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My sister didn’t ask to see her son’s essay before he sent it. He showed it to her AFTER it was submitted. First sentence? “Skiing is my life.”
We’ll never know if that’s the reason he got rejected to all but his safety school. Oh well. (-: |
This post was fine until the casual sexism. FWIW I am the poster you responded to (who read my kid’s essay) and I am a dad. |
| It sounds like his essay accurately reflects who he is at this moment in time, and aligns with his academic record/stats. So I wouldn’t worry. If it was way out of synch with all other indicia it might drag him down, but that’s not the case here. Your kid sounds great and is on a good path. All will be well. |
| My kid copied and pasted the wrong essay and named the wrong school in the supplemental and still got in. |
That is so awesome! Lol. |
I do not believe that for one hot second. The essays matter enormously. If they didn’t matter, no admissions would require them because they’re such a bore to read. And I’ve read articles about truly brilliant essays that got kids accepted to big, big reach schools. |
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My kid’s essay was all him and no one but him. Luckily, he’s a good writer and a funny kid. He somehow wove being just a nice guy into this funny, insightful piece. No big life altering lesson or claims of suffering or hardship.
He hasn’t had one rejection yet. |
Not sure why that opening would portend a damming essay? |
The poster did not assume your gender, they asked. Perhaps you are uncomfortable, because you fit the stereotype of an uninvolved father? (Not even understanding why someone would want to read their child’s essay?????) |
Funny! Thanks for sharing . I read essays for admission to grad school, and mistakes like this are more common than you might imagine! |
Your hunch does NOT match all of the experts I have read. Sorry if you got duped into paying some essay consultant! |
+1. My Goddaughter’s essay was wonderful, too. All about being raised by two psychologists. Funny and so true to her. |
| Essays matter. I remember the Tufts admissions person telling a story about a “great kid, a great application” and then they read his essay that went on and on about how much the applicant wanted to go to Cornell. And how that made Tufts move this kid from “from the yes pile to the no pile.” She stressed how critical it was to read your essays carefully and proof everything before you hit “send.” |
No, sweetie, my kids aren’t there yet. Who are the “experts” you’ve read? I think your just trying to make yourself feel better because your kid wrote a crappy essay. |
| Can people just forego the insults? This is a great thread but for the few nasty jabs. |