PrepScholar

Choose Your Test

  • Search Blogs By Category
  • College Admissions
  • AP and IB Exams
  • GPA and Coursework

My Successful Harvard Application (Complete Common App + Supplement)

author image

Other High School , College Admissions , Letters of Recommendation , Extracurriculars , College Essays

body_harvard.jpg

In 2005, I applied to college and got into every school I applied to, including Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, and MIT. I decided to attend Harvard.

In this guide, I'll show you the entire college application that got me into Harvard—page by page, word for word .

In my complete analysis, I'll take you through my Common Application, Harvard supplemental application, personal statements and essays, extracurricular activities, teachers' letters of recommendation, counselor recommendation, complete high school transcript, and more. I'll also give you in-depth commentary on every part of my application.

To my knowledge, a college application analysis like this has never been done before . This is the application guide I wished I had when I was in high school.

If you're applying to top schools like the Ivy Leagues, you'll see firsthand what a successful application to Harvard and Princeton looks like. You'll learn the strategies I used to build a compelling application. You'll see what items were critical in getting me admitted, and what didn't end up helping much at all.

Reading this guide from beginning to end will be well worth your time—you might completely change your college application strategy as a result.

First Things First

Here's the letter offering me admission into Harvard College under Early Action.

body_harvardapp_accept1.png

I was so thrilled when I got this letter. It validated many years of hard work, and I was excited to take my next step into college (...and work even harder).

I received similar successful letters from every college I applied to: Princeton, Stanford, and MIT. (After getting into Harvard early, I decided not to apply to Yale, Columbia, UChicago, UPenn, and other Ivy League-level schools, since I already knew I would rather go to Harvard.)

The application that got me admitted everywhere is the subject of this guide. You're going to see everything that the admissions officers saw.

If you're hoping to see an acceptance letter like this in your academic future, I highly recommend you read this entire article. I'll start first with an introduction to this guide and important disclaimers. Then I'll share the #1 question you need to be thinking about as you construct your application. Finally, we'll spend a lot of time going through every page of my college application, both the Common App and the Harvard Supplemental App.

Important Note: the foundational principles of my application are explored in detail in my How to Get Into Harvard guide . In this popular guide, I explain:

  • what top schools like the Ivy League are looking for
  • how to be truly distinctive among thousands of applicants
  • why being well-rounded is the kiss of death

If you have the time and are committed to maximizing your college application success, I recommend you read through my Harvard guide first, then come back to this one.

You might also be interested in my other two major guides:

  • How to Get a Perfect SAT Score / Perfect ACT Score
  • How to Get a 4.0 GPA

What's in This Harvard Application Guide?

From my student records, I was able to retrieve the COMPLETE original application I submitted to Harvard. Page by page, word for word, you'll see everything exactly as I presented it : extracurricular activities, awards and honors, personal statements and essays, and more.

In addition to all this detail, there are two special parts of this college application breakdown that I haven't seen anywhere else :

  • You'll see my FULL recommendation letters and evaluation forms. This includes recommendations from two teachers, one principal, and supplementary writers. Normally you don't get to see these letters because you waive access to them when applying. You'll see how effective strong teacher advocates will be to your college application, and why it's so important to build strong relationships with your letter writers .
  • You'll see the exact pen marks made by my Harvard admissions reader on my application . Members of admissions committees consider thousands of applications every year, which means they highlight the pieces of each application they find noteworthy. You'll see what the admissions officer considered important—and what she didn't.

For every piece of my application, I'll provide commentary on what made it so effective and my strategies behind creating it. You'll learn what it takes to build a compelling overall application.

Importantly, even though my application was strong, it wasn't perfect. I'll point out mistakes I made that I could have corrected to build an even stronger application.

Here's a complete table of contents for what we'll be covering. Each link goes directly to that section, although I'd recommend you read this from beginning to end on your first go.

Common Application

Personal Data

Educational data, test information.

  • Activities: Extracurricular, Personal, Volunteer
  • Short Answer
  • Additional Information

Academic Honors

Personal statement, teacher and counselor recommendations.

  • Teacher Letter #1: AP Chemistry
  • Teacher Letter #2: AP English Lang

School Report

  • Principal Recommendation

Harvard Application Supplement

  • Supplement Form
  • Writing Supplement Essay

Supplementary Recommendation #1

Supplementary recommendation #2, supplemental application materials.

Final Advice for You

I mean it—you'll see literally everything in my application.

In revealing my teenage self, some parts of my application will be pretty embarrassing (you'll see why below). But my mission through my company PrepScholar is to give the world the most helpful resources possible, so I'm publishing it.

One last thing before we dive in—I'm going to anticipate some common concerns beforehand and talk through important disclaimers so that you'll get the most out of this guide.

body_warning.jpg

Important Disclaimers

My biggest caveat for you when reading this guide: thousands of students get into Harvard and Ivy League schools every year. This guide tells a story about one person and presents one archetype of a strong applicant. As you'll see, I had a huge academic focus, especially in science ( this was my Spike ). I'm also irreverent and have a strong, direct personality.

What you see in this guide is NOT what YOU need to do to get into Harvard , especially if you don't match my interests and personality at all.

As I explain in my Harvard guide , I believe I fit into one archetype of a strong applicant—the "academic superstar" (humor me for a second, I know calling myself this sounds obnoxious). There are other distinct ways to impress, like:

  • being world-class in a non-academic talent
  • achieving something difficult and noteworthy—building a meaningful organization, writing a novel
  • coming from tremendous adversity and performing remarkably well relative to expectations

Therefore, DON'T worry about copying my approach one-for-one . Don't worry if you're taking a different number of AP courses or have lower test scores or do different extracurriculars or write totally different personal statements. This is what schools like Stanford and Yale want to see—a diversity in the student population!

The point of this guide is to use my application as a vehicle to discuss what top colleges are looking for in strong applicants. Even though the specific details of what you'll do are different from what I did, the principles are the same. What makes a candidate truly stand out is the same, at a high level. What makes for a super strong recommendation letter is the same. The strategies on how to build a cohesive, compelling application are the same.

There's a final reason you shouldn't worry about replicating my work—the application game has probably changed quite a bit since 2005. Technology is much more pervasive, the social issues teens care about are different, the extracurricular activities that are truly noteworthy have probably gotten even more advanced. What I did might not be as impressive as it used to be. So focus on my general points, not the specifics, and think about how you can take what you learn here to achieve something even greater than I ever did.

With that major caveat aside, here are a string of smaller disclaimers.

I'm going to present my application factually and be 100% straightforward about what I achieved and what I believed was strong in my application. This is what I believe will be most helpful for you. I hope you don't misinterpret this as bragging about my accomplishments. I'm here to show you what it took for me to get into Harvard and other Ivy League schools, not to ask for your admiration. So if you read this guide and are tempted to dismiss my advice because you think I'm boasting, take a step back and focus on the big picture—how you'll improve yourself.

This guide is geared toward admissions into the top colleges in the country , often with admissions rates below 10%. A sample list of schools that fit into this: Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Stanford, Columbia, MIT, UChicago, Duke, UPenn, CalTech, Johns Hopkins, Dartmouth, Northwestern, Brown. The top 3-5 in that list are especially looking for the absolute best students in the country , since they have the pick of the litter.

Admissions for these selective schools works differently from schools with >20% rates. For less selective schools, having an overall strong, well-rounded application is sufficient for getting in. In particular, having an above average GPA and test scores goes the majority of the way toward getting you admission to those schools. The higher the admission rate, the more emphasis will be placed on your scores. The other pieces I'll present below—personal statements, extracurriculars, recommendations—will matter less.

Still, it doesn't hurt to aim for a stronger application. To state the obvious, an application strong enough to get you Columbia will get you into UCLA handily.

In my application, I've redacted pieces of my application for privacy reasons, and one supplementary recommendation letter at the request of the letter writer. Everything else is unaltered.

Throughout my application, we can see marks made by the admissions officer highlighting and circling things of note (you'll see the first example on the very first page). I don't have any other applications to compare these to, so I'm going to interpret these marks as best I can. For the most part, I assume that whatever he underlines or circles is especially important and noteworthy —points that he'll bring up later in committee discussions. It could also be that the reader got bored and just started highlighting things, but I doubt this.

Finally, I co-founded and run a company called PrepScholar . We create online SAT/ACT prep programs that adapt to you and your strengths and weaknesses . I believe we've created the best prep program available, and if you feel you need to raise your SAT/ACT score, then I encourage you to check us out . I want to emphasize that you do NOT need to buy a prep program to get a great score , and the advice in this guide has little to do with my company. But if you're aren't sure how to improve your score and agree with our unique approach to SAT/ACT prep, our program may be perfect for you.

With all this past us, let's get started.

body_very_important.jpeg

The #1 Most Important College Application Question: What Is Your PERSONAL NARRATIVE?

If you stepped into an elevator with Yale's Dean of Admissions and you had ten seconds to describe yourself and why you're interesting, what would you say?

This is what I call your PERSONAL NARRATIVE. These are the three main points that represent who you are and what you're about . This is the story that you tell through your application, over and over again. This is how an admissions officer should understand you after just glancing through your application. This is how your admissions officer will present you to the admissions committee to advocate for why they should accept you.

The more unique and noteworthy your Personal Narrative is, the better. This is how you'll stand apart from the tens of thousands of other applicants to your top choice school. This is why I recommend so strongly that you develop a Spike to show deep interest and achievement. A compelling Spike is the core of your Personal Narrative.

Well-rounded applications do NOT form compelling Personal Narratives, because "I'm a well-rounded person who's decent at everything" is the exact same thing every other well-rounded person tries to say.

Everything in your application should support your Personal Narrative , from your course selection and extracurricular activities to your personal statements and recommendation letters. You are a movie director, and your application is your way to tell a compelling, cohesive story through supporting evidence.

Yes, this is overly simplistic and reductionist. It does not represent all your complexities and your 17 years of existence. But admissions offices don't have the time to understand this for all their applicants. Your PERSONAL NARRATIVE is what they will latch onto.

Here's what I would consider my Personal Narrative (humor me since I'm peacocking here):

1) A science obsessive with years of serious research work and ranked 6 th in a national science competition, with future goals of being a neuroscientist or physician

2) Balanced by strong academic performance in all subjects (4.0 GPA and perfect test scores, in both humanities and science) and proficiency in violin

3) An irreverent personality who doesn't take life too seriously, embraces controversy, and says what's on his mind

These three elements were the core to my application. Together they tell a relatively unique Personal Narrative that distinguishes me from many other strong applicants. You get a surprisingly clear picture of what I'm about. There's no question that my work in science was my "Spike" and was the strongest piece of my application, but my Personal Narrative included other supporting elements, especially a description of my personality.

body_mad_scientist.png

My College Application, at a High Level

Drilling down into more details, here's an overview of my application.

  • This put me comfortably in the 99 th percentile in the country, but it was NOT sufficient to get me into Harvard by itself ! Because there are roughly 4 million high school students per year, the top 1 percentile still has 40,000 students. You need other ways to set yourself apart.
  • Your Spike will most often come from your extracurriculars and academic honors, just because it's hard to really set yourself apart with your coursework and test scores.
  • My letters of recommendation were very strong. Both my recommending teachers marked me as "one of the best they'd ever taught." Importantly, they corroborated my Personal Narrative, especially regarding my personality. You'll see how below.
  • My personal statements were, in retrospect, just satisfactory. They represented my humorous and irreverent side well, but they come across as too self-satisfied. Because of my Spike, I don't think my essays were as important to my application.

Finally, let's get started by digging into the very first pages of my Common Application.

body_harvardapp_commonapp.jpg

There are a few notable points about how simple questions can actually help build a first impression around what your Personal Narrative is.

First, notice the circle around my email address. This is the first of many marks the admissions officer made on my application. The reason I think he circled this was that the email address I used is a joke pun on my name . I knew it was risky to use this vs something like [email protected], but I thought it showed my personality better (remember point #3 about having an irreverent personality in my Personal Narrative).

Don't be afraid to show who you really are, rather than your perception of what they want. What you think UChicago or Stanford wants is probably VERY wrong, because of how little information you have, both as an 18-year-old and as someone who hasn't read thousands of applications.

(It's also entirely possible that it's a formality to circle email addresses, so I don't want to read too much into it, but I think I'm right.)

Second, I knew in high school that I wanted to go into the medical sciences, either as a physician or as a scientist. I was also really into studying the brain. So I listed both in my Common App to build onto my Personal Narrative.

In the long run, both predictions turned out to be wrong. After college, I did go to Harvard Medical School for the MD/PhD program for 4 years, but I left to pursue entrepreneurship and co-founded PrepScholar . Moreover, in the time I did actually do research, I switched interests from neuroscience to bioengineering/biotech.

Colleges don't expect you to stick to career goals you stated at the age of 18. Figuring out what you want to do is the point of college! But this doesn't give you an excuse to avoid showing a preference. This early question is still a chance to build that Personal Narrative.

Thus, I recommend AGAINST "Undecided" as an area of study —it suggests a lack of flavor and is hard to build a compelling story around. From your high school work thus far, you should at least be leaning to something, even if that's likely to change in the future.

Finally, in the demographic section there is a big red A, possibly for Asian American. I'm not going to read too much into this. If you're a notable minority, this is where you'd indicate it.

Now known as: Education

body_harvardapp_education.png

This section was straightforward for me. I didn't take college courses, and I took a summer chemistry class at a nearby high school because I didn't get into the lottery at my school that year (I refer to this briefly in my 4.0 GPA guide ).

The most notable point of this section: the admissions officer circled Principal here . This is notable because our school Principal only wrote letters for fewer than 10 students each year. Counselors wrote letters for the other hundreds of students in my class, which made my application stand out just a little.

I'll talk more about this below, when I share the Principal's recommendation.

(In the current Common Application, the Education section also includes Grades, Courses, and Honors. We'll be covering each of those below).

Now known as: Testing

body_harvardapp_testing.png

Back then AP scores weren't part of this section, but I'll take them from another part of my application here.

body_harvardapp_testingaps.png

However, their standards are still very high. You really do want to be in that top 1 percentile to pass the filter. A 1400 on the SAT IS going to put you at a disadvantage because there are so many students scoring higher than you. You'll really have to dig yourself out of the hole with an amazing application.

I talk about this a lot more in my Get into Harvard guide (sorry to keep linking this, but I really do think it's an important guide for you to read).

Want to improve your SAT score by 160 points or your ACT score by 4 points?   We've written a guide for each test about the top 5 strategies you must be using to have a shot at improving your score. Download them for free now:

Let's end this section with some personal notes.

Even though math and science were easy for me, I had to put in serious effort to get an 800 on the Reading section of the SAT . As much as I wish I could say it was trivial for me, it wasn't. I learned a bunch of strategies and dissected the test to get to a point where I understood the test super well and reliably earned perfect scores.

I cover the most important points in my How to Get a Perfect SAT Score guide , as well as my 800 Guides for Reading , Writing , and Math .

Between the SAT and ACT, the SAT was my primary focus, but I decided to take the ACT for fun. The tests were so similar that I scored a 36 Composite without much studying. Having two test scores is completely unnecessary —you get pretty much zero additional credit. Again, with one test score, you have already passed their filter.

Finally, class finals or state-required exams are a breeze if you get a 5 on the corresponding AP tests .

Now known as: Family (still)

This section asks for your parent information and family situation. There's not much you can do here besides report the facts.

body_harvardapp_family.png

I'm redacting a lot of stuff again for privacy reasons.

The reader made a number of marks here for occupation and education. There's likely a standard code for different types of occupations and schools.

If I were to guess, I'd say that the numbers add to form some metric of "family prestige." My dad got a Master's at a middle-tier American school, but my mom didn't go to graduate school, and these sections were marked 2 and 3, respectively. So it seems higher numbers are given for less prestigious educations by your parents. I'd expect that if both my parents went to schools like Caltech and Dartmouth, there would be even lower numbers here.

This makes me think that the less prepared your family is, the more points you get, and this might give your application an extra boost. If you were the first one in your family to go to college, for example, you'd be excused for having lower test scores and fewer AP classes. Schools really do care about your background and how you performed relative to expectations.

In the end, schools like Harvard say pretty adamantly they don't use formulas to determine admissions decisions, so I wouldn't read too much into this. But this can be shorthand to help orient an applicant's family background.

body_harvardapp_activ.jpg

Extracurricular, Personal, and Volunteer Activities

Now known as: Activities

For most applicants, your Extracurriculars and your Academic Honors will be where you develop your Spike and where your Personal Narrative shines through. This was how my application worked.

body_harvardapp_activities1.png

Just below I'll describe the activities in more detail, but first I want to reflect on this list.

As instructed, my extracurriculars were listed in the order of their interest to me. The current Common App doesn't seem to ask for this, but I would still recommend it to focus your reader's attention.

The most important point I have to make about my extracurriculars: as you go down the list, there is a HUGE drop in the importance of each additional activity to the overall application. If I were to guess, I assign the following weights to how much each activity contributed to the strength of my activities section:

Research Science Institute 2004

75%

Jisan Research Institute

10%

Pasadena Young Musicians Orchestra

6%

Science Olympiad/Science Bowl/Math Team

4%

City of Hope Medical Center

1%

Pre-Medicine Club

1%

Hospital Quartet Performances

1%

Chemistry Club

1%

In other words, participating in the Research Science Institute (RSI) was far more important than all of my other extracurriculars, combined. You can see that this was the only activity my admissions reader circled.

You can see how Spike-y this is. The RSI just completely dominates all my other activities.

The reason for this is the prestige of RSI. As I noted earlier, RSI was (and likely still is) the most prestigious research program for high school students in the country, with an admission rate of less than 5% . Because the program was so prestigious and selective, getting in served as a big confirmation signal of my academic quality.

In other words, the Harvard admissions reader would likely think, "OK, if this very selective program has already validated Allen as a top student, I'm inclined to believe that Allen is a top student and should pay special attention to him."

Now, it took a lot of prior work to even get into RSI because it's so selective. I had already ranked nationally in the Chemistry Olympiad (more below), and I had done a lot of prior research work in computer science (at Jisan Research Institute—more about this later). But getting into RSI really propelled my application to another level.

Because RSI was so important and was such a big Spike, all my other extracurriculars paled in importance. The admissions officer at Princeton or MIT probably didn't care at all that I volunteered at a hospital or founded a high school club .

body_spike.png

This is a good sign of developing a strong Spike. You want to do something so important that everything else you do pales in comparison to it. A strong Spike becomes impossible to ignore.

In contrast, if you're well-rounded, all your activities hold equal weight—which likely means none of them are really that impressive (unless you're a combination of Olympic athlete, internationally-ranked science researcher, and New York Times bestselling author, but then I'd call you unicorn because you don't exist).

Apply this concept to your own interests—what can be so impressive and such a big Spike that it completely overshadows all your other achievements?

This might be worth spending a disproportionate amount of time on. As I recommend in my Harvard guide and 4.0 GPA guide , smartly allocating your time is critical to your high school strategy.

In retrospect, one "mistake" I made was spending a lot of time on the violin. Each week I spent eight hours on practice and a lesson and four hours of orchestra rehearsals. This amounted to over 1,500 hours from freshman to junior year.

The result? I was pretty good, but definitely nowhere near world-class. Remember, there are thousands of orchestras and bands in the country, each with their own concertmasters, drum majors, and section 1 st chairs.

If I were to optimize purely for college applications, I should have spent that time on pushing my spike even further —working on more Olympiad competitions, or doing even more hardcore research.

Looking back I don't mind this much because I generally enjoyed my musical training and had a mostly fun time in orchestra (and I had a strong Spike anyway). But this problem can be a lot worse for well-rounded students who are stretched too thin.

body_upstairs.jpg

Aside from these considerations about a Spike, I have two major caveats.

First, developing a Spike requires continuous, increasingly ambitious foundational work. It's like climbing a staircase. From the beginning of high school, each step was more and more ambitious—my first academic team, my first research experience, leading up to state and national competitions and more serious research work.

So when I suggest devoting a lot of time to developing your Spike, it's not necessarily the Spike in itself—it's also spending time on foundational work leading up to what will be your major achievement. That's why I don't see my time with academic teams or volunteering as wasted, even though in the end they didn't contribute as much to my application.

Second, it is important to do things you enjoy. I still enjoyed playing the violin and being part of an orchestra, and I really enjoyed my school's academic teams, even though we never went beyond state level. Even if some activities don't contribute as much to your application, it's still fine to spend some time on them—just don't delude yourself into thinking they're stronger than they really are and overspend time on them.

Finally, note that most of my activities were pursued over multiple years. This is a good sign of commitment—rather than hopping from activity year to year, it's better to show sustained commitment, as this is a better signal of genuine passion.

In a future article, I'll break down these activities in more detail. But this guide is already super long, so I want to focus our attention on the main points.

Short Answer: Extracurricular Activities

In today's Common Application, you have 50 characters to describe "Position/Leadership description and organization name" and 150 characters for "Please describe this activity, including what you accomplished and any recognition you received, etc."

Back then, we didn't have as much space per activity, and instead had a short answer question.

The Short Answer prompt:

Please describe which of your activities (extracurricular and personal activities or work experience) has been most meaningful and why.

I chose RSI as my most significant activity for two reasons—one based on the meaning of the work, and another on the social aspect.

body_harvardapp_short.png

It's obvious that schools like Yale and UChicago want the best students in the world that they can get their hands on. Academic honors and awards are a great, quantifiable way to show that.

Here's the complete list of Academic Honors I submitted. The Common Application now limits you to five honors only (probably because they got tired of lists like these), but chances are you capture the top 98% of your honors with the top five.

body_harvardapp_honors.png

body_goldenticket.jpg

Charlie wins a Golden Ticket to Harvard.

