You’re going to see if what you need to figure out more and what you’re missing. There’s even a chance your friends are going to point you in a new direction that you haven’t thought of.
Top 4 Life Changing Apps You Need as a College Student (With Demos)
Hey everyone! I was just using each of these apps today to study for my midterms, and I figured I’d share the wealth. I got each of these apps from the Apple App Store, and use them seamlessly across my Apple devices. I hope each of them change your midterm weeks for the better! (This is post is kind of long but I made it long to cover what I think are the coolest/most useful things about these apps)
App #1: Notability
Yah, yah. You’ve heard of this one before. I’m here to show you some reasons for that.
Best Features:
1. Annotating and Combining All of the Powerpoints and PDF’s of Your Wildest Dreams
Holy crap is this thing good at converting powerpoints and PDFs. The transition is undetectable. Furthermore, if your lecture material was split up into 2 powerpoints that your professor posted, or multiple topics are covered in one powerpoint that you want to separate, you can either combine them into one note, or only import selected slides into separate notes. Once you do that, you can draw, highlight, add photos and additional typed text…pretty much anything extra you’d need is at your fingertips.
Demo: Importing PDFS:
Here I’m taking a random web page PDF from organicchem.org about chair conformers, tapping once on it, and copying it to the notability app.
You literally just tap a couple times and it’s done for you. You can add the PDF to a new note, an old note, or even take specific pages of the PDF/powerpoint and place only the ones you want into a new or existing note. It’s almost too easy to be true.
2. You Can Actually Write Neatly
If you’re anything like me, it bothers you how your handwriting suddenly looks messy when you write on tablets. Well, notability handles that for you.
Demo: Writing and Editing Written Text:
Here I’m writing a huge note of what I want to remember with the pencil tool. I picked a red color from the huge color selection, and a rather thin pencil line because it’s only a small side-note. Of course you can customize your writing to fit what is easiest for you to read and study from. What happens in the second and third pictures is the cool part:
You can use the scissors tool to put a circle around what you just wrote, and then pinch and rotate the text to change its size and orientation, as well as drag your finger to move it to where you want your note to go. This way you can write super neatly and just do the moving around afterwords, making sure you can see your text and are comfortable with the way it appears. You can also re-select it to make it bigger again if you change your mind.
3. You Can Record and Embed Your Lectures Into Your Notes, While You’re Writing Original Notes OR Annotating Existing Ones
You can do them at the same time. You don’t have to think about inserting a recording after the fact, or mixing up small recordings and meshing them into one document. Notability sorts your audio recordings and fixes them up pretty for you, and just starts recording as soon as you hit the speaker button. Then you can keep annotating what Dr. So-and-So is saying without worrying about your recording being in the right place.
Demo: Recording While Note-Taking:
After you’ve recorded, you can click the speaker button again to edit the recording’s volume, sort multiple recordings you’ve taken as well as name them. Move the recordings from note to note, etc.
App #2: Flashcard Hero
Known colloquially as: “How I’m Passing My Anatomy Lab”
Listen here y’all if you wanna make flashcards fast as fuck and learn them the day of your practical, Flashcard Hero is how.
General Overview of Best Features:
The way I predominantly use this app is by furiously making and organizing my flashcards into millions of sections and subsections on my computer, so that everything is findable and easy to access within my flashcard deck. Then I move them via iCloud over to my phone and tablet to study them on the go.
You can put pictures, videos, PDF pages, anything on the front or back of your flashcard, and just as much as you want on the back as well. When you study, you can choose if you want the front or back to show up first, or an alternation of the two if you prefer. There is no length limit on what you can place on a particular card.
While you’re studying, the app gives you options of clicking “Easy, Unsure, or Hard” on the card you’re reviewing, so that it will pop up with the ones you’re unsure/really clueless about more often. This saves my actual ass I can’t recommend it enough. It has improved my ability to memorize tons of material far more quickly and efficiently.
Demo: The General Interface of Flashcard Hero:
You can see some of the features I’ve talked about. If you want to know even more of the features, try downloading the app and checking out the “Tutorial” deck it includes on the main menu!
App #3: LiquidText
This is another insanely useful method of PDF annotation. It is like nothing I’ve ever seen before, and is really good for people who enjoy mind-mapping and comprehensively organizing their ideas while reading!
Best Feature: Organizing Important Bits of Text:
Okay prepare to be very happy about this. You can literally highlight a section of a PDF, drag it to the side of your screen, and poof. Your highlighted bit is saved for you to click on and easily access later. You can even link your highlighted bits, no matter how far apart they are within the document, to help connect and organize your thoughts. And wait until you see Highlightview, where you can pinch the document so that all of your highlighted portions come together labelled with page numbers. Too satisfying okay, too satisfying:
If you’re reading something really quickly before class, and you want to easily access interesting portions of a long text during a class discussion, this app will save your life and save you pain in the long run.
App #4: MyScript Calculator
Just watch the demo of this one and prepare to take a huge sigh of relief and awe and happiness. It actually works and doesn’t confuse what you’re writing, and will do difficult/complex computation. By changing around the settings to fit the discipline of math you’re doing, this app can save you some annoying typing into calculators and can help you visualize large calculations at a glance.
Best Features: Blowing my tiny, bad at fast-math mind
Demo: General Interface of MyScript Calculator
Just. Yes. Yes good.
Anyway, I hope you guys enjoyed this/found at least one of these useful! Merry midterms!
03/18/2018 • sociology on the left and biology on the right so if I get sick of one subject I can quickly switch gears to the next lol :)
12/6/16 Sunday || 16/50 Econs notes for the day!
03. 04. 15 // I made flashcards for economics today!
AS economics revision 👍👍 mind mapping elasticities! Hopefully I will ace the exam this time round 😬
《 11 july 》notes for econs… trying to stuff in as many hours of studying as i can into a day
micro is starting to grow on me
Spencer Reid. The best kind of motivation~
(Picture from @literaryglamour, edit from @kaffeeyschule)