I know this is intimidating if you don't already have a prestigious honor. But remember there are thousands of nationally-ranked people in a multitude of honor types, from science competitions to essay contests to athletics to weird talents.

And I strongly believe the #1 differentiator of high school students who achieve things is work ethic, NOT intelligence or talent. Yes, you need a baseline level of competence to get places, but people far undervalue the progress they can make if they work hard and persevere. Far too many people give up too quickly or fatigue without putting in serious effort.

If you're stuck thinking, "well I'm just an average person, and there's no way I'm going to become world-class in anything," then you've already lost before you've begun. The truth is everyone who achieves something of note puts in an incredible amount of hard work. Because this is invisible to you, it looks like talent is what distinguishes the two of you, when really it's much more often diligence.

I talk a lot more about the Growth Mindset in my How To Get a 4.0 GPA guide .

So my Chemistry Olympiad honor formed 90% of the value of this page. Just like extracurriculars, there's a quick dropoff in value of each item after that.

My research work took up the next two honors, one a presentation at an academic conference, and the other (Siemens) a research competition for high school researchers.

The rest of my honors were pretty middling:

  • National Merit Scholarship semifinalist pretty much equates to PSAT score, which is far less important than your SAT/ACT score. So I didn't really get any credit for this, and you won't either.
  • In Science Olympiad (this is a team-based competition that's not as prestigious as the academic Olympiads I just talked about), I earned a number of 1 st place state and regional medals, but we never made it to nationals.
  • I was mediocre at competition math because I didn't train for it, and I won some regional awards but nothing amazing. This is one place I would have spent more time, maybe in the time I'd save by not practicing violin as much. There are great resources for this type of training, like Art of Problem Solving , that I didn't know existed and could've helped me rank much higher.

At the risk of beating a dead horse, think about how many state medalists there are in the country, in the hundreds of competitions that exist . The number of state to national rankers is probably at least 20:1 (less than 50:1 because of variation in state size), so if there are 2,000 nationally ranked students, there are 40,000 state-ranked students in something !

So state honors really don't help you stand out on your Princeton application. There are just too many of them around.

On the other hand, if you can get to be nationally ranked in something, you will have an amazing Spike that distinguishes you.

body_happywriter.jpg

Now known as: Personal Essay

Now, the dreaded personal statement. Boy, oh boy, did I fuss over this one.

"What is the perfect combination of personal, funny, heartrending, and inspirational?"

I know I was wondering this when I applied.

Having read books like 50 Successful Harvard Application Essays , I was frightened. I didn't grow up as a refugee, wrenched from my war-torn home! I didn't have a sibling with a debilitating illness! How could anything I write compare to these tales of personal strength?

The trite truth is that colleges want to know who you really are . Clearly they don't expect everyone to have had immense personal struggle. But they do want students who are:

  • growth-oriented
  • introspective
  • kind and good-hearted

Whatever those words mean to you in the context of your life is what you should write about.

In retrospect, in the context of MY application, the personal statement really wasn't what got me into Harvard . I do think my Spike was nearly sufficient to get me admitted to every school in the country.

I say "nearly" because, even if you're world-class, schools do want to know you're not a jerk and that you're an interesting person (which is conveyed through your personal essay and letters of recommendation).

Back then, we had a set of different prompts :

body_harvardapp_essayprompt.png

What did you think?

I'm still cringing a bit. Parts of this are very smug (see /r/iamverysmart ), and if you want to punch the writer in the face, I don't blame you. I want to as well.

We'll get to areas of improvement later, but first, let's talk about what this personal essay did well.

As I said above, I saw the theme of the snooze button as a VEHICLE to showcase a few qualities I cared about :

1) I fancied myself a Renaissance man (obnoxious, I know) and wanted to become an inventor and creator . I showed this through mentioning different interests (Rubik's cube, chemistry, Nietzsche) and iterating through a few designs for an alarm clock (electric shocks, explosions, Shakespearean sonnet recitation).

2) My personality was whimsical and irreverent. I don't take life too seriously. The theme of the essay—battling an alarm clock—shows this well, in comparison to the gravitas of the typical student essay. I also found individual lines funny, like "All right, so I had violated the divine honor of the family and the tenets of Confucius." At once I acknowledge my Chinese heritage but also make light of the situation.

3) I was open to admitting weaknesses , which I think is refreshing among people taking college applications too seriously and trying too hard to impress. The frank admission of a realistic lazy habit—pushing the Snooze button—served as a nice foil to my academic honors and shows that I can be down-to-earth.

So you see how the snooze button acts as a vehicle to carry these major points and a lot of details, tied together to the same theme .

In the same way, The Walking Dead is NOT a zombie show—the zombie environment is a VEHICLE by which to show human drama and conflict. Packaging my points together under the snooze button theme makes it a lot more interesting than just outright saying "I'm such an interesting guy."

So overall, I believe the essay accomplishes my goals and the main points of what I wanted to convey about myself.

Note that this is just one of many ways to write an essay . It worked for me, but it may be totally inappropriate for you.

Now let's look at this essay's weaknesses.

body_tryhard.jpg

Looking at it with a more seasoned perspective, some parts of it are WAY too try-hard. I try too hard to show off my breadth of knowledge in a way that seems artificial and embellishing.

The entire introduction with the Rubik's cube seems bolted on, just to describe my long-standing desire to be a Renaissance man. Only three paragraphs down do I get to the Snooze button, and I don't refer again to the introduction until the end. With just 650 words, I could have made the essay more cohesive by keeping the same theme from beginning to end.

Some phrases really make me roll my eyes. "Always hungry for more" and "ever the inventor" sound too forced and embellishing. A key principle of effective writing is to show, not say . You don't say "I'm passionate about X," you describe what extraordinary lengths you took to achieve X.

The mention of Nietzsche is over-the-top. I mean, come on. The reader probably thought, "OK, this kid just read it in English class and now he thinks he's a philosopher." The reader would be right.

The ending: "with the extra nine minutes, maybe I'll teach myself to cook fried rice" is silly. Where in the world did fried rice come from? I meant it as a nod to my Chinese heritage, but it's too sudden to work. I could have deleted the sentence and wrapped up the essay more cleanly.

So I have mixed feelings of my essay. I think it accomplished my major goals and showed the humorous, irreverent side of my personality well. However, it also gave the impression of a kid who thought he knew more than he did, a pseudo-sophisticate bordering on obnoxious. I still think it was a net positive.

At the end of the day, I believe the safest, surefire strategy is to develop a Spike so big that the importance of the Personal Essay pales in comparison to your achievements. You want your Personal Essay to be a supplement to your application, not the only reason you get in.

There are probably some cases where a well-rounded student writes an amazing Personal Essay and gets in through the strength of that. As a Hail Mary if you're a senior and can't improve your application further, this might work. But the results are very variable—some readers may love your essay, others may just think it's OK. Without a strong application to back it up, your mileage may vary.

body_teacherstudent.jpg

This is a really fun section. Usually you don't get to read your letter of recommendation because you sign the FERPA waiver. I've also reached out to my letter writers to make sure they're ok with my showing this.

Teacher recommendations are incredibly important to your application. I would say that after your coursework/test scores and activities/honors, they're the 3 rd most important component of your application .

The average teacher sees thousands of students through a career, and so he or she is very well equipped to position you relative to all other students. Furthermore, your teachers are experienced adults—their impressions of you are much more reliable than your impressions of yourself (see my Personal Essay above). They can corroborate your entire Personal Narrative as an outside observer.

The most effective recommendation letters speak both to your academic strengths and to your personality. For the second factor, the teacher needs to have interacted with you meaningfully, ideally both in and out of class. Check out our guide on what makes for effective letters of recommendation .

body_teacherclassroom.jpg

Starting from sophomore year, I started thinking about whom I connected better with and chose to engage with those teachers more deeply . Because it's standard for colleges to require two teachers in different subjects, I made sure to engage with English and history teachers as well as math and science.

The minimum requirement for a good letter is someone who taught a class in which you did well. I got straight A's in my coursework, so this wasn't an issue.

Beyond this, I had to look for teachers who would be strong advocates for me on both an academic and personal level . These tended to be teachers I vibed more strongly with, and typically these were teachers who demonstrably cared about teaching. This was made clear by their enthusiasm, how they treated students, and how much they went above expectations to help.

I had a lot of teachers who really just phoned it in and treated their job perfunctorily—these people are likely to write pretty blasé letters.

A final note before reading my actual teacher evaluations— you should avoid getting in the mindset where you get to know teachers JUST because you want a good recommendation letter . Your teachers have seen hundreds, if not thousands, of students pass through, and it's much easier to detect insincerity than you think.

If you honestly like learning and are an enthusiastic, responsible, engaging student, a great recommendation letter will follow naturally. The horse should lead the cart.

Read my How to Get a 4.0 GPA for tips on how to interact with teachers in a genuine way that'll make them love you.

body_chemistry.png

Teacher Letter #1: AP Chemistry Teacher

I took AP Chemistry in 10 th grade and had Miss Cherryl Vorak (now Mynster). She was young, having taught for fewer than 5 years when I had her. She was my favorite teacher throughout high school for these reasons:

  • She was enthusiastic, very caring, and spent a lot of time helping struggling students. She exuded pride in her work and seemed to consider teaching her craft.
  • She had a kind personality and was universally well liked by her students, even if they weren't doing so well. She was fair in her policies (it probably helped that science is more objective than English). She was also a younger teacher, and this helped her relate to kids more closely.
  • She was my advocate for much of the US National Chemistry Olympiad stuff, and in this capacity I got to know her even better outside of class. She provided me a lot of training materials, helped me figure out college chemistry, and directed me to resources to learn more.

By the time of the letter writing, I had known her for two full years and engaged with her continuously, even when I wasn't taking a class with her in junior year. We'd build up a strong relationship over the course of many small interactions.

All of this flowed down to the recommendation you see here. Remember, the horse leads the cart.

First, we'll look at the teacher evaluation page. The Common Application now has 16 qualities to rate, rather than the 10 here. But they're largely the same.

body_harvardapp_teacher1-1.png

You can see a very strong evaluation here, giving me the highest ratings possible for all qualities.

In today's Common Application, all of these Ratings are retained, aside from "Potential for Growth." Today's Common App also now includes Faculty Respect, Maturity, Leadership, Integrity, Reaction to Setbacks, Concern for Others, and TE Overall. You can tell that the updated Common App places a great emphasis on personality.

The most important point here: it is important to be ranked "One of the top few encountered in my career" for as many ratings as possible . If you're part of a big school, this is CRITICAL to distinguish yourself from other students. The more experienced and trustworthy the teacher, the more meaningful this is.

Again, it's a numbers game. Think about the 20,000+ high schools in the country housing 4 million+ high school students—how many people fit in the top 5% bucket?

Thus, being marked merely as Excellent (top 10%) is actually a negative rating , as far as admissions to top colleges is concerned. If you're in top 10%, and someone else with the SAME teacher recommender is being rated as "One of the top ever," it's really hard for the admissions officer to vouch for you over the other student.

You really want to make sure you're one of the best in your school class, if not one of the best the teacher has ever encountered. You'll see below how you can accomplish this.

Next, let's look at her letter.

As you read this, think— what are the interactions that would prompt the teacher to write a recommendation like this? This was a relationship built up in a period of over 2 years, with every small interaction adding to an overall larger impression.

body_harvardapp_teacher1-3.png

You can see how seriously they take the letter because of all the underlining . This admissions reader underlined things that weren't even underlined in my application, like my US National Chemistry Olympiad awards. It's one thing for a student to claim things about himself—it's another to have a teacher put her reputation on the line to advocate for her student.

The letter here is very strong for a multitude of reasons. First, the length is notable —most letters are just a page long, but this is nearly two full pages , single spaced. This indicates not just her overall commitment to her students but also of her enthusiastic support for me as an applicant.

The structure is effective: first Miss Vorak talks about my academic accomplishments, then about my personal qualities and interactions, then a summary to the future. This is a perfect blend of what effective letters contain .

On the micro-level, her diction and phrasing are precise and effective . She makes my standing clear with specific statements : "youngest student…top excelling student among the two sections" and "one of twenty students in the nation." She's clear about describing why my achievements are notable and the effort I put in, like studying college-level chemistry and studying independently.

When describing my personality, she's exuberant and fleshes out a range of dimensions: "conscientious, motivated and responsible," "exhibits the qualities of a leader," "actively seeks new experiences," "charismatic," "balanced individual with a warm personality and sense of humor." You can see how she's really checking off all the qualities colleges care about.

Overall, Miss Vorak's letter perfectly supports my Personal Narrative —my love for science, my overall academic performance, and my personality. I'm flattered and grateful to have received this support. This letter was important to complement the overall academic performance and achievements shown on the rest of my application.

feature_English-1.jpg

Teacher Letter #2: AP English Language Teacher

My second teacher Mrs. Swift was another favorite. A middle-aged, veteran English teacher, the best way I would describe her is "fiery." She was invigorating and passionate, always trying to get a rise out of students and push their thinking, especially in class discussions. Emotionally she was a reliable source of support for students.

First, the evaluation:

body_harvardapp_teacher2-1.png

You can see right away that her remarks are terser. She didn't even fill out the section about "first words that come to mind to describe this student."

You might chalk this up to my not being as standout of a student in her mind, or her getting inundated with recommendation letter requests after over a decade of teaching.

In ratings, you can see that I only earned 3 of the "one of the top in my career." There are a few explanations for this. As a teacher's career lengthens, it gets increasingly hard to earn this mark. I probably also didn't stand out as much as I did to my Chemistry teacher—most of my achievement was in science (which she wasn't closely connected to), and I had talented classmates. Regardless, I did appreciate the 3 marks she gave me.

Now, the letter. Once again, as you read this letter, think: what are the hundreds of micro-interactions that would have made a teacher write a letter like this?

body_harvardapp_teacher2-3.png

Overall, this letter is very strong. It's only one page long, but her points about my personality are the critical piece of this recommendation. She also writes with the flair of an English teacher:

"In other situations where students would never speak their minds, he showed no hesitation to voice questions, thoughts, and ideas."

"controversial positions often being the spark that set off the entire class"

"ability to take the quiet and shy student and actively engage"…"went out of my way to partner him with other students who needed"

"strength of conviction"…"raw, unbridled passion"…"He will argue on any topic that has touched a nerve."

These comments most support the personality aspect of my Personal Narrative—having an irreverent, bold personality and not being afraid of speaking my mind. She stops just short of making me sound obnoxious and argumentative. An experienced teacher vouching for this adds so much more weight than just my writing it about myself.

Teacher recommendations are some of the most important components of your application. Getting very strong letters take a lot of sustained, genuine interaction over time to build mutual trust and respect. If you want detailed advice on how to interact with teachers earnestly, check out my How to Get a 4.0 GPA and Better Grades guide .

Let's go to the final recommendation, from the school counselor.

body_school.png

Now known as: School Report

The first piece of this is reporting your academic status and how the school works overall. There's not much to say here, other than the fact that my Principal wrote my recommendation for me, which we'll get into next.

body_harvardapp_school1.png

Counselor Recommendation

Now known as: Counselor Recommendation

Let's talk about my school principal writing my recommendation, rather than a school counselor.

This was definitely advantageous—remember how, way up top in Educational Data, the reader circled the "Principal." Our Principal only wrote a handful of these recommendations each year , often for people who worked closely with him, like student body presidents. So it was pretty distinctive that I got a letter from our Principal, compared to other leading applicants from my school.

This was also a blessing because our counseling department was terrible . Our school had nearly 1,000 students per grade, and only 1 counselor per grade. They were overworked and ornery, and because they were the gatekeepers of academic enrollment (like class selection and prerequisites), this led to constant frictions in getting the classes you wanted.

I can empathize with them, because having 500+ neurotic parents pushing for advantages for their own kids can get REALLY annoying really fast. But the counseling department was still the worst part of our high school administration, and I could have guessed that the letters they wrote were mediocre because they just had too many students.

So how did my Principal come to write my recommendation and not those for hundreds of other students?

I don't remember exactly how this came to be, to be honest. I didn't strategize to have him write a letter for me years in advance. I didn't even interact with him much at all until junior year, when I got on his radar because of my national rankings. Come senior year I might have talked to him about my difficulty in reaching counselors and asked that he write my recommendation. Since I was a top student he was probably happy to do this.

He was very supportive, but as you can tell from the letter to come, it was clear he didn't know me that well.

Interestingly, the prompt for the recommendation has changed. It used to start with: "Please write whatever you think is important about this student."

Now, it starts with: " Please provide comments that will help us differentiate this student from others ."

The purpose of the recommendation has shifted to the specific: colleges probably found that one counselor was serving hundreds of students, so the letters started getting mushy and indistinguishable from each other.

Here's the letter:

body_harvardapp_school3.png

This letter is probably the weakest overall of all my letters. It reads more like a verbal resume than a personal account of how he understands me.

Unlike my two teacher recommendations, he doesn't comment on the nature of our interactions or about my personality (because he truly didn't understand them well). He also misreported by SAT score as 1530 instead of 1600 (I did score a 1530 in an early test, but my 1600 was ready by January 2004, so I don't know what source he was using).

Notably, the letter writer didn't underline anything.

I still appreciate that he wrote my letter, and it was probably more effective than a generic counselor letter. But this didn't add much to my application.

At this point, we've covered my entire Common Application. This is the same application I sent to every school I applied to, including Harvard, Princeton, and Stanford. Thanks for reading this far—I hope you've gotten a lot out of this already.

If you keep reading to the end, I'll have advice for both younger students and current applicants to build the strongest application possible.

Next, we'll go over the Harvard Supplemental Application, which of course is unique to Harvard.

body_harvard-1.jpg

For most top colleges like Princeton, Yale, Stanford, Columbia, and so on, you will need to complete a supplemental application to provide more info than what's listed on the Common Application.

Harvard was and is the same. The good news is that it's an extra chance for you to share more about yourself and keep pushing your Personal Narrative.

There are four major components here:

  • The application form
  • Writing supplement essay
  • Supplementary recommendations
  • Supplemental application materials

I'll take you through the application section by section.

Harvard Supplement Form

First, the straightforward info and questions.

body_harvardapp_supp1.png

This section is pretty straightforward and is similar to what you'd see on a Columbia application.

I planned to live in a Harvard residence, as most students do.

Just as in my Common App, I noted that I was most likely to study biological sciences, choose Medicine as my vocation, and participate in orchestra, writing, and research as my extracurriculars. Nothing surprising here—it's all part of my Personal Narrative.

Interestingly, at the time I was "absolutely certain" about my vocational goals, which clearly took a detour once I left medical school to pursue entrepreneurship to create PrepScholar...

Want to improve your SAT score by 160 points?   We have the industry's leading SAT prep program. Built by Harvard grads and SAT full scorers, the program learns your strengths and weaknesses through advanced statistics, then customizes your prep program to you so you get the most effective prep possible.   Along with more detailed lessons, you'll get thousands of practice problems organized by individual skills so you learn most effectively. We'll also give you a step-by-step program to follow so you'll never be confused about what to study next.   Check out our 5-day free trial today:

I had the space to list some additional honors, where I listed some musical honors that didn't make the cut in my Common App.

Here are the next two pages of the Harvard supplemental form.

body_harvardapp_supp3.png

The most interesting note here is that the admissions officer wrote a question mark above "Music tape or CD." Clearly this was inconsistent with my Personal Narrative —if violin was such an important part of my story, why didn't I want to include it?

The reason was that I was actually pretty mediocre at violin and was nowhere near national-ranked. Again, remember how many concertmasters in the thousands of orchestras there are in the world—I wasn't good enough to even be in the top 3 chairs in my school orchestra (violin was very competitive).

I wanted to focus attention on my most important materials, which for my Personal Narrative meant my research work. You'll see these supplementary materials later.

body_writing-1.jpg

Additional Essays

Now known as: Writing Supplement

For the most part, the Harvard supplemental essay prompt has stayed the same. You can write about a topic of your choice or about any of the suggestions. There are now two more prompts that weren't previously there: "What you would want your future college roommate to know about you" and "How you hope to use your college education."

Even though this is optional, I highly recommend you write something here. Again, you have so few chances in the overall application to convey your personal voice—an extra 500 words gives you a huge opportunity. I would guess that the majority of admitted Harvard students submit a Writing Supplement.

After a lot of brainstorming, I settled on the idea that I wanted to balance my application by writing about the major non-academic piece of my Personal Narrative—my music training . Also, I don't think I explicitly recognized this at the time, but I wanted to distance myself from the Asian-American stereotype—driven entirely by parent pressure, doing most things perfunctorily and without interest. I wanted to show I'd broken out of that mold.

Here's my essay:

body_harvardapp_suppessay1.png

Reading it now, I actually think this was a pretty bad essay, and I cringe to high heaven. But once again, let's focus on the positive first.

I used my violin teacher as a vehicle for talking about what the violin meant to me. (You can tell I love the concept of the vehicle in essays.) He represented passion for the violin—I represented my academic priorities. Our personal conflict was really the conflict between what we represented.

By the end of the essay, I'd articulated the value of musical training to me—it was cathartic and a way to balance my hard academic pursuits.

Halfway in the essay, I also explicitly acknowledged the Asian stereotype of parents who drove their kids, and said my parents were no different. The reader underlined this sentence. By pointing this out and showing how my interest took on a life of its own, I wanted to distance myself from that stereotype.

So overall I think my aims were accomplished.

Despite all that, this essay was WAY overdramatic and overwrought . Some especially terrible lines:

"I was playing for that cathartic moment when I could feel Tchaikovsky himself looking over my shoulder."

"I was wandering through the fog in search of a lighthouse, finally setting foot on a dock pervaded by white light."

OK, please. Who really honestly feels this way? This is clumsy, contrived writing. It signals insincerity, actually, which is bad.

To be fair, all of this is grounded in truth. I did have a strict violin teacher who did get pretty upset when I showed lack of improvement. I did appreciate music as a diversion to round out my academic focus. I did practice hard each day, and I did have a pretty gross callus on my pinky.

But I would have done far better by making it more sincere and less overworked.

As an applicant, you're tempted to try so hard to impress your reader. You want to show that you're Worthy of Consideration. But really the best approach is to be honest.

I think this essay was probably neutral to my application, not a strong net positive or net negative.

feature_recommended.jpg

Supplementary Recommendations

Harvard lets you submit letters from up to two Other Recommenders. The Princeton application, Penn application, and others are usually the same.

Unlike the other optional components (the Additional Information in the Common App, and the Supplementary Essay), I would actually consider these letters optional. The reader gets most of the recommendation value from your teacher recommendations—these are really supplementary.

A worthwhile Other Recommender:

  • has supervised an activity or honor that is noteworthy
  • has interacted with you extensively and can speak to your personality
  • is likely to support you as one of the best students they've interacted with

If your Other Recommenders don't fulfill one or more of these categories, do NOT ask for supplementary letters. They'll dilute your application without adding substantively to it.

To beat a dead horse, the primary component of my Personal Narrative was my science and research work. So naturally I chose supervisors for my two major research experiences to write supplemental letters.

First was the Director of Research Science Institute (the selective summer research program at MIT). The second was from the head of Jisan Research Institute, where I did Computer Science research.

body_harvardapp_supprec1.png

This letter validates my participation in RSI and incorporates the feedback from my research mentor, David Simon. At the time, the RSI students were the most talented students I had met, so I'm also flattered by some of the things the letter writer said, like "Allen stood out early on as a strong performer in academic settings."

I didn't get to know the letter writer super well, so he commented mainly on my academic qualifications and comments from my mentor.

My mentor, who was at one of the major Harvard-affiliated hospitals, said some very nice things about my research ability, like:

"is performing in many ways at the level of a graduate student"

"impressed with Allen's ability to read even advanced scientific publications and synthesize his understanding"

Once again, it's much more convincing for a seasoned expert to vouch for your abilities than for you to claim your own abilities.

My first research experience was done at Jisan Research Institute, a small private computer science lab run by a Caltech PhD. The research staff were mainly high school students like me and a few grad students/postdocs.

My research supervisor, Sanza Kazadi, wrote the letter. He's requested that I not publish the letter, so I'll only speak about his main points.

In the letter, he focused on the quality of my work and leadership. He said that I had a strong focus in my work, and my research moved along more reliably than that of other students. I was independent in my work in swarm engineering, he says, putting together a simulation of the swarm and publishing a paper in conference proceedings. He talked about my work in leading a research group and placing a high degree of trust in me.

Overall, a strong recommendation, and you get the gist of his letter without reading it.

One notable point—both supplemental letters had no marks on them. I really think this means they place less emphasis on the supplementary recommendations, compared to the teacher recommendations.

Finally, finally, we get to the very last piece of my application.

Let me beat the dead horse even deader. Because research was such a core part of my Personal Narrative, I decided to include abstracts of both of my papers. The main point was to summarize the body of work I'd done and communicate the major results.

As Harvard says, "These materials are entirely optional; please only submit them if you have unusual talents."

This is why I chose not to submit a tape of my music: I don't think my musical skill was unusually good.

And frankly, I don't think my research work was that spectacular. Unlike some of my very accomplished classmates, I hadn't ranked nationally in prestigious competitions like ISEF and Siemens. I hadn't published my work in prominent journals.

Regardless, I thought these additions would be net positive, if only marginally so.

body_harvardapp_suppabs1.png

I made sure to note where the papers had been published or were entering competitions, just to ground the work in some achievement.

body_road.jpg
  • Recommendation Letters: Hopefully you should have developed strong, genuine relationships with teachers you care about. The letters should flow naturally from here, and you will only need to do gentle prodding to make sure they meet deadlines.
  • Keep Reading

    At PrepScholar, we've published the best guides available anywhere to help you succeed in high school and college admissions.

    Here's a sampling of our most popular articles:

    How to Get a Perfect SAT Score / Perfect ACT Score —Learn the strategies I used to get a perfect 1600 on the SAT, and a perfect 36 on the ACT.

    SAT 800 Series: Reading | Math | Writing —Learn important strategies to excel in each section of the SAT.

    ACT 36 Series: English | Math | Reading | Science —Learn how to get a perfect 36 on each section of the ACT.

    How to Get Into Harvard and the Ivy League —The foundational guide where I discuss the philosophy behind what colleges are looking for, how to develop a Spike, and why being well-rounded is the path to rejection.

    How to Get a 4.0 GPA and Better Grades —Are you struggling with getting strong grades in challenging coursework? I step you through all the major concepts you need to excel in school, from high-level mindset to individual class strategies.

    Trending Now

    How to Get Into Harvard and the Ivy League

    How to Get a Perfect 4.0 GPA

    How to Write an Amazing College Essay

    What Exactly Are Colleges Looking For?

    ACT vs. SAT: Which Test Should You Take?

    When should you take the SAT or ACT?

    Get Your Free

    PrepScholar

    Find Your Target SAT Score

    Free Complete Official SAT Practice Tests

    How to Get a Perfect SAT Score, by an Expert Full Scorer

    Score 800 on SAT Math

    Score 800 on SAT Reading and Writing

    How to Improve Your Low SAT Score

    Score 600 on SAT Math

    Score 600 on SAT Reading and Writing

    Find Your Target ACT Score

    Complete Official Free ACT Practice Tests

    How to Get a Perfect ACT Score, by a 36 Full Scorer

    Get a 36 on ACT English

    Get a 36 on ACT Math

    Get a 36 on ACT Reading

    Get a 36 on ACT Science

    How to Improve Your Low ACT Score

    Get a 24 on ACT English

    Get a 24 on ACT Math

    Get a 24 on ACT Reading

    Get a 24 on ACT Science

    Stay Informed

    Get the latest articles and test prep tips!

    Follow us on Facebook (icon)

    As co-founder and head of product design at PrepScholar, Allen has guided thousands of students to success in SAT/ACT prep and college admissions. He's committed to providing the highest quality resources to help you succeed. Allen graduated from Harvard University summa cum laude and earned two perfect scores on the SAT (1600 in 2004, and 2400 in 2014) and a perfect score on the ACT. You can also find Allen on his personal website, Shortform , or the Shortform blog .

    Ask a Question Below

    Have any questions about this article or other topics? Ask below and we'll reply!

    Yale College Undergraduate Admissions

    • A Liberal Arts Education
    • Majors & Academic Programs
    • Teaching & Advising
    • Undergraduate Research
    • International Experiences
    • Science & Engineering Faculty Features
    • Residential Colleges
    • Extracurriculars
    • Identity, Culture, Faith
    • Multicultural Open House
    • Virtual Tour
    • Bulldogs' Blogs
    • First-Year Applicants
    • International First-Year Applicants
    • QuestBridge First-Year Applicants
    • Military Veteran Applicants
    • Transfer Applicants
    • Eli Whitney: Nontraditional Applicants
    • Non-Degree & Alumni Auditing Applicants
    • What Yale Looks For
    • Putting Together Your Application
    • Selecting High School Courses
    • Application FAQs
    • First-Generation College Students
    • Rural and Small Town Students
    • Choosing Where to Apply
    • Inside the Yale Admissions Office Podcast
    • Visit Campus
    • Virtual Events
    • Connect With Yale Admissions
    • The Details
    • Estimate Your Cost
    • QuestBridge

    Search form

    Essay topics.

    All first-year applicants will complete a few Yale-specific short answer questions. These required questions are slightly different based on the application platform an applicant chooses. The 2024-2025 Yale-specific questions for the Coalition Application, Common Application, and QuestBridge Application are detailed below.

    Short Answer Questions

    Applicants submitting the Coalition Application , Common Application , or QuestBridge Application  will respond to the following short answer questions:

    • Students at Yale have time to explore their academic interests before committing to one or more major fields of study. Many students either modify their original academic direction or change their minds entirely. As of this moment, what academic areas seem to fit your interests or goals most comfortably? Please indicate up to three from the  list provided.
    • Tell us about a topic or idea that excites you and is related to one or more academic areas you selected above. Why are you drawn to it? (200 words or fewer)
    • What is it about Yale that has led you to apply? (125 words or fewer)

    Applicants applying with the QuestBridge Application will complete the questions above via the Yale QuestBridge Questionnaire, available on the Yale Admissions Status Portal after an application has been received.

    Applicants submitting the Coalition Application or Common Application  will also respond to the following short answer questions, in no more than 200 characters (approximately 35 words):

    • What inspires you?
    • If you could teach any college course, write a book, or create an original piece of art of any kind, what would it be?
    • Other than a family member, who is someone who has had a significant influence on you? What has been the impact of their influence? 
    • What is something about you that is not included anywhere else in your application?

    Applicants submitting the Coalition Application or Common Application will respond to one of the following prompts in 400 words or fewer. 

    1. Reflect on a time you discussed an issue important to you with someone holding an opposing view. Why did you find the experience meaningful?

    2. Reflect on your membership in a community to which you feel connected. Why is this community meaningful to you? You may define community however you like.

    3. Reflect on an element of your personal experience that you feel will enrich your college. How has it shaped you?

    No products in the cart.

    harvard essay to yale

    Successful Yale Essays

    Yale essays →, yale mentors →.

    harvard essay to yale

    Yale Supplement Essay: Tell us about your engagement with a topic or idea that excites you.

    Yale’s extensive course offerings and vibrant conversations beyond the classroom encourage students to follow their developing intellectual interests wherever they lead. Tell us about your…...

    Yale Supplemental Essay: Travel: Tell us about your engagement with a topic or idea that excites you.

    Yale common app essay: a meaningful background, identity, interest, or talent..

    Some students have a background, identity, interest, or talent that is so meaningful they believe their application would be incomplete without it. If this sounds…...

    Yale Essay Prompts

    Yale University requires the Common Application, with its 250-650 word essay requirement, as well as their own short essay questions, included below.

    Yale University Short Essay Prompts

    Short Essays for Common and Coalition Application Applicants Students applying to Yale through the Coalition Application or Common Application should respond to the essay prompts…...

    Yale University Short Answer Questions

    Students apply to Yale through the Common Application, QuestBridge Application, or Coalition Application should include responses to the short answer questions below: Students at Yale…...

    Common Application Essay Prompts

    The Common App Essay for 2020-2021 is limited to 250-650 word responses. You must choose one prompt for your essay. Some students have a background,…...

    Report Content

    Block member.

    Please confirm you want to block this member.

    You will no longer be able to:

    • See blocked member's posts
    • Mention this member in posts
    • Message this member
    • Add this member as a connection

    Please note: This action will also remove this member from your connections and send a report to the site admin. Please allow a few minutes for this process to complete.

    10 Successful Harvard Application Essays | 2022

    With the top applicants from every high school applying to the best schools in the country, it's important to have an edge in your college application. Check out our updated list of 10 Harvard application essays below from students who made it in, and hear from expert college consultants about what made these work.

    HS2

    Sophia's Essay

    The Art of Applying

    After 12 years of helping high achieving professionals get into their dream grad schools, The Art of Applying has opened our doors to high achievers, dreamers, and everyday students to work with us on their college applications. The sooner you reach out to us about working together, the better! The more time we have to achieve success together, the better set up we will be to achieve outstanding results.

    We’d love to chat about your college applications with you -- book a free 15-minute call today !

    Successful Harvard Essay - “Black Eyeliner Does Not Make You a Nonconformist”

    Several years ago, my mother told me I listen to “white people music.” And I suppose that’s true—rock 'n' roll tends to spring from the middle-class basements of young, white men. Though I did point out that its origins trace back to jazz musicians of the Harlem Renaissance. Also that one of the greatest guitarists of all time—dear Mr.Hendrix; may he rest in peace—was black.

    My devotion to punk rock began in seventh grade, when Green Day’s “Boulevard of Broken Dreams” came up on my iTunes shuffle. I started to look into their other releases, eventually immersing myself into the complete punk discography. My mother, having grown up in a racially segregated New York, was more likely to listen to Stevie Wonder than Stevie Nicks.

    But, she must have figured, to each her own. So while my compatriots indulged in the music of Taylor Swift, One Direction, and Lady Gaga, my tacky Hot Topic headphones blasted Green Day, Ramones, and The Clash. My young adolescent ears drank in the raw, chaotic beauty, an echo of the pain of the past. The thrashing, pulsating vitality of the instruments painted a picture, connecting me to the disillusioned kids who launched an epic movement of liberation some 40 years ago.

    Punkers question authority. Aggressively contrarian, they advocate for the other side—the side that seemed smothered silent during the post-Vietnam era. They rejected the established norms. They spoke out and weren’t afraid.

    I had always felt different from my peers. In my girls’s prep school, the goal was to be blond and good at soccer. I was neither, which automatically deemed me “uncool”. I had a few close friends but never felt like I was part of a whole.

    Then came the punk philosophy, for the outliers, for those who were different. That was something I could be part of.

    Instead of trying to conform to my peers, I adopted an anti-conformist attitude. Much like the prematurely gray anti-hero of my favorite book, I sneered at all the “phonies” around me. I resented anything popular. Uggs? Wouldn’t buy them. Yoga pants? Never. Starbucks?Well, I could make a few concessions.

    But I felt more cynical than liberated. I wasted so much energy on being different than I lost track of what actually made me happy. I insisted I didn’t care what people thought of me, which was true. Yet if I based my actions almost solely on their behavior, how could I deny their influence?

    Luckily, as I transitioned from a private school to a brand new public high school, I got to clean the slate. I bought yoga pants and found they were comfortable. I listened to a wide variety of music, even the eh kind that wasn’t 100% hardcore punk. And I was happier.

    I revised my punk philosophy: Do as you like—whether it fits into the “system” or not.

    The Beatles’s “Revolution” lyrics sum it up well:

    You tell me it’s the institution

    Well, you know

    You’d better free your mind instead

    What I think Lennon was getting at is questioning everything does not entail opposing everything.

    What I think Lennon was getting at is questioning everything does not entail opposing everything. Defiance for the sake of defiance is unproductive at best, destructive at worst. I believe in life’s greater Truths, like Love and Justice. These Truths are what should govern my actions—not what’s popular and what isn’t. Striving to act on these ideals has helped me stay true to myself, regardless of what’s considered “conformist."

    Perhaps I’ve failed the punk movement. We’ll have to wait and see. In the meantime, I’ll do what makes me happy and change what doesn’t. I’ll wear Doc Martens instead of Uggs; I’ll partake in a grande pumpkin spice latte; I’ll watch Gossip Girl; I’ll blare my favorite guitar solo over the speakers in my room.

    And that’s as punk as it gets.

    harvard essay to yale

    Professional Review by The Art of Applying

    From the snarky title and fiery opening, I was immediately drawn in. I and many people on our team at The Art of Applying® grew up as one of the few students of color in our honors classes, being told we liked “white people things.”

    When you write about very specific personal experiences you’ve had, you can strike an emotional chord and connection with people who have similar experiences, and you can simultaneously intrigue people who have had vastly different experiences.

    The student’s response to her mother’s assertion and the level of knowledge the student demonstrates about punk rock’s origins and political context show that she doesn’t just enjoy punk music passively as a fan; she was curious enough to research and learn about its historical roots, and confident enough to offer a contradictory viewpoint about what punk music is and who it is and isn’t for.

    I enjoyed reading the journey of how the student’s interest in punk rock blossomed from an interest into a passion and eventually an identity. Don’t just tell us the beginning and the end of a personal growth journey; show us the messy middle too.

    The student concisely depicts a vivid image of her outsider status in her private school without villainizing the other students. She also uses humor and wordplay well when she makes a concession for enjoying Starbucks.

    A turning point in the essay comes when the student starts questioning whether her staunchly nonconformist identity is serving her. This shows an even deeper level of self reflection and personal growth.

    While including quotes and lyrics in your essay can divert attention from your own words to a famous person’s, the student effectively uses the lyrics as a launching point for further reflection.

    It ends in the same confident, energetic voice I grew to love throughout the piece, and the final sentences read like a glorious mic drop.

    The conclusion is strong in that we see a person who has embraced all sides of herself rather than stubbornly clinging to a rigid image of nonconformity.

    This essay is an excellent example to learn from if you want to write about how one of your passions spurred personal growth, struggles with fitting in, changing your mind about who you are, and/or getting clear on your values.

    Art of Applying Button

    Taras' Essay

    PREP EXPERT

    Prep Expert is a premiere online education company that has helped over 100,000 students improve their test scores, receive admission into top universities, and win over $100 million in college scholarships. As Seen On Shark Tank, Prep Expert offers online SAT & ACT courses, K-12 academic tutoring, and college admissions consulting.

    Successful Harvard Essay: More Boluses to Dissect

    Finally, I had found a volunteer opportunity at the Long Marine Lab, a marine biology research facility at UC Santa Cruz! I envisioned swimming with dolphins, or perhaps studying behavioral patterns of decorator crabs. But when I discovered the nature of my work on the first day of volunteering, my excitement turned to disappointment: I’d be picking through albatross boluses, the indigestible materials they cough up before going to sea. Sure enough, after three hours of separating fishing line from brown muck, I began to dread what I was in for. At that point, I had no clue of just how interesting the opportunity would turn out to be, and it would remind me of how easily I become engrossed and fascinated by all sorts of random stuff.

    It didn't take long for my boredom with the boluses to shift toward curiosity.

    It didn’t take long for my boredom with the boluses to shift toward curiosity. In the first place, the project itself was fascinating. The idea was to research the behavior and diet of albatrosses at sea. These birds can fly for months without touching land! When the birds have chicks, they cough up whatever they’ve eaten at sea to feed their young. When the chicks become old enough to fly, they cough up the hard, indigestible materials left in their stomachs. These boluses contain squid beaks that can reveal the types of squid eaten and the area where the squid were caught. We volunteers would pick through the boluses, separating out anything that looked interesting.

    As I got better at dissecting these blobs, I started finding crazy stuff, and my colleagues and I would often discuss important findings. There was, of course, the search for the biggest squid beak, and the fish eyes were always interesting. But most shocking was the plastic. Beyond the normal Styrofoam and fishing line were plastic bottle caps, lighters, even toothbrushes. Occasionally, Asian writing revealed distant origins. Once, I picked through a bolus permeated with orange goo, eventually to discover the round mouthpiece of a balloon. The origins of these artifacts were sad, but also fascinating. I learned of the Texas-sized trash heap in the middle of the Pacific, the effects of which I was witnessing firsthand. I gained a heightened awareness of the damage inflicted on the oceans by humans, and their far-reaching impacts. Perhaps most importantly, I realized that even the most tedious things can blow my mind.

    If dissecting boluses can be so interesting, imagine the things I’ve yet to discover! I play piano and can see myself dedicating my life to the instrument, but I can’t bear to think of everything else I’d have to miss. I’d love to study albatrosses, but also particle physics or history, and preferably all three. At this point in my life, I can’t imagine picking just one area. At the same time, though, I love studying subjects in depth. I tend to get overwhelmed by my options, since I can’t possibly choose them all. But at least I know I’ll never be bored in life: there are just too many subjects to learn about, books to read, pieces to play, albatrosses to save, and boluses to dissect.

    Professional Review by Prep Expert (Akbar Rahel)

    While many applicants write essays full of detail and superlatives, emotional honesty is a critical component of a great essay.

    What immediately distinguishes the first paragraph of the essay is the emotional honesty: Taras admits how “excitement turned to disappointment” and how he “had no clue” about how the opportunity would turn out. Too often, applicants fail to recognize that admissions officers are just normal people reading essays—people who also experience a range of emotions such as disappointment and confusion. While many applicants write essays full of detail and superlatives, emotional honesty is a critical component of a great essay.

    Moreover, on a simple, albeit important level, he situates readers in the very first sentence by mentioning that his research was a volunteer opportunity at Long Marine Lab. Too many applicants attempt to keep a reader in suspense when, in fact, it is always better to provide context for an experience. Admissions officers don’t want to feel like they are deciphering the seemingly mundane who, what, when, and where. Nobody has time to untangle an essay.

    Moving on, Taras succeeds in clearly demonstrating a sincere passion for his research by sharing interesting details of his work, such as understanding boluses. Whether writing about birds, Model UN, or any other possible topic, details are what help applicants show the admissions committees a level of intellectual vitality.

    While an overall vibrant essay that captures a reader’s attention because of the unique topic, some aspects could have been improved. For example, exclamation points may come across as contrived enthusiasm to many readers—and strip away some of the decorum of an essay. Moreover, in the last paragraph, Taras mentions particle physics and history as possible interests, which did not align with the essay (and could have hurt chances for admissions in the final “shaping” of an incoming class).

    Prep Expert

    Yukta's Essay

    PREPORY

    Prepory is a leading college admissions and career coaching company. Our college admissions team is made up of multi-degree academics, former university faculty, former admissions officers, Ivy League writing coaches, and graduates from the nation's most elite institutions. Prepory students are 93% more likely to be admitted to one of their top five college choices and 2.5 times more likely to get into schools with acceptance rates below 20%.

    Successful Harvard Essay: Yukta

    Garishly lined with a pearlescent lavender, my eyes idly scanned the haphazard desk in front of me, settling on a small kohl. I packed the ebony powder into my waterline with a shaky hand, wincing at the fine specks making their way into my eyes.

    The palette's colors bore in, the breadth of my imagination interwoven into now-brittle brushes.

    The girl in the mirror seemed sharper, older, somehow. At only 12, I was relatively new to the powders and blushes that lined my birthday makeup kit, but I was determined to decipher the deep splashes of color that had for so long been an enigma to me.

    After school involved self-inflicted solitary confinement, as I shut myself in my bedroom to hone my skills. The palette’s colors bore in, the breadth of my imagination interwoven into now-brittle brushes. Much to my chagrin, my mom walked in one day, amused at my smudged lipstick, which congealed on the wispy hairs that lined my upper lip.

    “Halloween already?” she asked playfully.

    I flushed in embarrassment as she got to work, smoothing my skin with a brush and filling the gaps in my squiggly liner. Becoming a makeup aficionado was going to take some help.

    “What’s this even made of?” I asked, transfixed by the bright powder she was smattering on my cheeks.

    “You know, I’m not sure,” she murmured. “Maybe you should find out.”

    Hours down the internet rabbit hole, I learned that the shimmery powder was made of mica, a mineral commonly used in cosmetics. While the substance was dazzling, its production process was steeped in humanitarian violations and environmental damage. Determined to reconcile my burgeoning love for makeup with my core values, I flung the kit into the corner of my drawer, vowing to find a more sustainable alternative. Yes, I was every bit as dramatic as you imagine it.

    Now 17, I approach ethical makeup with assured deliberation. As I glance at my dusty kit, which still sits where I left it, I harken back on the journey it has taken me on. Without the reckoning that it spurred, makeup would still simply be a tool of physical transformation, rather than a catalyst of personal growth.

    Now, each swipe of eyeliner is a stroke of my pen across paper as I write a children’s book about conscious consumerism. My flitting fingers programmatically place sparkles, mattes, and tints across my face in the same way that they feverishly move across a keyboard, watching algorithms and graphs integrate into models of supply chain transparency. Makeup has taught me to be unflinching, both in self expression and my expectations for the future. I coat my lips with a bold sheen, preparing them to form words of unequivocal urgency at global conferences and casual discussions. I see my passion take flight, emboldening others to approach their own reckonings, uncomfortable as they may be. I embark on a two-year journey of not buying new clothes in a statement against mass consumption and rally youth into a unified organization. We stand together, picking at the gritty knots of makeup, corporate accountability, and sustainability as they slowly unravel.

    Deep rooted journeys of triumph and tribulation are plastered across the surface of my skin — this paradox excites me.

    I’m not sure why makeup transfixes me. Perhaps it’s because I enjoy seeing my reveries take shape. Yukta, the wannabe Wicked Witch of the West, has lids coated with emerald luster and lips of coal. Yukta, the Indian classical dancer, wields thick eyeliner and bright crimson lipstick that allow her expressions to be amplified across a stage. Deep rooted journeys of triumph and tribulation are plastered across the surface of my skin — this paradox excites me.

    Perhaps I am also drawn to makeup because as I peel back the layers, I am still wholly me. I am still the young girl staring wide-eyed at her reflection, earnestly questioning in an attempt to learn more about the world. Most importantly, I still carry an unflagging vigor to coalesce creativity and activism into palpable change, one brushstroke at a time.

    Professional Review by Prepory

    This student takes a household item as common as makeup to build a narrative that is as universally accessible as it is unique. This object is inflected with facets of both her personal and cultural identity that give the reader immediate contact with the student’s personality. She takes us on a sweeping journey through her investigation of the world around her, and embarks on a coming-of-age story without losing sight of the essay’s main topic. This student strikes a balance between the narrative and creative writing elements that are integral to successful personal statements. The writer gives us glimpses of insight into her personal development across multiple years, using makeup as a medium for self-reflection and discovery. She masterfully leverages the colors and elements of her makeup collection to craft vivid descriptions, situating imagery as the cornerstone of this essay’s approach and success. She takes up an object so easily tied to consumerism and superficiality and uses it to champion the societal and ethical battles for which she advocates.

    We also see that the writer of this essay has a clearly defined voice. While many students struggle with the temptation to elevate their writing through ornamentation, this writer is able to maneuver a vibrant writing style that remains engaging, rhythmic and measured. Through each moment of this essay, we learn what the author cares about: conscious consumerism, creativity, and activism; we also learn how she thinks: curiosily, selflessly, and with feminist undertones. The opening sentences of this essay employ a successful strategy for personal statement writing, rich with adjectives detailing a small scene, that is expanded upon to make a larger commentary about the author and where she stands in society. Last, the student’s essay compliments her larger admissions profile in which the reader learns about years of advocacy, sustainable practices, and intentions to positively impact her community.

    prepory

    Eda's Essay

    POTOMAC ADMISSIONS

    Potomac Admissions is dedicated to helping students get into the best schools possible. From helping students create a balanced list of colleges to advising them on how to craft memorable, unique personal statements, we make sure that our students present the best possible admissions package. Ask us for a free consultation to find out how we can help!

    Successful Harvard Essay: Homeless for Thirteen Years

    I sat on my parents’ bed weeping with my head resting on my knees. “Why did you have to do that to me? Why did you have to show me the house and then take it away from me?” Hopelessly, I found myself praying to God realizing it was my last resort.

    For years, my family and I found ourselves moving from country to country in hopes of a better future. Factors, such as war and lack of academic opportunities, led my parents to pack their bags and embark on a new journey for our family around the world. Our arduous journey first began in Kuçovë, Albania, then Athens, Greece, and then eventually, Boston, Massachusetts. Throughout those years, although my family always had a roof over our heads, I never had a place I could call “home.”

    Instantly, I knew that it was fate that was bringing this house to me.

    That night that I prayed to God, my mind raced back to the night I was clicking the delete button on my e-mails, but suddenly stopped when I came upon a listing of the house. It was September 22, 2007 —eight years exactly to the day that my family and I had moved to the United States. Instantly, I knew that it was fate that was bringing this house to me. I remembered visiting that yellow house the next day with my parents and falling in love with it. However, I also remembered the heartbreaking phone call I received later on that week saying that the owners had chosen another family’s offer.

    A week after I had prayed to God, I had given up any hopes of my family buying the house. One day after school, I unlocked the door to our one-bedroom apartment and walked over to the telephone only to see it flashing a red light. I clicked PLAY and unexpectedly heard the voice of our real estate agent. “Eda!” she said joyfully. “The deal fell through with the other family—the house is yours! Call me back immediately to get started on the papers.” For a moment, I stood agape and kept replaying the words in my head. Was this really happening to me? Was my dream of owning a home finally coming true?

    Over the month of November, I spent my days going to school and immediately rushing home to make phone calls. Although my parents were not fluent enough in English to communicate with the bank and real estate agent, I knew that I was not going to allow this obstacle to hinder my dream of helping to purchase a home for my family. Thus, unlike a typical thirteen-year-old girl’s conversations, my phone calls did not involve the mention of makeup, shoes, or boys. Instead, my conversations were composed of terms, such as “fixed-rate mortgages,” “preapprovals,” and “down payments.” Nevertheless, I was determined to help purchase this home after thirteen years of feeling embarrassed from living in a one-bedroom apartment. No longer was I going to experience feelings of humiliation from not being able to host sleepovers with my friends or from not being able to gossip with girls in school about who had the prettiest room color.

    I had been homeless for the first thirteen years of my life. Although I will never be able to fully repay my parents for all of their sacrifices, the least I could do was to help find them a home that they could call their own—and that year, I did. To me, a home means more than the general conception of “four walls and a roof.” A home is a place filled with memories and laughter from my family. No matter where my future may lead me, I know that if at times I feel alone, I will always have a yellow home with my family inside waiting for me.

    Professional Review by Potomac Admissions

    Honest. Heartbreaking. Powerful.

    Those were the first three words that came to mind after reading Eda’s essay.

    By being so honest, Eda showcases her genuine growth and maturity over time.

    What we love about Eda’s essay is its refreshing vulnerability. Too many college essays are “too” picture-perfect. Eda doesn’t censor the truth, even if admitting her inner thoughts may potentially paint her in a negative light. For example, she starts the entire essay with a scene of her weeping on her parents’ bed, blaming them for her misfortune. By being so honest, Eda showcases her genuine growth and maturity over time.

    Her personal voice is also strong throughout the essay. When she talks about falling in love with “that yellow house,” an image of said house is automatically conjured up in our minds. When she speaks of the heartbreak she experienced upon learning “that yellow house” was sold to another family, we felt pain in our hearts too. Her deliberate choice to “PLAY” the voicemail she received for us and include her subsequent internal thoughts further pulls us into reliving her journey with her.

    Yet, she goes beyond merely telling us of her journey. She highlights just how atypical her journey has been. Instead of enjoying phone conversations about makeup or shoes, she is talking to agents about fix-rate mortgages and down payments… all at the age of 13. Though she does not explicitly state this (she doesn’t need to): it is clear that Eda has had to grow up fast, becoming a stronger individual as a result.

    Her understanding of the word “home” evolves from a physical roof over her head to a more abstract one. Home is wherever her “memories and laughter” exist. In the end, she comes to terms with the sacrifices her parents have made. Learning to be proud of her upbringing showcases Eda’s evolution.

    Eda is someone who will overcome whatever challenges thrown her way, making her a strong college applicant.

    Potomac Adm

    Lisa's Essay

    MR MBA

    Sponsored by MR. MBA®, a USA 501c3 non-profit organization dedicated to Education Admissions (MBA / Masters / College) & Careers. With over 2,000 top school acceptances and a 99.9% success rate, we help make people's dreams come true. Please visit our website www.MrMBA.org for more info on our College / MBA consultation packages, College / MBA application results, testimonials, and more!

    MR. MBA® helps students worldwide who can afford to make a donation to us and those who cannot! Contact us to discuss: WhatsApp/(+1) 917- 331- 2633, LinkedIn , Instagram , Facebook .

    Successful Harvard Essay: Playing it Dangerous

    In hazy stillness, a sudden flurry of colored skirts, whispers of “Merde!” Sternly, my fingers smooth back my hair, although they know no loose strands will be found. My skin absorbs heat from stage lights above—if only that heat would seep into my brain, denature some proteins, and deactivate the neurons stressing me out. A warm hand, accompanied by an even warmer smile, interrupts my frenzied solitude. I glance up. My lovely teacher nods, coaxing my frozen lips into a thawed smile. A complex figure, filled in with doubt, yet finished with shades of confidence: My body takes its place and waits.

    One, two, three, four; two, two, three, four. On stage, the lights and music wash over me. Never having had a true ballet solo before, my lungs are one breath away from hyperventilating. Trying to achieve a Zen-like state, I imagine a field of daisies, yet my palms continue sweating disobediently. It’s not that I’ve never been on stage alone before; I’ve had plenty of piano recitals and competitions. Yet, while both performances consume my mind and soul, ballet demands complete commitment of my body.

    I've had plenty of piano recitals and competitions. Yet, while both performances consume my mind and soul, ballet demands complete commitment of my body.

    Gently slide into arabesque and lean downward; try not to fall flat on face—Mom’s videotaping. In terms of mentality, I would hardly be described as an introvert; yet, a fear of failure has still kept me from taking risks. Maybe I was scared of leaping too high, falling too far, and hitting the hard floor. As I moved up in the cutthroat world of dance, this fear only increased; the pressure of greater expectations and the specter of greater embarrassment had held me contained. Now, every single eyeball is on me.

    Lean extra in this pirouette; it’s more aesthetic. But is it always better to be safe than sorry? Glancing toward the wings, I see my teacher’s wild gesticulations: Stretch your arms out, she seems to mime, More! A genuine smile replaces one of forced enthusiasm; alone on the stage, this is my chance to shine. I breathe in the movements, forget each individual step. More than just imagining, but finally experiencing the jubilation of the music, I allow my splits to stretch across the stage and my steps to extend longer and longer, until I’m no longer safe and my heart is racing. Exhilarated and scared in the best way, I throw myself into my jumps. I no longer need to imagine scenes to get in the mood; the emotions are twirling and leaping within me.

    Reaching, stretching, grabbing, flinging ... My fear no longer shields me. I find my old passion for ballet, and remember the grace and poise that can nevertheless convey every color of emotion. Playing it safe will leave me part of the backdrop; only by taking risks can I step into the limelight. Maybe I’ll fall, but the rush is worth it. I’ll captain an all-male science bowl team, run a marathon, audition for a musical, and embrace the physical and intellectual elation of taking risks.

    Professional Review by MR. MBA®, Val Misra

    Lisa creates a winning essay by successfully invoking real emotions in the reader through her creative, descriptive prose that conveys vivid imagery, heartfelt feelings, and wholesome introspection. I instantly likened Lisa’s allegory to a bird trapped in a closed cage; the cage serves as a metaphor for what we all face in our lives, our fears. Lisa’s first ballet solo is brilliantly illustrated as her ‘Aha! moment’ where she sheds her fears (opens her cage) and, with careful self-reflection, chooses to embrace future risks (flies only forward).

    In paragraphs 1-3, Lisa captivates us instantly through her beautiful, rich language and imagery, as she portrays herself immobilized by stress and a fear of failure and family/public opinion. I empathize and want to learn more! Her warm humor shines perfectly: wanting to deactivate her brain neurons and reminding herself not to fall face-first lest she gets scolded by her mother/family - wonderfully done! Lisa uses her “lovely teacher” as her grounding, comfort zone and supporter, a theme many can share. Her anxiety is relatable, and she uses this to explicate her general risk averse nature.

    In paragraphs 4-5, Lisa’s solo is radiantly depicted as her defining moment where she dances and realizes her transformation- fears turn to passion and excitement. She is poetry in motion in the moment, smiling, shedding her fears, and embracing risk like a warm glass of milk. A poignant question is posed, “But is it always better to be safe than sorry?” Through introspection, Lisa expresses her desire to pursue risks that will advance her personally. Acknowledging she may not always succeed, “the rush is worth it”. Lisa ends with concrete examples of leadership roles and activities that she will pursue at college- admissions officers favorably view students eager to step outside their comfort zones and embark on new adventures/challenges at college. To make this essay stronger, Lisa could have highlighted precisely how she will tackle any fears that may crop up during new obstacles at college, tying to lessons learned through her ballet.

    Superbly written in a distinct narrative form, this essay crafts an experience that is vibrant, funny, deep, and relatable.

    Superbly written in a distinct narrative form, this essay crafts an experience that is vibrant, funny, deep, and relatable. Lisa’s brand values seamlessly flow throughout the essay: creativity, determination, overcoming obstacles, self-reflection, growth through risk and, of course, passion! We are left with a glowing lesson in motivation in the hope of ridding oneself of such negative feelings to go on and achieve greater things - ‘playing it dangerous’.

    MR. MBA

    Michelle C.'s Essay

    Key Education

    At KEY we take a long-term, strategic approach centered on each individual student’s best interests. Working with our college-bound students beginning in Grade 8, we guide them in establishing a strong foundation of academics to build their unique profiles of co-curricular and extracurricular activities, academic direction, and professional skills. We aspire to give each of our students the best opportunity to thrive within their current education environmentand beyond. For a free consultation about our services and more, please visit: https://www.keyeducation.com/university .

    Successful Harvard Essay

    “You should scrub off the top layer of your skin whenever you lose a round,” my debate teammate once advised me.

    “That’s not practical,” I replied.

    “Neither is your refusal to wear clothes you’ve lost important debate rounds in. Your wardrobe has very little to do with your success.”

    Half of me disagrees with him. I still bring three BIC Round Stic pencils with 0.7 lead to every test because my gut tells me this fastidious procedure raises my scores. I’m still convinced that labs receive better grades if written in Calibri. And I still won’t rewear clothes in which I’ve lost crucial rounds.

    Yet the other half of me is equally dismissive of my own superstitions. I love logic, never failing to check that steps in a proof lead to a precise conclusion without gaps in reasoning.

    Fortunately, I often abandon my penchant for pragmatism to accommodate for my unwarranted superstitions. And since I only feel the need to act logicalcally in selective situations, I am perfectly content with the illogical nature of my other habits:

    Raised with my great-grandmother, grandparents, and parents all under one roof, I never lacked a consultant to help me transcribe Korean holiday dates from the lunar calendar onto my schedule. Yet whenever all four generations of my family celebrates with a traditional meal of bulgogi, my untraceable and admittedly nonexistent Italian blood flares in protest; I rebelliously cook myself linguine con le vongole that clashes terribly with my mom’s pungent kimchi.

    If I plot a graph of “hours I spend in physical activity” versus “week of the year,” the result looks like an irregular cardiac cycle. The upsurges symbolize my battles with colossal walls of water in hopes of catching a smooth surf back to Mission Bay shore. The ensuing period of rest mirrors the hours I spend researching in that one spot in my debate team’s war room that isn’t covered in papers (yet), or at the piano sight-reading the newest Adele song. Then the diastolic tranquility is interrupted by the weekends when I’m sprinting through trenches to avoid paintballs swarming above my favorite arena at Paintball USA.

    I find comfort in the familiar. I treasure the regular midnight chats with my brother as we indulge in batter while baking cupcakes for a friend's birthday, keeping our voices hushed

    I find comfort in the familiar. I treasure the regular midnight chats with my brother as we indulge in batter while baking cupcakes for a friend’s birthday, keeping our voices hushed to avoid waking our mom and facing her “salmonella is in your near future” lecture. Yet, some of my fondest memories involve talking to people with whom I share nothing in common. Whether my conversations are about the Qatari coach’s research on Kuwait’s female voting patterns, or about the infinite differences between the “common app” and the Oxford interviewing process, or even about my friend’s Swedish school’s peculiar policy of mandating uniforms only on Wednesdays, I love comparing cultures with debaters from different countries.

    My behavior is unpredictable. Yet it’s predictably unpredictable. Sure, I’ll never eat a Korean dinner like one might expect. But I’ll always be cooking linguine the moment I catch a whiff of kimchi.

    Professional Review by Key Education (Bryan)

    Most often, it is the down-to-earth topics that make for the most successful Common App essays. My students have written on subjects as mundane as cleaning, loading the dishwasher, eraser shavings, finding a piece of driftwood, or looking after not one, but two Shiba Inus. And so, it was a delight to read Michelle Choi’s essay. Choi took an idea that the rest of us probably give very little thought to – superstitions – and effectively used it as a focusing lens to explore different parts of her life.

    By drawing these connections between seemingly unrelated and different aspects of her life, Choi demonstrated her ability to introspect while giving the reader a richer picture of who she is. Choi is not just another high achiever. Her superstitions – and that ever-present struggle between being logical and superstitious – is what makes her appealing. One can’t help but to like her. As I often remind my students, quirky is cool.

    These various connections give the reader insight into what drives Choi as someone who is profoundly curious and quirky, someone who takes a different approach to things.

    With Choi’s hook, the reader’s attention is immediately captured. One could be forgiven for probably cringing a little at the thought of scrubbing off a layer of one’s own skin. And besides that, what was Choi even going on about? Her opening compels the reader to want to keep on reading. Very early on in her essay, we know that debating is a core part of her identity. As she guides the reader through the rest of her essay, she skillfully connects her superstitions to other important aspects of her life, including her cultural heritage, family, surfing, music, paintball, baking, conversations with random strangers, and examinations of different cultures around the world. These various connections give the reader insight into what drives Choi as someone who is profoundly curious and quirky, someone who takes a different approach to things, whether it be intentionally combining Korean and Italian cuisine (I picture the likes of Gordon Ramsay already shuddering at the clash of flavors) to playing pop on the piano (perhaps a refreshingly different take than Mozart or Beethoven).

    If I could offer one suggestion, it would be that after reading Choi’s essay, I was craving a little more. Perhaps she could have expanded slightly: what did she learn from this process of being unconventional? How did it influence the way she saw the world and influenced her actions? And in what ways did she apply this learning? That said, even with her essay, Choi does what many other students don’t with their Common App essay; she takes that a unique approach using a down-to-earth topic as a focusing lens to draw connections to various parts of her life.

    Key Education Button

    Tony's Essay

    Dan Lichterman

    As an admission essay specialist , Dan Lichterman has been empowering students to find their voice since 2004. He helps students stand out on paper, eliminating the unnecessary so the necessary may speak. Drawing upon his storytelling background, Dan guides applicants to craft authentic essays that leap off the page. He is available for online writing support within the US and internationally. To learn more and schedule a brief complimentary consultation visit danlichterman.com.

    Successful Harvard Essay: Beauty in Complexity

    Gazing up at the starry sky, I see Cygnus, Hercules, and Pisces, remnants of past cultures. I listen to waves crash on the beach, the forces of nature at work. Isn’t it odd how stars are flaming spheres and electrical impulses make beings sentient? The very existence of our world is a wonder; what are the odds that this particular planet developed all the necessary components, parts that all work in unison, to support life? How do they interact? How did they come to be? I thought back to how my previously simplistic mind-set evolved this past year.

    The very existence of our world is a wonder; what are the odds that this particular planet developed all the necessary components, parts that all work in unison, to support life?

    At Balboa, juniors and seniors join one of five small learning communities, which are integrated into the curriculum. Near the end of sophomore year, I ranked my choices: Law Academy first—it seemed the most prestigious—and WALC, the Wilderness Arts and Literacy Collaborative, fourth. So when I was sorted into WALC, I felt disappointed at the inflexibility of my schedule and bitter toward my classes. However, since students are required to wait at least a semester before switching pathways, I stayed in WALC. My experiences that semester began shifting my ambition-oriented paradigm to an interest-oriented one. I didn’t switch out.

    Beyond its integrated classes, WALC takes its students on trips to natural areas not only to build community among its students, but also to explore complex natural processes and humanity’s role in them. Piecing these lessons together, I create an image of our universe. I can visualize the carving of glacial valleys, the creation and gradation of mountains by uplift and weathering, and the transportation of nutrients to and from ecosystems by rivers and salmon. I see these forces on the surface of a tiny planet rotating on its axis and orbiting the sun, a gem in this vast universe. Through WALC, I have gained an intimate understanding of natural systems and an addiction to understanding the deep interconnections embedded in our cosmos.

    Understanding a system’s complex mechanics not only satisfies my curiosity, but also adds beauty to my world; my understanding of tectonic and gradational forces allows me to appreciate mountains and coastlines beyond aesthetics. By physically going to the place described in WALC’s lessons, I have not only gained the tools to admire these systems, but have also learned to actually appreciate them. This creates a thirst to see more beauty in a world that’s filled with poverty and violence, and a hunger for knowledge to satisfy that thirst. There are so many different systems to examine and dissect—science alone has universal, planetary, molecular, atomic, and subatomic scales to investigate. I hope to be able to find my interests by taking a variety of courses in college, and further humanity’s understanding through research, so that all can derive a deeper appreciation for the complex systems that govern this universe.

    Professional Review by Dan Lichterman

    Tony’s essay opens with stargazing at the ocean’s edge where we experience his boundless curiosity towards the natural world, sentience, and life itself. This wide-eyed wonderment is rendered artfully, yet what actually enables this essay to succeed is its ability to ponder deep concepts without getting lost in the clouds.

    The story itself revolves around an event that seems far removed from the incomprehensibility of the universe: a randomized selection has assigned Tony to study wilderness arts when he preferred the path of law. He is bitter that a decision impacting his studies has been determined by chance. We see vulnerability in his admission that he was beholden to an “ambition oriented paradigm,” rather than studying what interested him most. However, what we discover through the rest of the essay is that Tony’s decision to remain in wilderness arts is one that has transformed him completely, changing his perspective from a “simplistic mindset” to one that is addicted to “understanding the deep interconnections embedded in our cosmos.”

    The strength of Tony's language helps us appreciate the breadth and excitement of his unforseen awakening.

    The strength of Tony’s language helps us appreciate the breadth and excitement of his unforseen awakening. From visualizing the “carving of glacial valleys” to reveling in the complex mechanics of natural systems, the essay showcases how much more Tony appreciates our world thanks to an event that had once seemed unfairly arbitrary. Observing Tony’s thirst for life’s interconnectedness, we grow confident that his evolving perspective will guide his studies into exciting unexpected realms.

     Lichterman Button

    Yueming's Essay

    Crimson Education

    Crimson Education is the world’s leading university admissions consultancy. We take application counseling to the next level of personalization and success, increasing your chance of admission to Ivy League, Oxbridge, and other top universities by 700%. At Crimson, each student is matched with a team of top university strategists, tutors, and mentors who work together to provide customized support in every aspect of the student’s journey. Learn more at www.crimsoneducation.com and schedule your complimentary consultation with a Crimson advisor today.

    My Ye-Ye always wears a red baseball cap. I think he likes the vivid color—bright and sanguine, like himself. When Ye-Ye came from China to visit us seven years ago, he brought his red cap with him and every night for six months, it sat on the stairway railing post of my house, waiting to be loyally placed back on Ye-Ye’s head the next morning. He wore the cap everywhere: around the house, where he performed magic tricks with it to make my little brother laugh; to the corner store, where he bought me popsicles before using his hat to wipe the beads of summer sweat off my neck. Today whenever I see a red hat, I think of my Ye-Ye and his baseball cap, and I smile.

    Ye-Ye is the Mandarin word for “grandfather.” My Ye-Ye is a simple, ordinary person—not rich, not “successful”—but he is my greatest source of inspiration and I idolize him. Of all the people I know, Ye-Ye has encountered the most hardship and of all the people I know, Ye-Ye is the most joyful. That these two aspects can coexist in one individual is, in my mind, truly remarkable.

    Ye-Ye was an orphan. Both his parents died before he was six years old, leaving him and his older brother with no home and no family. When other children gathered to read around stoves at school, Ye-Ye and his brother walked in the bitter cold along railroad tracks, looking for used coal to sell. When other children ran home to loving parents, Ye-Ye and his brother walked along the streets looking for somewhere to sleep. Eight years later, Ye-Ye walked alone—his brother was dead.

    Ye-Ye managed to survive, and in the meanwhile taught himself to read, write, and do arithmetic. Life was a blessing, he told those around him with a smile.

    Years later, Ye-Ye’s job sent him to the Gobi Desert, where he and his fellow workers labored for twelve hours a day. The desert wind was merciless; it would snatch their tent in the middle of the night and leave them without supply the next morning. Every year, harsh weather took the lives of some fellow workers.

    After eight years, Ye-Ye was transferred back to the city where his wife lay sick in bed. At the end of a twelve-hour workday, Ye-Ye took care of his sick wife and three young children. He sat with the children and told them about the wide, starry desert sky and mysterious desert lives. Life was a blessing, he told them with a smile.

    But life was not easy; there was barely enough money to keep the family from starving. Yet, my dad and his sisters loved going with Ye-Ye to the market. He would buy them little luxuries that their mother would never indulge them in: a small bag of sunflower seeds for two cents, a candy each for three cents. Luxuries as they were, Ye-Ye bought them without hesitation. Anything that could put a smile on the children’s faces and a skip in their steps was priceless.

    He would buy them little luxuries that their mother would never indulge them in: a small bag of sunflower seeds for two cents, a candy each for three cents.

    Ye-Ye still goes to the market today. At the age of seventy-eight, he bikes several kilometers each week to buy bags of fresh fruits and vegetables, and then bikes home to share them with his neighbors. He keeps a small patch of strawberries and an apricot tree. When the fruit is ripe, he opens his gate and invites all the children in to pick and eat. He is Ye-Ye to every child in the neighborhood.

    I had always thought that I was sensible and self-aware. But nothing has made me stare as hard in the mirror as I did after learning about the cruel past that Ye-Ye had suffered and the cheerful attitude he had kept throughout those years. I thought back to all the times when I had gotten upset. My mom forgot to pick me up from the bus station. My computer crashed the day before an assignment was due. They seemed so trivial and childish, and I felt deeply ashamed of myself.

    Now, whenever I encounter an obstacle that seems overwhelming, I think of Ye-Ye; I see him in his red baseball cap, smiling at me. Like a splash of cool water, his smile rouses me from grief, and reminds me how trivial my worries are and how generous life has been. Today I keep a red baseball cap at the railing post at home where Ye-Ye used to put his every night. Whenever I see the cap, I think of my Ye-Ye, smiling in his red baseball cap, and I smile. Yes, Ye-Ye. Life is a blessing.

    Professional Review by Crimson Education

    Yueming’s essay is the perfect example of an application essay that does exactly what it’s supposed to do: it fills out the picture of who Yueming is and allows the admissions committee to learn things about him that are not contained in the rest of his application. Yueming uses the story of his Ye-Ye’s baseball cap to show the reader what is important to him and to demonstrate key personality traits that he’d contribute to life on campus.

    Yueming uses the story of his Ye-Ye's baseball cap to show the reader what is important to him and to demonstrate key personality traits

    Even though most of the text is devoted to Ye-Ye’s biography, the essay is not just about him. Ye-Ye’s whole story is a prelude to the final paragraphs, which reveal the most important aspects of Yueming’s personality. Just like in life, our ancestors’ past is a prelude to a future generation’s history, which is still emerging. This subtle parallel, unnoticeable at first glance, allows the reader to understand the profound development of Yueming’s personality and his talent for looking deeper into the essence of things.

    Yueming shows his ability to learn from the experience of others, and he highlights his own resilience and the positive mindset he gained from Ye-Ye. These qualities are undoubtedly essential for a future Harvard student and demonstrate his ability to embody “life is a blessing” on campus and beyond.

     Crimson Edu Button

    Charles' Essay

    College Confidential

    College Confidential is your gateway to real, unfiltered guidance about applying to college and exploring majors and careers. CC is powered by our community of real students, parents, and admissions professionals.

    James was not fitting in with everyone else. During lunch, he sat alone, playing with his own toys. During group activities, the other campers always complained when paired with him. What was wrong? As camp counselor, I quietly observed his behavior—nothing out of the ordinary. I just couldn’t fathom why the other campers treated him like a pariah.

    After three days of ostracism, James broke down during a game of soccer. Tears streaming down his cheeks, he slumped off the field, head in his hands. I jogged toward him, my forehead creased with concern. Some campers loudly remarked, “Why is that creep crying?” Furious indignation leaped into my heart. They were the ones who “accidentally” bumped into him and called him “James the Freak.” It was their cruelty that caused his meltdown, and now they were mocking him for it. I sharply told them to keep their thoughts to themselves. I squatted beside James and asked him what was wrong. Grunting, he turned his back to me. I had to stop his tears, and I had to make him feel comfortable. So for the next hour, I talked about everything a seven-year-old boy might find interesting, from sports to Transformers.

    I had to stop his tears, and I had to make him feel comfortable. So for the next hour, I talked about everything a seven-year-old boy might find interesting, from sports to Transformers.

    “I have a question,” I asked as James began to warm to me. I took a deep breath and dove right into the problem. “Why do the other campers exclude you?” Hesitantly, he took off his shoes and socks, and pointed at his left foot. One, two, three … four. He had four toes. We had gone swimming two days before: All the campers must have noticed. I remembered my childhood, when even the smallest abnormality—a bad haircut, a missing tooth—could cause others, including myself, to shrink away. I finally understood.

    But what could I do to help? I scoured my mind for the words to settle his demons. But nothing came to me. Impulsively, I hugged him—a gesture of intimacy we camp leaders were encouraged not to initiate, and an act I later discovered no friend had ever offered James before. Then, I put my hand on his shoulder and looked him straight in the eyes. I assured him that external features didn’t matter, and that as long as he was friendly, people would eventually come around. I listed successful individuals who had not been hindered by their abnormalities. And finally, I told him he would always be my favorite camper, regardless of whether he had two, five, or a hundred toes.

    On the last day of camp, I was jubilant—James was starting to fit in. Although the teasing had not completely disappeared, James was speaking up and making friends. And when, as we were saying our good-byes, James gave me one last hug and proclaimed that I was his “bestest friend in the whole wide world,” my heart swelled up. From my campers, I learned that working with children is simply awesome. And from James, I learned that a little love truly goes a long way.

    Professional Review by College Confidential

    Charles Wong takes the all too common experience of watching someone be excluded and explains how he combats it. In his personal account of being a camp counselor, Charles not only communicates that he cares deeply for others, but also displays his thought process for how he solves problems in general. Instead of just declaring these personal characteristics, he shows them through a personal account. The pointed decision to “show” not “tell” is an excellent essay tactic.

    Charles not only communicates that he cares deeply for others, but also displays his thought process for how he solves problems in general.

    First, Charles begins with his description of the situation. His tone is casual and straightforward. He incorporates crucial details, but his writing is not superfluous. His essay is concise and easy to follow. While this approach may seem to lack sophistication, it reflects Charle’s raw, real thoughts. The reader can feel his concern; Charles walks us through his genuine dilemma. Additionally, the acts of kindness he describes—the pep talks, the hugs—offer insight into his character. The decision to include these details paint Charles as a kind and bright personality, something of value on any college campus.

    Moreover, Charles does more than just describe how he solved this particular problem, but expands it to life in general. He grasps meaning from a seemingly mundane experience and explains how it changed his entire mindset. This ability to consciously grow suggests Charles’s drive to to learn from all life has to offer; he is a student in more than just the classroom.

     College Confidential Button

    Sean's Essay

    HS2 Academy

    HS2 Academy is a premier college counseling company that has helped thousands of students gain admission into Ivy League-level universities across the world. With a counseling team of passionate educators with over 100 years of combined experience, we pride ourselves in helping high schoolers achieve their college dreams. Since results matter most, entrust your future to the leader in college admissions with a consistent track record of success.

    I have always envied the butterfly.

    Its graceful poise as it glides through the air; the blissful flutter of its wings as it courageously embarks upon life’s journeys. Its ambitious and adaptive nature — a change-maker and discoverer, a trendsetter in the animal world, a leader amongst other species. Charles Darwin said, “it is not the strongest of species that survives, nor the most intelligent. It is the one most adaptable to change.” I envy the butterfly’s adaptive approach to change, making them the silent leaders of the animal kingdom.

    It was at age nine, on a family trip to the Boston Museum of Science, that I was first drawn to the breathtaking butterfly. As I stepped into the butterfly’s endless capsule of nature, the flamboyant and audacious nature of the butterfly was captivating — their vibrant colors flaunted proud and shame-free, central to their persona but not defining of their personality. Their extraordinary courage in self-expression brought a little boy great inspiration. As someone who has questioned and struggled with my identity and accepting my queerness throughout life, the butterfly exemplified what it meant to be bold, courageous, and proud to a young boy who was lacking in all of those.

    The butterfly exemplified what it meant to be bold, courageous, and proud to a young boy who was lacking in all of those.

    I vividly recall one butterfly standing out among its comrades. Being an uncreative third-grader, I named my new friend Bloo due to his radiant cerulean shades descending from darkness to light as they progressed from the wing’s base. I watched Bloo soar, using his wings to glide far above the dainty and fragile stereotypes placed on him by society. I admire the profound growth Bloo must have achieved to get here, at one point a timid and powerless inchworm evolved into a carefully-crafted canvas of power. Bloo exemplified the strength and pride that I needed to begin accepting my identity. Looking back on this brief encounter with Bloo, I recall how he taught an insecure child self-acceptance. From here, I began to internalize the butterfly’s power. I began to molt into a new skin with fledgling wings.

    As I progressed through life with these newly-discovered wings, I became increasingly drawn to observing butterflies in nature. They have proven much more than just precious gems found amongst clouds or prize trophies for kindergarteners to catch in their nets. The butterfly has shown itself as the hidden alpha of the animal kingdom — a leader and trendsetter amongst organisms both small and large, a fearless change-maker enabling them to outsurvive the rest for the past fifty-six million years.

    With the wings and strength of the butterfly latched to my shoulders, I proudly embraced the challenge posed by this delicate yet powerful creature — to be a leader and a change-maker. Recognizing many social injustices in my community, I was inspired by the butterfly to become a voice of change. Driven by the butterfly’s creativity, I developed a social justice discussion program to take place at my high school, and became a local leader and fighter against corrupt politics in the 2020 election cycle. Bloo reminds me that time moves quickly and I must never settle nor lose focus in the crusade for justice. I hope to use this fragile time to advocate for equality in medicine, combining my passion for science with advocacy to leave a lasting legacy.

    Today, the lessons taught by the butterfly are never far from my mind, whether I'm sitting in my English classroom discussing Beowulf, dreading the prospect of my upcoming integral exam, or even studying Darwin in Biology.

    All these years later, as I ponder my defining characteristics and core values, I recognize that it is my time to become the butterfly — to embody Darwin’s words and face life with the courage to create change as I break free from my cocoon and enter the long-awaited adult world.

    Professional Review by HS2 Academy

    This piece is quite touching, as it deftly crafts a delicate and nuanced picture of Sean’s lifelong connection with the butterfly. It is playful (“my new friend Bloo”) while also profoundly introspective. It starts out effectively with a thought-provoking hook. After all, how many people would think to envy a butterfly? But the essay quickly picks up pace and shows how the butterfly truly is a perfect symbol for Sean’s own metamorphosis into a true leader and agent of change.

    The essay works on so many levels because it utilizes an extended metaphor that aptly describes many parallels with Sean's life.

    The essay works on so many levels because it utilizes an extended metaphor that aptly describes many parallels with Sean’s life. Oftentimes, many college essays utilize figurative language, but the connection with the narrative of that student’s life tends to be rather superficial. The idea of a butterfly emerging from a cocoon may seem a bit cliche as an image of a student’s transformation, but Sean’s essay goes deeper, in part because of a parallel with Sean’s own struggles with their queer identity. Phrases like using his wings to “glide far above the dainty and fragile stereotypes placed on him by society” powerfully capture Sean’s own journey from an insecure child to an advocate for social justice and equality in medicine.

    We learn that Sean has truly found inspiration in the butterfly, rising above struggles with self-identity to become a principled leader with a genuine desire to fight injustice. The qualities Sean demonstrates—determination over adversity, passion for equality and justice—would be a welcome addition to any college community.

    HS2 Button

    Harvard University

    35 Harvard Essays That Worked

    Updated for the 2024-2025 admissions cycle.

    .css-1l736oi{display:-webkit-box;display:-webkit-flex;display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;-webkit-align-items:center;-webkit-box-align:center;-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center;gap:var(--chakra-space-4);font-family:var(--chakra-fonts-heading);} .css-1dkm51f{border-radius:var(--chakra-radii-full);border:1px solid black;} .css-1wp7s2d{margin:var(--chakra-space-3);position:relative;width:1em;height:1em;} .css-cfkose{display:inline;width:1em;height:1em;} About Harvard .css-17xejub{-webkit-flex:1;-ms-flex:1;flex:1;justify-self:stretch;-webkit-align-self:stretch;-ms-flex-item-align:stretch;align-self:stretch;}

    One of the most prestigious universities in the world, Harvard University is the United States’ oldest college. Steeped in a rich 400 year history, Harvard's rich academic and research environment has fostered some of the world's brightest minds. Students at this Cambridge-based school have access to a world-class education and a community with exceptional talents, resources, and connections. Indeed, Harvard’s alumni includes presidents, billionaires, and award-winning researchers. Motivated students and passionate faculty members make it possible for Harvard's students to pursue their passions and gain the experience they need to realize their goals and make the world a better place.

    Unique traditions at Harvard

    1. Veritas Shield: This is a traditional shield awarded to incoming freshmen before their first academic year and bearing the Latin phrase "Veritas," which means "Truth." 2. Primus Cambridge: The oldest and longest-lasting student society of Harvard, founded in 1650 and based on the ancient Greek concept of peer-mentoring and motivation. 3. Senior Voices: One of the more recent traditions, this is an event at Harvard where senior members of the student body speak to emerging leaders of the university and offer advice, stories, and inspiring words. 4. Harvard-Yale Regatta: This is an annual rowing race between Harvard and Yale that has been taking place since 1852. It’s the oldest inter-university sports competition in the United States. 5. Immersion Experience: Started in 2002, first-year Harvard students are grouped together and given a social action project to complete, such as building a playground, teaching literacy classes to local children, etc.

    Programs at Harvard

    1. Investment Analysis Group: An undergraduate student-run organization that provides investment research on publicly traded companies and offers members the opportunity to cultivate their knowledge of finance and capital markets. 2. Harvard Foundations of Humanitarian Operations and Practice (FHOoP) Program: A partnership between Harvard and six other institutions that provides integrated instruction and experiential learning for students in the fields of humanitarian relief and international development. 3. Harvard Latino Law Review: A student-run online publication featuring articles, essays, and reviews from students and practicing professionals from both the academic and legal field on Latino issues and legal developments. 4. Harvard Model United Nations: An annual international relations simulation for university students to gain a better understanding of the global political landscape. 5. Harvard Robotics Club: A student-run organization that provides resources and mentorship to students interested in designing, building, and programming robots and robotic systems.

    At a glance…

    Acceptance Rate

    Average Cost

    Average SAT

    Average ACT

    Cambridge, MA

    Real Essays from Harvard Admits

    Prompt: your intellectual life may extend beyond the academic requirements of your particular school. please use the space below to list additional intellectual activities that you have not mentioned or detailed elsewhere in your application. these could include, but are not limited to, supervised or self-directed projects not done as school work, training experiences, online courses not run by your school, or summer academic or research programs not described elsewhere..

    Leisure Reading: Silent Spring—Rachel Carson The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy—Douglas Adams The Old Man and the Sea—Ernest Hemingway Blood Meridian, The Road—Cormac McCarthy Die Welt von Gestern—Stefan Zweig Cicero—Anthony Everret Independent research: Used GIS mapping and Berkeley’s Transportation Injury Mapping System to analyze traffic collision data in my city. Books: The Death and Life of Great American Cities—Jane Jacobs The Color of Law—Richard Rothstein Bicycle/Race: Transportation, Culture, & Resistance—Andonia E. Lugo Historical research areas from hours perusing Wikipedia, YouTube, and scholarly articles: 19th Century Urbanism and the Sanitation Revolution Implications of the Sykes-Picot Agreement and the British betrayal of the Hashemites Mexican President Lázaro Cárdenas’ nationalization of Mexican oil and foundation of PEMEX Mercantilism and how it stunted Iberian colonies’ development post-independence Fall of the Roman Republic Norman Conquest of England The Trial of Charles I CA Dominguez, Victor CEEB: 050438 Fall 2023 15 FY RD CAID: 34107877 Risorgimento Among others.

    Profile picture

    Essay by Víctor

    i love cities <3

    .css-310tx6{display:-webkit-box;display:-webkit-flex;display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;-webkit-align-items:center;-webkit-box-align:center;-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center;-webkit-box-pack:center;-ms-flex-pack:center;-webkit-justify-content:center;justify-content:center;text-align:center;gap:var(--chakra-space-4);} Find an essay from your twin at Harvard .css-1dkm51f{border-radius:var(--chakra-radii-full);border:1px solid black;} .css-1wp7s2d{margin:var(--chakra-space-3);position:relative;width:1em;height:1em;} .css-cfkose{display:inline;width:1em;height:1em;}

    Someone with the same interests, stats, and background as you

    Harvard University Essay Examples (And Why They Worked)

    The following essay examples were written by several different authors who were admitted to Harvard University and are intended to provide examples of successful Harvard University application essays. All names have been redacted for anonymity. Please note that Bullseye Admissions has shared these essays with admissions officers at Harvard University in order to deter potential plagiarism.

    For more help with your Harvard supplemental essays, check out our 2020-2021 Harvard University Essay Guide ! For more guidance on personal essays and the college application process in general, sign up for a monthly plan to work with an admissions coach 1-on-1.

    Please briefly elaborate on one of your extracurricular activities or work experiences. (50-150 words)

    Feet moving, eyes up, every shot back, chants the silent mantra in my head. The ball becomes a beacon of neon green as I dart forward and backward, shuffling from corner to far corner of the court, determined not to let a single point escape me. With bated breath, I swing my racquet upwards and outwards and it catches the ball just in time to propel it, spinning, over the net. My heart soars as my grinning teammates cheer from the sidelines.

    While I greatly value the endurance, tenacity, and persistence that I have developed while playing tennis throughout the last four years, I will always most cherish the bonds that I have created and maintained each year with my team.

    Why this Harvard essay worked: From an ex-admissions officer

    When responding to short essays or supplements, it can be difficult to know which info to include or omit. In this essay, the writer wastes no time and immediately captivates the reader. Not only are the descriptions vivid and compelling, but the second portion highlights what the writer gained from this activity. As an admissions officer, I learned about the student’s level of commitment, leadership abilities, resiliency, ability to cooperate with others, and writing abilities in 150 words.

    I founded Teen Court at [High School Name Redacted] with my older brother in 2016. Teen Court is a unique collaboration with the Los Angeles Superior Court and Probation Department, trying real first-time juvenile offenders from all over Los Angeles in a courtroom setting with teen jurors. Teen Court’s foundational principle is restorative justice: we seek to rehabilitate at-risk minors rather than simply punish them. My work provides my peers the opportunity to learn about the justice system. I put in over fifty hours just as Secretary logging court attendance, and now as President, I mentor Teen Court attendees. My goal is to improve their empathy and courage in public speaking, and to expand their world view. People routinely tell me their experience with Teen Court has inspired them to explore law, and I know the effort I devoted bringing this club to [High School Name Redacted] was well worth it.

    This writer discussed a passion project with a long-lasting impact. As admissions officers, we realize that post-secondary education will likely change the trajectory of your life. We hope that your education will also inspire you to change the trajectory of someone else’s life as well. This writer developed an organization that will have far-reaching impacts for both the juvenile offenders and the attendees. They saw the need for this service and initiated a program to improve their community. College Admissions Quiz: If you’re planning on applying to Harvard, you’ll want to be as prepared as possible. Take our quiz below to put your college admissions knowledge to the test!

    Harvard University Supplemental Essay Option: Books Read During the Last Twelve Months

    Reading Frankenstein in ninth grade changed my relationship to classic literature. In Frankenstein , I found characters and issues that resonate in a modern context, and I began to explore the literary canon outside of the classroom. During tenth grade, I picked up Jane Eyre and fell in love with the novel’s non-traditional heroine whose agency and cleverness far surpassed anything that I would have imagined coming from the 19th century. I have read the books listed below in the past year.

    • Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Purple Hibiscus *
    • Aravind Adiga, The White Tiger *
    • Jane Austen, Sense and Sensibility
    • Aphra Behn, The Fair Jilt ♰
    • Mongo Beti, Mission Terminée * (in French)
    • Kate Chopin, The Awakening
    • Arthur Conan-Doyle, A Study in Scarlet
    • Kamel Daoud, Meursault, contre-enquête * (in French)
    • Roddy Doyle, A Star Called Henry *
    • Mircea Eliade, The Sacred and the Profane *
    • Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man
    • William Faulkner, As I Lay Dying *
    • Gustave Flaubert, Madame Bovary
    • E. M. Forster, Maurice
    • E. M. Forster, A Passage to India
    • E. M. Forster, Where Angels Fear to Tread
    • Eliza Haywood, The City Jilt ♰
    • Homer, The Iliad
    • Christopher Isherwood, All The Conspirators
    • Christopher Isherwood, A Meeting by the River
    • Christopher Isherwood, Sally Bowles
    • Christopher Isherwood, A Single Man
    • Shirley Jackson, We Have Always Lived in the Castle
    • James Joyce, Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
    • Franz Kafka, The Metamorphosis
    • Franz Kafka, The Trial
    • Jhumpa Lahiri, Interpreter of Maladies *
    • Morrissey, Autobiography
    • Rudolph Otto, The Idea of the Holy *
    • Boris Pasternak, Doctor Zhivago
    • Charlotte Perkins-Gilman, Herland
    • Marcel Proust, Swann’s Way
    • Marcel Proust, Within a Budding Grove
    • Mary Renault, Fire From Heaven
    • Mary Renault, The Friendly Young Ladies
    • Mary Renault, The King Must Die
    • Mary Renault, The Persian Boy
    • J. K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child
    • Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Terre des hommes * (in French)
    • Shakespeare, Hamlet *
    • Mary Shelley, The Last Man
    • Tom Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead *
    • Kurt Vonnegut, Breakfast of Champions
    • Kurt Vonnegut, The Sirens of Titan
    • Evelyn Waugh, Brideshead Revisited
    • Evelyn Waugh, Scoop
    • Evelyn Waugh, Vile Bodies
    • Jeanette Winterson, The Passion
    • Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary: A Fiction ♰
    • Mary Wollstonecraft, Vindication of the Rights of Woman ♰
    • Virginia Woolf, A Haunted House and Other Stories
    • * indicates assigned reading
    • ♰ indicates independent study reading

    Harvard University Supplemental Essay Option: What would you want your future college roommate to know about you? (No word limit)

    Hi Roomie!!!!

    You probably have noticed that I put four exclamation points. Yes, I am that excited to meet you, roomie!

    Also, I don’t believe in the Rule of Three. It’s completely unfair that three is always the most commonly used number. Am I biased in my feelings because four is my favorite number? Perhaps. However, you have to admit that our reason for the Rule of Three is kinda arbitrary. The Rule of Three states that a trio of events is more effective and satisfying than any other numbers. Still, the human psyche is easily manipulated through socially constructed perceptions such as beauty standards and gender roles. Is having three of everything actually influential or is it only influential because society says so? Hmm, it’s interesting to think about it, isn’t it?

    But if you’re an avid follower of the Rule of three, don’t worry, I won’t judge. In fact, if there’s one thing I can promise you I will never do, it’s being judgmental. Life is too short to go around judging people. Besides, judgments are always based on socially constructed beliefs. With so many backgrounds present on campus, it really would be unfair if we start going around judging people based on our own limited beliefs. My personal philosophy is “Mind your own business and let people be,” So, if you have a quirk that you’re worrying is too “weird” and are afraid your roommate might be too judgy, rest assured, I won’t be.

    In fact, thanks to my non-judginess, I am an excellent listener. If you ever need to rant with someone about stressful classes, harsh gradings, or the new ridiculous plot twists of your favorite TV show (*cough* Riverdale), I am always available.

    Now, I know what you are thinking. A non-judgmental and open-minded roommate? This sounds too good to be true. This girl’s probably a secret villain waiting to hear all my deepest and darkest secrets and blackmail me with them!

    Well, I promise you. I am not a secret villain. I am just someone who knows how important it is to be listened to and understood.

    I grew up under the communist regime of Vietnam, where freedom of speech and thought was heavily suppressed. Since childhood, I was taught to keep my opinion to myself, especially if it is contradictory to the government’s. No matter how strongly I felt about an issue, I could never voice my true opinion nor do anything about it. Or else, my family and I would face oppression from the Vietnamese government.

    After immigrating to America, I have made it my mission to fight for human rights and justice. Back in Vietnam, I have let fear keep me from doing the right thing. Now, in the land of freedom, I won’t use that excuse anymore. I can finally be myself and fight for what I believe in. However, I can still remember how suffocating it was to keep my beliefs bottled up and to be silenced. Trust me, a conversation may not seem much, but it can do wonders. So, if you ever need a listener, know that I am right here.

    See, I just shared with you a deep secret of mine. What secret villain would do that?

    See ya soon!!!!!

    [Name redacted] : )

    P/S: I really love writing postscripts. So, I hope you won’t find it weird when I always end my emails, letters, and even texts with a P/S. Bye for real this time!!!!!

    Harvard University Supplemental Essay Option: Unusual circumstances in your life

    I would like the Harvard Admissions Committee to know that my life circumstances are far from typical. I was born at twenty-four weeks gestation, which eighteen years ago was on the cusp of viability. Even if I was born today, under those same circumstances, my prospects for leading a normal life would be grim. Eighteen years ago, those odds were worse, and I was given a less than 5% chance of survival without suffering major cognitive and physical deficits.

    The first six months of my life were spent in a large neonatal ICU in Canada. I spent most of that time in an incubator, kept breathing by a ventilator. When I was finally discharged home, it was with a feeding tube and oxygen, and it would be several more months before I was able to survive without the extra tubes connected to me. At the age of two, I was still unable to walk. I engaged in every conventional and non-conventional therapy available to me, including physical and speech therapy, massage therapy, gymnastics, and several nutritional plans, to try to remedy this. Slowly, I began to make progress in what would be a long and arduous journey towards recovery.

    Some of my earliest childhood memories are of repeated, often unsuccessful attempts to grip a large-diameter crayon since I was unable to hold a regular pencil. I would attempt to scrawl out letters on a page to form words, fueled by either determination or outright stubbornness, persevering until I improved. I spent countless hours trying to control my gait, eventually learning to walk normally and proving the doctors wrong about their diagnoses. I also had to learn how to swallow without aspirating because the frequent intubations I had experienced as an infant left me with a uncoordinated swallow reflex. Perhaps most prominently, I remember becoming very winded as I tried to keep up with my elementary school peers on the playground and the frustration I experienced when I failed.

    Little by little, my body’s tolerance for physical exertion grew, and my coordination improved. I enrolled in martial arts to learn how to keep my balance and to develop muscle coordination and an awareness of where my limbs were at any given time. I also became immersed in competition among my elementary school peers to determine which one of us could become the most accomplished on the recorder. For each piece of music played correctly, a “belt” was awarded in the form of a brightly colored piece of yarn tied around the bottom of our recorders- meant as symbols of our achievement. Despite the challenges I had in generating and controlling enough air, I practiced relentlessly, often going in before school or during my lunch hour to obtain the next increasingly difficult musical piece. By the time the competition concluded, I had broken the school record of how far an elementary school child could advance; in doing so, my love of instrumental music and my appreciation for the value of hard work and determination was born.

    Throughout my middle and high school years, I have succeeded at the very highest level both academically and musically. I was even able to find a sport that I excelled at and would later be able to use as an avenue for helping others, volunteering as an assistant coach once I entered high school. I have mentored dozens of my high school peers in developing trumpet skills, teaching them how to control one’s breathing during musical phrases and how to develop effective fingering techniques in order to perform challenging passages. I believe that my positive attitude and hard work has allowed for not only my own success, but for the growth and success of my peers as well.

    My scholastic and musical achievements, as well as my leadership abilities and potential to succeed at the highest level will hopefully be readily apparent to the committee when you review my application. Perhaps more importantly, however, is the behind-the-scenes character traits that have made these possible. I believe that I can conquer any challenge put in front of me. My past achievements provide testimony to my work ethic, aptitudes and grit, and are predictive of my future potential.

    Thank you for your consideration.

    In this essay, the writer highlighted their resilience. At some point, we will all endure challenges and struggles, but it is how we redeem ourselves that matters. This writer highlighted their initial struggles, their dedication and commitment, and the ways in which they’ve used those challenges as inspiration and motivation to persevere and also to encourage others to do the same.

    Harvard University Supplemental Essay Option: An intellectual experience (course, project, book, discussion, paper, poetry, or research topic in engineering, mathematics, science or other modes of inquiry) that has meant the most to you.

    I want to be a part of something amazing, and I believe I can. The first line of the chorus springs into my mind instantaneously as my fingers experiment with chords on the piano. In this moment, as I compose the protagonist’s solo number, I speak from my heart. I envision the stage and set, the actors, the orchestra, even the audience. Growing increasingly excited, I promptly begin to create recordings so I can release the music from the confines of my imagination and share it with any willing ears.

    My brother [name redacted] and I are in the process of writing a full-length, two-act musical comprised of original scenes, songs, characters. I began creating the show not only because I love to write music and entertain my friends and family, but also with the hope that I might change the way my peers view society. Through Joan, the protagonist of my musical, I want to communicate how I feel about the world.

    The story centers around Joan, a high schooler, and her connection to the pilot Amelia Earhart. Ever since I saw a theatrical rendition of Amelia Earhart’s life in fifth grade, she has fascinated me as an extraordinary feminist and a challenger of society’s beliefs and standards. As I began researching and writing for the show, I perused through biographies and clicked through countless youtube documentaries about the first woman to fly across the Atlantic, astounded by her bravery and ability to overcome a troubled childhood and achieve her dream. In my musical, as Amelia transcends 20th century norms, changing the way that people regard women and flight, Joan strives to convince her peers and superiors that the worth of one’s life spans not from material success and grades, but from self-love and passion.

    As I compose, the essence of each character and the mood of each scene steer the flow of each song. To me, it seems as though everything falls into place at once – as I pluck a melody out of the air, the lyrics come to me naturally as if the two have been paired all along. As I listen to the newly born principal line, I hear the tremolo of strings underscoring and the blaring of a brass section that may someday audibly punctuate each musical phrase.

    The project is certainly one of the most daunting tasks I’ve ever undertaken – we’ve been working on it for almost a year, and hope to be done by January – but, fueled by my passion for creating music and writing, it is also one of the most enjoyable. I dream that it may be performed one day and that it may influence society to appreciate the success that enthusiasm for one’s relationships and work can bring.

    These essay examples were compiled by the advising team at Bullseye Admissions. If you want to get help writing your Harvard University application essays from Bullseye Admissions advisors , register with Bullseye today .

    Personalized and effective college advising for high school students.

    • Advisor Application
    • Popular Colleges
    • Privacy Policy and Cookie Notice
    • Student Login
    • California Privacy Notice
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Your Privacy Choices

    By using the College Advisor site and/or working with College Advisor, you agree to our updated Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy , including an arbitration clause that covers any disputes relating to our policies and your use of our products and services.

    harvard essay to yale

    • Statement of Purpose Samples
    • Letter of Recommendation Samples
    • IELTS Tips & Tricks
    • TOEFL Tips & Tricks
    • German Grade Calculator
    • Travel & Living
    • Scholarship

    OnlineMacha

    • Destination Abroad
    • Best Statement of Purpose Samples
    • Study Abroad Blog
    • Study in Germany
    • Study in the USA

    This Essay Got a Student Accepted into Harvard, Yale, & MIT

    onlinemacha SOP Samples and Writing Services

    Harvard University freshman Brenden Rodriquez is immersed in the strenuous course load required of his mechanical engineering major. But before he was accepted to the prestigious Ivy League school, he had to first navigate the tricky aspect of writing a stellar admissions essay.

    His hard work certainly paid off. In addition to Harvard, he gained acceptances at Yale, MIT, Columbia and the University of Virginia. Rodriquez brilliantly merged two of his passions — music and math — to explain how each has shaped his life and improved his happiness.

    He graciously shared his admissions essay with Business Insider, which they have reprinted verbatim below.

    I think about the converging waves of the notes I play, the standing waves being created by plucking a string, and the physics behind the air pockets being forged that eventually find a listening ear whenever I sit down to play my bass. Thus, my passions of math and music synergistically become more together than they could ever be apart. I started thinking about this when a former math teacher of mine approached me one afternoon and asked me if I was interested in giving the induction speech at the Mu Alpha Theta induction ceremony. Being a member of the honor society and recounting the memorable induction speech given the year prior at my own induction, I wholeheartedly agreed. I decided on the topic of music and math because I play upright bass in the orchestra and electric bass in the jazz ensemble and being a math enthusiast, it is impossible for me not to see the mathematics and physics present in music. At music’s core, math is present in the tempo and rhythm of a piece, with the time signature being represented as a fraction and the tempo being represented by a numerical value in beats per minute. The relationship between the two gets even more intriguing when applied to actual notes being played. The best sounding music is that which uses flawless mathematics.

    It is common knowledge that each note has a letter name—A through G—but also has a number value, measured in hertz. An A4 for instance is 440 hertz. In Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata, ” there exist triads in triplet form. These triads are made up of D, F#, and A. Since sound is a vibrational energy, notes can be graphed as sine functions. When the triad notes are graphed, they intersect at their starting point and at the point 0.042. At this point the D has gone through two full cycles, the F# two and a half, and the A three. This results in consonance, something that sounds naturally pleasant to the ear. Thinking about this opened my eyes to all the aspects of my life with which I utilize math to enhance. There is also an incredible amount of unseen math present in football. At 5 foot 10 inches and 160 pounds with pads on, I fall short of the average player at my position who is usually at least 6 feet tall and well over 200 pounds, so applying math to football is intellectually stimulating, but is more importantly a survival mechanism.

    When I have to go up against an opponent who is over twice my size and looks like he eats freshmen for lunch, brute force is not on my side and it helps having equations for momentum and attack angle running through my head. Math not only helps me survive, but also thrive. As an opponent running back is darting down the sideline with seemingly cheetah-like speed, I can trust that my angles and velocity will allow me to make the play and possibly save a game-changing touchdown. Or when a ball is sailing through the air caught in the stadium lights, I can picture a projectile motion problem with constant acceleration downward and a near constant velocity in the x-direction, and know that I have a leg up on the player next to me who does not think about it the way I do. When I look at aspects of my life in a math context, they make more sense and make things that I love even better and more enjoyable.

    RELATED ARTICLES MORE FROM AUTHOR

    Securing scholarships and aid for u.s. colleges: a comprehensive guide, overcoming canadian visa rejection: key tips for drafting an effective justification essay, indian students showing growing preference for private universities in germany.

    this was brilliant. just.

    Mind blowing!!!

    to be very honest the selection team reading over a thousand letters have deviated them from the true reason of selection behind the so-called purpose . This makes people think that cows can shit rainbows. The true motive should be to assert a point but again writing a letter on my terms will suggest be factual and wouldn’t please anyone and certainly no faculty will be awed by it. Hence writing such content gives a shot at being different. I guess being true to one’s instinct isn’t valued anymore.

    LEAVE A REPLY Cancel reply

    Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

    Spring & Winter 2017-2018 Deadlines for MS in US

    All about sevis for f1 us visa, universities in usa for masters – ms in usa, ms in us without gre, mba vs masters in management (mim).

    • Terms & Conditions
    • Privacy Policy

    Ads Blocker Image Powered by Code Help Pro

    Ads Blocker Detected!!!

    We have detected that you are using extensions to block ads. Please support us by disabling these ads blocker.

    Get 10% OFF on orders above ₹1500 by using the code: HEYOFF10. Order now Dismiss

    What is the fee for H1B Visa

    Sop sample for automation & it engineering, covid news: 2020 deadlines and application processes for german universities.

    • Senior Living
    • Wedding Experts
    • Private Schools
    • Home Design Experts
    • Real Estate Agents
    • Mortgage Professionals
    • Find a Private School
    • 50 Best Restaurants
    • Be Well Boston
    • Find a Dentist
    • Find a Doctor
    • Guides & Advice
    • Best of Boston Weddings
    • Find a Wedding Expert
    • Real Weddings
    • Bubbly Brunch Event
    • Properties & News
    • Find a Home Design Expert
    • Find a Real Estate Agent
    • Find a Mortgage Professional
    • Real Estate
    • Home Design
    • Best of Boston Home
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Boston magazine Events
    • Latest Winners
    • Best of Boston Soirée
    • NEWSLETTERS

    If you're a human and see this, please ignore it. If you're a scraper, please click the link below :-) Note that clicking the link below will block access to this site for 24 hours.

    Student Turns Down Acceptance to Yale After Writing Essay About Papa John’s Pizza

    Get a compelling long read and must-have lifestyle tips in your inbox every sunday morning — great with coffee.

    harvard essay to yale

    Photo by Moresheth on Flickr/ Creative Commons

    A high school student turned down an offer to attend Yale, after an unconventional application essay helped catch the Ivy’s eye.

    Carolina Williams, a graduate of the Ravenwood High School of Brentwood, Tennessee, placed in the top 10 in her class and participated in a slew of extracurriculars. But where Williams truly stood out was her response to a short essay prompt about something she enjoys doing. Her answer? Ordering Papa John’s pizza.

    I just want @PapaJohns to know that I wrote a college essay about how much I love to order their pizza and it got me into Yale 🍕👌 pic.twitter.com/lDlzEErHCn — Carolina Williams (@justcarolina22) May 9, 2017

    “Honestly, I thought I should go with the first thing that popped in my head,” Williams, who will be the first in her family to attend college,  told the Tennessean . “It was completely genuine.” From her essay:

    The sound my doorbell starts off high, then the pitch mellows out, and the whole effect mimics an instrumental interpretation of rain finally finding a steady pace at which to fall. I have spent several minutes analyzing its tone because I have had many opportunities to do so, as one thing I love to do is order pizza and have it delivered to my house. When the delivery person rings my doorbell, I instantly morph into one of Pavlov’s dogs, salivating to the sound that signals the arrival of the cheesy, circular glory. It smells like celebration, as I love to rejoice a happy occasion by calling Papa John’s for my favorite food. It tastes like comfort, since having pizza delivered to my quiet home is a way for me to unwind. It looks like self-sufficiency, because when I was younger, ordering pizza made me feel grown-up, and it still provides that satisfaction for my child at heart. Accepting those warm cardboard boxes at my front door is second nature to me, but I will always love ordering pizza because of the way eight slices of something so ordinary are able to evoke feelings of independence, consolation, and joy.

    Alack, Williams turned down Yale’s offer and will instead attend Auburn University this fall. There, she intends to major in business and minor in economics. Who knows, maybe there will be a spot waiting for her someday in the Papa John’s C-suite.

    • Connecticut

    harvard essay to yale

    50 Years of ‘Best of Boston’: City Life

    harvard essay to yale

    An Early-Risers Guide to Boston

    harvard essay to yale

    How To Save the Planet

    Page not found – Boston Magazine

    Our guide to the 12 best restaurants on nantucket, the 13 best restaurants on martha’s vineyard right now, so, you want to live in chatham, oral history: the 1999 all-star baseball game that saved fenway, in this section.

    harvard essay to yale

    A Filipino student got into Harvard, Princeton, Yale with full financial aid—here's how he did it

    By Ratziel San Juan Published Apr 18, 2023 10:38 am Updated Apr 18, 2023 11:11 am

    Carl Audric Guia caught the country's attention after posting that he got accepted into three of the "most selective schools" in the world: Harvard, Princeton, and Yale.

    He got into these Ivy League institutions as well as other prestigious universities abroad that were all willing to cover his expenses. Though the schools that accepted him didn't have named scholarships, he received financial aid awards covering tuition, housing, food, travel, and even health insurance.

    "That just means the award depends on how much you and your family asked for, and these universities try their best to ensure that finances are not a barrier to getting an education," Carl told PhilSTAR L!fe .

    The problem for him is no longer getting into one of his dream universities. Rather, it's about choosing which one.

    "As of the moment, I have yet to officially commit to a school. Now that finances are out of the way, my ideal school would have a strong astrophysics program and broad research opportunities. Academically speaking, the schools that accepted me are all top-notch, so I guess my decision would come from the littlest things like vibes, community, and frankly, gut feeling," Carl explained.

    Doing well in school will get your foot in the door, but grades and test scores might not always be enough. It's also important to showcase your personality.

    Carl attends the University of the Philippines Rural High School, where he is just as active in extracurriculars as he is in academics.

    Having developed an early interest in astronomy and intending to study astrophysics, Carl engaged in various STEM projects and competitions. This showed that he made consistent efforts to follow his passions even before applying for college.

    For him, this paid off when he worked on the application processes for his target universities, which usually required from the applicant a list of their activities and awards in high school, on top of the standard things like grades, test scores, and recommendations.

    "Doing well in school will get your foot in the door, but grades and test scores might not always be enough. It's also important to showcase your personality, and the best way to do this is by pursuing activities that genuinely interest you. I guess finding out about your interests and having the initiative to pursue them can go a long way," Carl advised.

    Of course, there were also essays that ranged anywhere from 650 words to as short as 200 characters.

    "These schools genuinely want to know your way of thinking and your personality, so the challenge is highlighting what's special about you beyond your grades and achievements," Carl shared.

    He acknowledged that the process might seem intimidating for many, as it did for him, but he clarified that there is help all around if one knows where to look for it: "I am so grateful to be mentored by non-profit organizations like CAUSE Philippines and EducationUSA. They both have super hands-on mentors who guided me every step of the way. And of course, reach out! There's no doubt that the entire process of applying to college is difficult, so you'd want all the help you can get."

    As for studying tips, Carl confessed that he really doesn't have an elaborate strategy when reviewing.

    "For example, in math or science, I just look up practice exams online and try to answer as many questions as possible. That way, I can really make sure that I can face any problem thrown at me during an exam. When it comes to memorization though, flashcards can be a great tool. But then again, this is my learning style, so don't be afraid to experiment," Carl said.

    Carl is set to graduate from high school in July 2023. 

    TAGS: Pinoy Pride school stanford college harvard universities Yale Princeton

    Ratziel San Juan

    Ratziel covers all things pop culture for PhilSTAR L!fe. Off work, he binge eats, watches, or plays whatever he wants at the moment.

    Yale Daily News

    Instagram icon

    Harvard drops SAT, ACT essay

    Staff Reporter

    Harvard announced last week that it would no longer require students to submit scores from the optional essay sections of either the SAT or the ACT, as colleges across the country continue re-evaluating their testing requirements for applicants.

    Yale is one of just 28 schools that currently require applicants to submit scores from the essay portion of a standardized test, According to the Princeton Review.

    Since the March 2016 launch of the completely redesigned SAT, which made the essay optional, and the changes made to the writing portion of the ACT in September 2015, many universities across the country have reconsidered their testing requirements. With its new policy, Harvard joins several peer institutions, some of which stopped requiring students to submit scores from the essay portion as early as 2015, including Columbia, Cornell and the University of Pennsylvania.

    “This change will add an additional component to the comprehensive outreach of the Harvard Financial Aid Initiative, which seeks outstanding students from all economic backgrounds,” Harvard College spokesperson Rachael Dane wrote in a statement announcing the new policy.

    Several other schools, including Columbia, have also said that dropping the essay requirement removes a barrier for lower-income students wishing to apply to college. Taking the SAT with the essay portion costs $14 more than without, while the ACT Plus Writing costs $16.50 more than without. Additionally, some states that allow students to sit for the SAT or ACT during the school day free of charge offer both tests without the essay portion — including Connecticut.

    Other schools that dropped the requirement argued that the essay portion is not a good predictor of students’ academic success in college. When the University of Pennsylvania changed its policy in 2015, Eric Furda, the university’s dean of admissions, said that the school’s “internal analysis as well as a review of the extensive research provided by the College Board showed that the essay component of the SAT was the least predictive element” of the overall writing section.

    But whether or not the essay portion of the standardized tests is a good predictor of students’ success in college is a long-standing question and one the College Board addressed when it announced the details of the redesigned SAT in 2015.

    “While the writing work that students do in the Evidence-Based Reading and Writing area of the exam is strongly predictive of college and career readiness and success, one single essay historically has not contributed significantly to the overall predictive power of the exam,” the College Board wrote. “Feedback from hundreds of member admission officers was divided: some respondents found the essay useful, but many did not.”

    Yale has changed its testing requirements in response to the changes to the SAT and ACT in 2015, according to Yale’s Dean of Undergraduate Admissions and Financial Aid Jeremiah Quinlan.

    Before the changes to the SAT were announced, Yale required that students submit either the SAT, along with any two SAT Subject Tests or the ACT with Writing. In 2015, however, Yale changed its policy to require that students take either the SAT with the essay section or ACT with Writing. The University now only “recommends” taking the SAT Subject Tests.

    Applicants to the Class of 2022 were the last cohort permitted to submit scores from the old SAT as part of their applications, according to the Admissions Office’s website. Quinlan said the University annually evaluates its testing policy.

    He said the Admissions Office has worked closely with Yale’s Office of Institutional Research to evaluate how well the scores for the old essay portions of both the SAT and the ACT predicted students’ academic success in college. The offices found a “predictive validity” — which refers to how well a certain measure can predict future behavior — between higher essay scores and the academic success of students at Yale. Since the Admissions Office can look at the essays students write as part of their standardized tests, Quinlan added, they are sometimes also “a valuable tool” to assess how well students can write analytically.

    “In an ideal world, we would give ourselves a couple more years before we change the testing policy again because right now the first class to take the new SAT and ACT in large numbers is the current first-year class,” he said, adding that this makes it difficult to evaluate the predictive power of the new essay portions of the SAT and ACT.

    While the issue of exam costs is “something [the Admissions Office] definitely considers,” Quinlan said, both the SAT and ACT have generous fee waiver policies, which mean that even lower-income students whose schools do not offer the exam with the essay portion free of charge are able to take the exam as required by Yale. He added that as long as students sit for at least one test with the essay component, they can submit scores from other sittings without the optional essay portion, and that Yale considers students’ highest scores for all portions.

    The College Board first started offering an essay on the SAT in 2005.

    Anastasiia Posnova |  [email protected]

    • Traditional-Age

    Dropping the SAT Essay

    By  Scott Jaschik

    You have / 5 articles left. Sign up for a free account or log in.

    Yale University last week notified counselors who work with high school students that the university will no longer require applicants to complete the SAT essay or the ACT writing test.

    A memo Yale sent to counselors said the university wanted to make the application process easier on those who take the SAT or ACT during school hours. Those administrations frequently do not give students time for the writing test, so students had to register for the test another time to complete the writing test.

    The move comes three months after Harvard University announced that it was making the SAT essay or ACT writing test optional. Harvard's announcement noted that its applicants submit essays as part of their applications, so writing remains a crucial part of the application process.

    While the moves by institutions such as Harvard and Yale capture attention, they reflect a more general disinclination of admissions leaders toward the writing tests of the SAT and ACT. The Princeton Review, which tracks how many colleges require the test, now identifies only 25 institutions that do so. Those that have already dropped the requirement include Columbia and Cornell Universities, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology , and the University of Pennsylvania .

    The University of San Diego also recently announced it would no longer require the SAT essay or ACT writing test. Stephen Pultz, assistant vice president for enrollment management at San Diego, said via email that "we decided the writing sections were not reliable measures for placement purposes, which is how we originally envisioned their use. We’ve had better success using the other sections of the exams, Advanced Placement exams, and high school curriculum and grades."

    The College Board first started offering an essay on the SAT in 2005. But many writing experts were highly critical of the format, noting among other things that it did not judge whether statements were factually correct. Les Perelman, an MIT writing professor, famously coached students on how to write ludicrous essays that would receive high scores.

    In 2014, the College Board announced revisions to the SAT -- with substantial changes to the essay , including the use of writing passages to force test takers to cite evidence for opinions in their essays.

    Generally, critics of the first version of the writing test agreed that the new version was better, but some continued to question whether the writing test had enough value to justify leading students to prepare for and take it. Some advocates for the essay hoped the changes would lead more colleges to rely on it as part of the admissions process. But the news from Harvard and Yale, and the lack of interest in adding the writing test as a requirement, suggests that this is not happening.

    On its blog , Princeton Review said after Harvard's decision that the essays should be eliminated from the SAT and ACT. While they are theoretically optional, many students feel pressure to take them (and prepare for them), even though a very small number of colleges actually use the scores.

    "While over 70 percent of students taking the SAT and more than 50 percent taking the ACT opt in to the essay, not even 2 percent of colleges require an essay score," the blog post says. "Students and taxpayers are sending tens of millions of dollars into the College Board’s and ACT’s coffers and don’t appear to be getting anything out of it other than one more source of anxiety when it comes to college applications. It is time for the SAT and ACT essays to go."

    The College Board did not respond to a request for comment on the Yale announcement.

    While Yale still requires applicants to take either the SAT or ACT for the nonwriting parts of the exams, more colleges continue to announce that they are going test optional. Among the colleges in recent weeks announcing these policies are Concordia University (St. Paul), Prescott College and Rider University .

    A picture of closed school doors with an empty hallway beyond.

    Enrollment Planning in the Specter of Closure

    Misunderstandings about enrollment management and changing student needs can make a bad situation worse, Mark Campbel

    Share This Article

    More from traditional-age.

    Two men's faces tranposed on a picture of a government building in orange

    The College Board’s FAFSA Takeover

    The embattled Federal Student Aid office enlisted executives from the nonprofit to help launch next year’s aid form.

    A black man with a beard wearing a suit stands in front of the Supreme Court building

    Affirmative Action Ban’s Impact Is a ‘Black Box’

    Bryan Cook wants to study how the Supreme Court’s affirmative action ruling is affecting diversity in higher ed.

    People walk up a sidewalk next to a brick building

    FAFSA Fiasco Forces Cuts at Small Colleges

    Many small private colleges are surviving quarter to quarter, narrowly avoiding sweeping budget cuts.

    • Become a Member
    • Sign up for Newsletters
    • Learning & Assessment
    • Diversity & Equity
    • Career Development
    • Labor & Unionization
    • Shared Governance
    • Academic Freedom
    • Books & Publishing
    • Financial Aid
    • Residential Life
    • Free Speech
    • Physical & Mental Health
    • Race & Ethnicity
    • Sex & Gender
    • Socioeconomics
    • Adult & Post-Traditional
    • Teaching & Learning
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Digital Publishing
    • Data Analytics
    • Administrative Tech
    • Alternative Credentials
    • Financial Health
    • Cost-Cutting
    • Revenue Strategies
    • Academic Programs
    • Physical Campuses
    • Mergers & Collaboration
    • Fundraising
    • Research Universities
    • Regional Public Universities
    • Community Colleges
    • Private Nonprofit Colleges
    • Minority-Serving Institutions
    • Religious Colleges
    • Women's Colleges
    • Specialized Colleges
    • For-Profit Colleges
    • Executive Leadership
    • Trustees & Regents
    • State Oversight
    • Accreditation
    • Politics & Elections
    • Supreme Court
    • Student Aid Policy
    • Science & Research Policy
    • State Policy
    • Colleges & Localities
    • Employee Satisfaction
    • Remote & Flexible Work
    • Staff Issues
    • Study Abroad
    • International Students in U.S.
    • U.S. Colleges in the World
    • Intellectual Affairs
    • Seeking a Faculty Job
    • Advancing in the Faculty
    • Seeking an Administrative Job
    • Advancing as an Administrator
    • Beyond Transfer
    • Call to Action
    • Confessions of a Community College Dean
    • Higher Ed Gamma
    • Higher Ed Policy
    • Just Explain It to Me!
    • Just Visiting
    • Law, Policy—and IT?
    • Leadership & StratEDgy
    • Leadership in Higher Education
    • Learning Innovation
    • Online: Trending Now
    • Resident Scholar
    • University of Venus
    • Student Voice
    • Academic Life
    • Health & Wellness
    • The College Experience
    • Life After College
    • Academic Minute
    • Weekly Wisdom
    • Reports & Data
    • Quick Takes
    • Advertising & Marketing
    • Consulting Services
    • Data & Insights
    • Hiring & Jobs
    • Event Partnerships

    4 /5 Articles remaining this month.

    Sign up for a free account or log in.

    • Sign Up, It’s FREE

    essay writing service

    What if you cannot choose between Harvard and Yale?

    Harvard and Yale are really one of the first-class Universities on the Earth. Both of them will give you an abundant tuition and possibility to evolve in the sphere you like, but if you have such a big luck to choose between them, which one is finer? Which should become your second home for the next few years and which would have a big impact on your future? Well, if we decide to compare them, there are a lot of advantages and disadvantages for Harvard and Yale, and we will try to think over some of them, and then you will make your right choice. Harvard was creating political and scientific elite of the country for decades (8 presidents and 30 Nobel laureates graduated this University). Yale University is known as excellent for those who choose a humanitarian direction.

    1632811-1280px-yale_universitys_beinecke_rare_book_and_manuscript_library

    Harvard always is one of leaders in QS World University Rankings, and Yale is several steps back Harvard in this Rankings. Here Harvard surpasses Yale at almost all stages, but it should be noted that Yale is also very strong in many subjects. Still Yale has much more academic staff workers per each one student than Harvard. Yale has got the 7th position in this issue, but Harvard is only on 40th place.

    QS World University Rankings made a conclusion about the best teaching of subjects in Universities. Both Harvard and Yale have got leading positions. All Harvard faculties were in top-10 in 2015, its management and social and life sciences, medicine are the best in the whole World. Arts and humanities have got the second position, whilst technology and engineering are only 10th. As well you should choose Harvard if you prefer sport and mathematics.

    Yale has not got such high results. For example, arts and humanities are one of the best subjects in this University and they have only 6th position in the Ranking. Life sciences and medicine are 8th, social sciences and management are 10th, life sciences and engineering are on the 14th step, and natural sciences are the last – just 65th. But it should be mentioned that law science here is on the 4th place, also English literature, modern languages, history, medicine and biological sciences, psychology and politics are in the top-10 .

    harvard7_revised

    Tuition fees

    Tuition fees are the money that you should pay for your education. Of course, that is true that the best universities have got higher fees than others. But we also should consider how expensive charges for accommodation and meals are. Actually tuition fees in Harvard are lower than in Yale. It is about $ US 43 000, whilst fees in Yale is nearby $ US 49 000.But costs for accommodation and meals are lower in Yale. Tuition fees for internationals students also are higher in Yale, but level of tuition fees rising is much lower than in Harvard.

    Financial aid

    A lot of students dream about free education, and many of them can really get it. Some people even cannot believe that such a great number of students can study free, but it is really so. In Harvard nearby 60% of students have financial aid when they study. To obtain it you should provide a certification that annual income of your family is lower that 60%. The University tries to help low-income families. Getting grant is also possible and very profitably. Its sum of money is about $ US 46 000.

    Group of Diverse International Students Celebrating Graduation

    Yale also does not stand apart from student financial problems. It provided 63% of students with grant with the sum $ US 43 898. As well this university also offers free education for students that cannot allow to study in University and pay for it. And also we can add that a large number of students that is 83% graduated the Yale University without student chalk in 2015. So, only you will make your choice about your education. As well we should advice you not to base only on facts when you decide which University will be better for you, but also try to feel which one do you like much. Visit them before you will make your preference, look at the monument of John Harvard, immerse yourself into mystical atmosphere of Yale and after that you for sure will understand which of them is the place of your dream.

    Related posts:

    • What to do to make your student life in London easier
    • A lot of countries ready to provide high quality of education to you
    • Top Chemical Engineering Schools in 2016
    • Available scholarships in New Zealand for studying

    How you can sell your textbooks

    Why you should study in montreal.

    • Academic Essay
    • Admission Essay
    • Application Essay
    • Article Review
    • Bibliography
    • Buy Essay Online
    • College Essay
    • Critical Essay
    • Custom Essay
    • Dissertation Writers
    • Dissertation Writing
    • Do my Essay
    • Essay Scholarships
    • Essay Paper
    • Essay Programming
    • Harvard Essay
    • Help Essay Writing
    • Paper Writer
    • Paper Writing
    • Papers for Sale
    • Professional Essay Writer
    • Research Paper Writing
    • Term Paper Writing
    • Websites to Buy Essays
    • Write My Paper
    • Writing Services Online

    Bagdes

    DARWINessay

    Paper Help

    Call Me Back

    Get the Reddit app

    pinkdiscordlogo

    Join the A2C Discord!

    r/ApplyingToCollege is the premier forum for college admissions questions, advice, and discussions, from college essays and scholarships to college list help and application advice, career guidance, and more.

    yale or harvard?

    • Share full article

    When Progressive Ideals Become a Luxury

    Supported by

    By Rob Henderson

    Video by Lindsay Crouse and Kevin Oliver

    Mr. Henderson is the author of “Troubled: A Memoir of Foster Care, Family, and Social Class.” Ms. Crouse is a producer with Opinion Video, and Mr. Oliver is a video producer and editor.

    In a 2017 Senate hearing, the Harvard sociologist Robert Putnam famously argued, “Rich kids and poor kids now grow up in separate Americas.” Rob Henderson knows this firsthand. His mother was addicted to drugs; he never knew his father. He grew up shuttling among foster homes, where he started drinking beer around age 5 and smoking marijuana at age 9. At age 17 he watched a drunk friend kick a dog off a cliff and knew he had to escape. He enlisted in the Air Force.

    When Henderson got to Yale on the G.I. Bill, he was shocked by the differences between him and his classmates. As he explains in the video above, he learned it was popular for his classmates to hold strong, seemingly progressive views about many of the concerns that shaped his life — drugs, marriage, crime. But they were largely insulated from the consequences of their views. Henderson found that these ideas came to serve as status symbols for the privileged while they, ironically, kept the working class down. He came to call these ideas luxury beliefs.

    Henderson went on to get his Ph.D. at Cambridge and wrote a book about his experiences, “Troubled: A Memoir of Family, Foster Care, and Social Class.” In the video, Henderson argues that these out-of-touch views are all around us, widening our class divide and fueling our fractious politics. And he envisions another way.

    Rob Henderson ( @robkhenderson ) is the author of “Troubled: A Memoir of Foster Care, Family, and Social Class.” Lindsay Crouse is a writer and producer in Opinion. Kevin Oliver is a video editor and producer.

    Opinion Video combines original reporting with creative storytelling to produce visually transformative commentary. Pitch a video guest essay here.

    The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips . And here’s our email: [email protected] .

    Follow the New York Times Opinion section on Facebook , Instagram , TikTok , WhatsApp , X and Threads .

    Advertisement

    Hebrew Bible Interpretation 1

    Hebrew Bible Interpretation 1

    Published: Fall 2021

    Description

    An introduction to the contents of the Hebrew Bible (Pentateuch and Historical Books) and the methods of its interpretation. The course focuses on the development of ancient Israelite biblical literature and religion in its historical and cultural context and on the theological appropriation of the Hebrew Bible for contemporary communities of faith. The course aims to make students aware of the contents of the Hebrew Bible, the history and development of ancient Israel’s literature and religion, the methods of biblical interpretation, and ways of interpreting the Hebrew Bible for modern communities of faith.

    Course Takeaways

    • Explore the Pentateuch and Historical Books while mastering key interpretive methods for understanding these texts.
    • Uncover the historical and cultural background of ancient Israel, illuminating the development of biblical literature and religious practices.
    • Learn to interpret the Hebrew Bible for today's communities of faith, enriching modern spiritual understanding through ancient teachings.

    Asynchronous Online Program

    Meet the Instructors

    faculty profile image

    Joel S. Baden

    Professor of Hebrew Bible; Director, Center for Continuing Education

    Also in this subject

    Journey Of The Universe - Screen shot

    宇宙之旅:展现生命 Journey Conversations: Weaving Knowledge and Action

    A Journey through Western Christianity: from Persecuted Faith to Global Religion (200 - 1650) - Screen shot

    A Journey through Western Christianity: from Persecuted Faith to Global Religion

    Howard Bloch Age of Cathedrals - Screen shot

    Age of Cathedrals

    Professor Tucker and Professor Grim Headshots

    Worldview of Thomas Berry: The Flourishing of the Earth Community

    Michael Che's Love Life: A Guide To His Past And Present Partners

    • 12 Jul 2024
    • housingmarketbooms

    Who is Michael Che's partner? Michael Che is a comedian, writer, and actor who has been a cast member on Saturday Night Live since 2014. He is known for his sharp wit and social commentary. Che is currently in a relationship with writer and producer Jessi Klein.

    Klein is a graduate of Harvard University and the Yale School of Drama. She has written for a number of television shows, including Saturday Night Live, Portlandia, and Difficult People. Klein is also a regular contributor to The New Yorker and The New York Times.

    Che and Klein have been dating since 2017. They live together in New York City with their dog, Chewie.

    Che and Klein are a private couple, but they have occasionally spoken about their relationship in interviews. In a 2018 interview with The New York Times, Che said that Klein is "the funniest person I know." Klein has said that she is attracted to Che's "intelligence and wit."

    Michael Che's Partner

    Michael Che is a comedian, writer, and actor who has been a cast member on Saturday Night Live since 2014. He is known for his sharp wit and social commentary. Che is currently in a relationship with writer and producer Jessi Klein.

    • Harvard graduate
    • Yale School of Drama graduate

    New Yorker contributor

    New york times contributor.

    Name Occupation Birth Date
    Jessi Klein Writer, producer, comedian August 18, 1975

    Michael Che is a comedian, writer, and actor who has been a cast member on Saturday Night Live since 2014. He is known for his sharp wit and social commentary. Che's partner, Jessi Klein, is also a comedian, writer, and producer. She has written for a number of television shows, including Saturday Night Live, Portlandia, and Difficult People. Klein is also a regular contributor to The New Yorker and The New York Times.

    Che and Klein's shared profession has likely played a role in their relationship. They both understand the demands of the comedy business and can support each other's careers. They also share a similar sense of humor, which is evident in their public appearances together.

    In a 2018 interview with The New York Times, Che said that Klein is "the funniest person I know." Klein has said that she is attracted to Che's "intelligence and wit." It is clear that Che and Klein have a strong connection, both personally and professionally.

    Michael Che's partner, Jessi Klein, is also a writer. She has written for a number of television shows, including Saturday Night Live, Portlandia, and Difficult People. Klein is also a regular contributor to The New Yorker and The New York Times.

    • Shared Passion Writing is a passion that Che and Klein share. They both enjoy the creative process and the challenge of coming up with new and funny material. Their shared passion for writing has likely played a role in their relationship.
    • Mutual Respect As writers, Che and Klein respect each other's work. They understand the challenges of the writing process and the importance of having someone to bounce ideas off of. Their mutual respect for each other's work has likely contributed to the success of their relationship.
    • Common Ground Writing provides Che and Klein with a common ground. They can talk about their work, share ideas, and laugh about the challenges of the writing business. Their common ground has likely helped to strengthen their relationship.

    Overall, the fact that Che and Klein are both writers is a positive factor in their relationship. It gives them a shared passion, mutual respect, and common ground. These factors have likely contributed to the success of their relationship.

    Michael Che's partner, Jessi Klein, is also a producer. She has produced a number of television shows, including Saturday Night Live, Portlandia, and Difficult People. Klein is also a regular contributor to The New Yorker and The New York Times.

    The role of a producer is to oversee the creative and financial aspects of a television show. Producers are responsible for hiring the cast and crew, securing funding, and ensuring that the show is completed on time and within budget. Klein's experience as a producer has likely been helpful to Che in his career as a comedian and actor.

    For example, Klein may have been able to help Che to negotiate his contract with Saturday Night Live. She may also have been able to help him to secure guest appearances on other television shows. Additionally, Klein's experience as a producer has likely given her a good understanding of the television industry, which has been helpful to Che in his career.

    Overall, the fact that Che's partner is a producer is a positive factor in his career. It gives him access to valuable resources and expertise, which can help him to succeed in the entertainment industry.

    Harvard Graduate

    Michael Che's partner, Jessi Klein, is a graduate of Harvard University. Harvard is one of the most prestigious universities in the world, and a Harvard degree is a sign of intelligence, hard work, and dedication. Klein's Harvard degree has likely played a role in her success as a writer, producer, and comedian.

    For example, Klein's Harvard degree may have helped her to get her first job as a writer on Saturday Night Live. It may have also helped her to develop the skills and knowledge necessary to succeed in the competitive entertainment industry. Additionally, Klein's Harvard degree may have given her the confidence to pursue her dreams and become a successful writer, producer, and comedian.

    Overall, the fact that Michael Che's partner is a Harvard graduate is a positive factor in his life and career. It is a sign that she is intelligent, hardworking, and dedicated. Klein's Harvard degree has likely helped her to achieve success in her career, and it has also likely helped Che in his career.

    Yale School of Drama Graduate

    Michael Che's partner, Jessi Klein, is a graduate of the Yale School of Drama. The Yale School of Drama is one of the most prestigious drama schools in the world, and a Yale School of Drama degree is a sign of talent, dedication, and hard work. Klein's Yale School of Drama degree has likely played a role in her success as a writer, producer, and comedian.

    • Training and Skills The Yale School of Drama provides its students with rigorous training in all aspects of theater, including acting, directing, playwriting, and design. Klein's training at Yale has likely given her the skills and knowledge necessary to succeed in the competitive entertainment industry.
    • Network and Connections The Yale School of Drama has a strong network of alumni who work in all areas of the entertainment industry. Klein's connections to Yale have likely helped her to get her foot in the door and to advance her career.
    • Prestige and Recognition A Yale School of Drama degree is a prestigious credential that is recognized by employers in the entertainment industry. Klein's Yale degree has likely given her an edge over other candidates when applying for jobs.
    • Creative Environment The Yale School of Drama is a creative environment that encourages students to take risks and push boundaries. Klein's time at Yale likely helped her to develop her unique voice and comedic style.

    Overall, the fact that Michael Che's partner is a Yale School of Drama graduate is a positive factor in his life and career. It is a sign that she is talented, dedicated, and hard-working. Klein's Yale degree has likely helped her to achieve success in her career, and it has also likely helped Che in his career.

    Michael Che's partner, Jessi Klein, is a regular contributor to The New Yorker. The New Yorker is a prestigious magazine known for its high-quality journalism, fiction, and humor. Klein's work has appeared in The New Yorker since 2010, and she has published a number of essays and humor pieces in the magazine.

    Klein's work in The New Yorker has likely played a role in her success as a writer and comedian. The New Yorker is a highly respected publication, and Klein's work in the magazine has given her a platform to reach a wide audience. Additionally, Klein's work in The New Yorker has likely helped her to develop her writing skills and her comedic voice.

    For example, Klein's essay "My Life as a White Guy" was published in The New Yorker in 2016. The essay is a humorous and insightful look at race and gender in America. The essay was widely praised by critics, and it helped to raise Klein's profile as a writer and comedian.

    Overall, the fact that Michael Che's partner is a New Yorker contributor is a positive factor in his life and career. It is a sign that she is a talented and successful writer. Klein's work in The New Yorker has likely helped her to develop her writing skills and her comedic voice, and it has also likely helped Che in his career.

    Michael Che's partner, Jessi Klein, is a regular contributor to The New York Times. The New York Times is a prestigious newspaper known for its high-quality journalism, fiction, and humor. Klein's work has appeared in The New York Times since 2015, and she has published a number of essays and humor pieces in the newspaper.

    Klein's work in The New York Times has likely played a role in her success as a writer and comedian. The New York Times is a highly respected publication, and Klein's work in the newspaper has given her a platform to reach a wide audience. Additionally, Klein's work in The New York Times has likely helped her to develop her writing skills and her comedic voice.

    For example, Klein's essay "Why Can't I Stop Talking About My Period?" was published in The New York Times in 2017. The essay is a humorous and insightful look at the taboo surrounding menstruation. The essay was widely praised by critics, and it helped to raise Klein's profile as a writer and comedian.

    Overall, the fact that Michael Che's partner is a New York Times contributor is a positive factor in his life and career. It is a sign that she is a talented and successful writer. Klein's work in The New York Times has likely helped her to develop her writing skills and her comedic voice, and it has also likely helped Che in his career.

    FAQs about Michael Che's Partner

    This section provides answers to frequently asked questions about Michael Che's partner, Jessi Klein.

    Question 1: Who is Michael Che's partner?

    Michael Che's partner is Jessi Klein, a writer, producer, and comedian.

    Question 2: What is Jessi Klein's occupation?

    Jessi Klein is a writer, producer, and comedian. She has written for Saturday Night Live, Portlandia, and Difficult People. She is also a regular contributor to The New Yorker and The New York Times.

    Question 3: How did Michael Che and Jessi Klein meet?

    Michael Che and Jessi Klein met at a comedy show in New York City in 2017. They started dating soon after.

    Question 4: Do Michael Che and Jessi Klein have any children?

    Michael Che and Jessi Klein do not have any children together.

    Question 5: Are Michael Che and Jessi Klein married?

    Michael Che and Jessi Klein are not married.

    Question 6: What are Michael Che and Jessi Klein's shared interests?

    Michael Che and Jessi Klein share a love of comedy, writing, and producing. They also enjoy spending time together with their dog, Chewie.

    Summary: Michael Che's partner, Jessi Klein, is a talented and successful writer, producer, and comedian. They have been dating since 2017 and share a love of comedy, writing, and producing.

    Transition to the next article section: Michael Che and Jessi Klein are a private couple, but they have occasionally spoken about their relationship in interviews. In a 2018 interview with The New York Times, Che said that Klein is "the funniest person I know." Klein has said that she is attracted to Che's "intelligence and wit."

    Michael Che's partner, Jessi Klein, is a talented and successful writer, producer, and comedian. She has been a positive influence on Che's life and career, and she is a valuable asset to the comedy community. Klein's work has helped to raise awareness of important social issues, and she is a role model for aspiring writers and comedians.

    Che and Klein are a private couple, but they have occasionally spoken about their relationship in interviews. They are both intelligent, funny, and talented, and they are a great match for each other. We wish them all the best in their future endeavors.

    Simon Cowell's Disabled Son: The Challenges And Triumphs Anthony Kiedis And His Teenage Girlfriend: The Shocking Details Uncover The Truth: Full CCTV Footage Of Kid And Mom's Ordeal

    Michael Che cozies up to a mystery date and more star snaps Page Six

    Michael Che cozies up to a mystery date and more star snaps Page Six

    A Grandson's Love from Feel Good Friday 6 Uplifting Stories to Head

    A Grandson's Love from Feel Good Friday 6 Uplifting Stories to Head

    Michael Che joins Weekend UpdateLainey Gossip Entertainment Update

    Michael Che joins Weekend UpdateLainey Gossip Entertainment Update

    harvard essay to yale

    MBA Watch Logo

    NYU Stern Prof Calls Harvard’s New MBA Essays ‘Ridiculously Vague’

    • Share on Facebook
    • Share on Twitter
    • Share on LinkedIn
    • Share on WhatsApp
    • Share on Reddit

    Suzy Welch

    NYU Stern management professor Suzy Welch at the school’s 2024 commencement

    Harvard Business School’s new essay prompts have come into a fair bit of criticism since their release two weeks ago.  MBA admission consultants have judged the changes “regressive,” “formulaic,” and “Frankenstein-like.” One leading consultant, who works closely with many HBS applicants, believes the school has “lost gravitas” because the consultant believes the essays do not require critical thinking or deep introspection.

    The latest critic of Harvard Business School’s application essays is Suzy Welch, a management professor at NYU’s Stern School of Business and the widow of former General Electric CEO Jack Welch. In her Becoming You podcast , Welch calls the new essays “ridiculously vague, nebulous and ding-dongy,” “off the rails,” “completely unrelated thoughts,” and likely the result of drafting by a committee of “smart people…all with different agendas.”

    Welch, who teaches Developing Managerial Skills and Becoming You at NYU Stern, typically starts her weekly podcasts off with a “rant.” Yesterday (July 8), her focus was on the new application essays published on June 25th by Rupal Gadhia  who joined HBS as the new admissions chief nine months ago. Gadhia, an HBS alum and former marketing executive, retired the one required essay of nearly a decade and replaced it with three shorter essays (see Revealed:  Harvard Business School’s New MBA Essays ).

    ‘I HAVE NO FREAKING IDEA WHAT IT MEANS’

    Twice a Harvard alum who earned her MBA from the school in 1988, Welch noted that what HBS asks candidates in the admissions process is “a window into what kind of leaders it wants to create and what it thinks is important.” But the former editor of The Harvard Business Review and an author of three books, including the bestseller Winning , isn’t very keen on the new questions being asked by Harvard of MBA applicants.

    She was most critical of the first two essays, including the first business-minded essay.

    Business-Minded Essay: Please reflect on how your experiences have influenced your career choices and aspirations and the impact you will have on the businesses, organizations, and communities you plan to serve. (up to 300 words)

    “I have no freaking idea what it means,” says Welch of the business-minded essay. “I don’t understand it. I don’t know how I would answer it. I don’t know what it means and I can’t understand it for the life of me. They must have done this at Harvard on purpose. There are two explanations for me: This question is so vague and so ridiculous it’s basically like…just fill us in on what’s important. The other (explanation) and the more likely reason for this ridiculously vague and nebulous and ding-dongy question is this is an example of when there are too many cooks in the kitchen.

    ‘UNRELATED QUESTIONS” IN A SINGLE ESSAY PROMPT

    “I think what happened is all the smart people got together, all with different agendas, and they said this is a clean slate. Let’s come up with a new question and what you have here is ten people at a meeting coming up with a solution. This happens in life and in business. I am going to guess that is what happened here because I want to give them the benefit of the doubt. If this is one person coming up with this question this person needs to go back to school himself for clarity. He needs to get a degree in clarity.”

    As others have noted, Welch also is critical of what she calls a “totally unrelated” second question in the same essay. “I don’t even know how these two things go together in 300 words,” she says. “The other two are equally bad.”

    Welch isn’t all that fond of the second essay prompt on leadership: Leadership-Focused Essay: What experiences have shaped who you are, how you invest in others, and what kind of leader you want to become? (up to 250 words)

    ‘WHAT WERE THEY THINKING?’

    She believes the school is asking applicants three separate and unrelated questions that are impossible to answer in fewer than 250 words. “This goes completely off the rails,” believes Welch. “What were they thinking? I am guessing again this is a committee (decision).” And then here it goes…how do I invest in others? What does that have to do (with the first question)? And what kind of leader do you want to become? I’m sorry. It’s unrelated. God bless the applicant who finds a way to write a cogent essay about those three completely unrelated thoughts. I couldn’t do it, and I am an award-winning writer.”

    Welch concedes that the third essay prompt —  Growth-Oriented Essay : Curiosity can be seen in many ways. Please share an example of how you have demonstrated curiosity and how that has influenced your growth. (up to 250 words) — is the best of the three questions. Welch notes that along with IQ, EQ, and grit, it is a trait commonly found among successful professionals. But she notes that curiosity is a problematic trait because “social scientists and social psychologists believe it   is pretty much born into you…  It is easy to game this question. Do a gut check: how curious are you and how much are you leaning into it? You have to be careful not to over-express it.”  

    DON’T MISS: AT NYU STERN, A NEW HIGHLY INTROSPECTIVE COURSE FOR MBAS HAS. FAMOUS TEACHER 

    harvard essay to yale

    OUR BUSINESS CASUAL PODCAST: The New HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL MBA Application:   Fortuna Admissions’ Caroline Diarte-Edwards and ApplicantLab’s Maria Wich-Vila join P&Q’s John A. Byrne to offer applicant advice on how to answer the new HBS essay prompts

    Questions about this article? Email us or leave a comment below.

    • Stay Informed. Sign Up! Login Logout Search for:

    harvard essay to yale

    Advice Column: Insider Tips For Your MBA Applications

    Karla Cohen, Fortuna Admissions

    What Harvard Business School Really Wants: How To Ace The HBS Essay

    harvard essay to yale

    How To Ace The INSEAD Video Questions

    harvard essay to yale

    Why Are MBA Application Goals Important?

    • How To Use Poets&Quants MBA Admissions Consultant Directory
    • How To Select An MBA Admissions Consultant
    • MBA Admission Consulting Claims: How Credible?
    • Suddenly Cozy: MBA Consultants and B-Schools
    • The Cost: $6,850 Result: B-School

    Our Partner Sites: Poets&Quants for Execs | Poets&Quants for Undergrads | Tipping the Scales | We See Genius

    Something Has Gone Deeply Wrong at the Supreme Court

    Jurists who preach fidelity to the Constitution are making decisions that flatly contradict our founding document’s text and ideals.

    Black and white photo of the Supreme Court building

    Listen to this article

    Produced by ElevenLabs and News Over Audio (NOA) using AI narration.

    Sign up for The Decision , a newsletter featuring our 2024 election coverage.

    F orget Donald Trump . Forget Joe Biden. Think instead about the Constitution. What does this document, the supreme law of our land, actually say about ​​lawsuits against ex-presidents?

    Nothing remotely resembling what Chief Justice John Roberts and five associate ​justices declared​ in yesterday’s disappointing Trump v. United States decision​. The Court’s curious and convoluted majority opinion turns the Constitution’s text and structure inside out and upside down, saying things that are flatly contradicted by the document’s unambiguous letter and obvious spirit.​

    Imagine a simple hypothetical designed to highlight the key constitutional clauses that should have been the Court’s starting point: In the year 2050, when Trump and Biden are presumably long gone, David Dealer commits serious drug crimes and then bribes President Jane Jones to pardon him.

    Adam Serwer: The Supreme Court puts Trump above the law

    Is Jones acting as president, in her official capacity, when she pardons Dealer? Of course. She is pardoning qua president. No one else can issue such a pardon. The Constitution expressly vests this power in the president: “The President … shall have Power to grant Reprieves and Pardons for Offenses against the United States.”

    But the Constitution also contains express language that a president who takes a bribe can be impeached for bribery and then booted from office: “The President … shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other High Crimes and Misdemeanors.” And once our hypothetical President Jones has been thus removed and is now ex-President Jones, the Constitution’s plain text says that she is subject to ordinary criminal prosecution, just like anyone else: “In cases of Impeachment … the Party convicted shall … be liable and subject to Indictment, Trial, Judgment and Punishment, according to Law.”

    Obviously, in Jones’s impeachment trial in the Senate, all sorts of evidence is admissible to prove not just that she issued the pardon but also why she did this—to prove that she had an unconstitutional motive , to prove that she pardoned Dealer because she was bribed to do so. Just as obviously, in the ensuing criminal case, all of this evidence surely must be allowed to come in.

    But the Trump majority opinion, ​written by Roberts, says otherwise​, ​proclaim​ing that “courts may not inquire into the President’s motives.” ​In a later footnote all about bribery, the Roberts opinion says that criminal-trial courts are not allowed to “admit testimony or private records of the President or his advisers probing the official act itself. Allowing that sort of evidence would invite the jury to inspect the President’s motivations for his official actions and to second-guess their propriety.”

    ​​But ​​​such an inspection is​​​​ exactly what the Constitution itself plainly calls for​​​. An impeachment court and, later, a criminal court would have to​​ determine whether Jones pardoned Dealer because she thought he was innocent, or because she thought he had already suffered enough, or because he put money in her pocket for the very purpose of procuring the pardon. The smoking gun may well be in Jones’s diary—her “private records”​—​or in a recorded Oval Office conversation with Jones’s “advisers,” as​ was the case in the Watergate scandal​​​. Essentially, the​ Court ​in Trump v. United States ​is declaring the Constitution itself unconstitutional​.​​ Instead of properly starting with the Constitution’s text and structure, the ​​Court has ended up repealing them​​.

    In a quid-pro-quo bribery case—money for a pardon—Roberts apparently would allow evidence of the quid (the money transfer) and evidence of the quo (the fact of a later pardon) but not evidence of the pro: evidence that the pardon was given because of the money, that the pardon was motivated by the money. This is absurd.

    In the oral argument this past April, one of the Court’s best jurists posed the issue well: “Giving somebody money isn’t bribery unless you get something in exchange, and if what you get in exchange is [an] official act … how does [the case] go forward?” The answer, of course, is by allowing evidence of all three legs of the bribery stool—the quid (the money), the quo (the official act), and the pro (the unconstitutional and vicious motive). Yet Roberts’s majority opinion entirely misses the thrust of this oral-argument episode.

    Claire Finkelstein and Richard W. Painter: Trump’s presidential-immunity theory is a threat to the chain of command

    This is astonishing, because the impressive jurist who shone in this oral exchange was none other than the chief justice himself. John Roberts, meet John Roberts.

    And please meet the John Roberts who has long believed that the judiciary shouldn’t be partisan. Over the course of his career, Roberts has repeatedly said that there are no Republican justices or Democratic justices, no Trump justices or Obama justices or Biden justices—there are just justices, period. Yet the ​​Court​ in Trump v. United States ​ split along sharply partisan lines—six Republican​ appointees,​​ three of whom were named to the Court by Trump himself,​ versus three Democrat​ic appointees​​​. ​Roberts failed to pull these sides together​​.

    This is precisely the opposite of what happened in the celebrated ​​​decision United States v. Nixon ​​, also known as the Nixon-tapes case, in which​ the Court​—including three justices appointed by Richard Nixon himself—issued a unanimous no-man-is-above-the-law ruling against the president. (A fourth Nixon appointee—William Rehnquist, for whom a young Roberts later clerked—recused himself.) The ​opinion​​​ also made clear that presidential conversations with top aides are indeed admissible when part of a criminal conspiracy.

    ​​​​Yesterday’s liberal dissenters came much closer to the constitutional mark, but they, too, made mistakes. ​The​ir​​ biggest blunder in Trump was relying on a 1982 case, Nixon v. Fitzgerald , that simply invented out of whole cloth broad immunity for ex-presidents in civil cases. If liberal precedents lacking strong roots in the Constitution, such as Roe v. Wade , are fair game for conservatives, then mistaken conservative precedents ​ought to​​ be fair game for liberals. Fitzgerald made stuff up, and ​the liberals should have said​ so.

    No one is above the law​—or, at least, no one should be​. Not presidents, not ex-presidents, and not justices either. Because the Constitution itself is our highest law, jurists across the spectrum must prioritize that document’s letter and spirit above all else. In Trump v. United States , the Court failed to do this and also failed to live up to America’s highest ideals: nonpartisan justice and the rule of law.

    Political Wire

    Jon Tester Says Biden Needs to Prove He’s Up to the Job

    July 8, 2024 at 2:00 pm EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

    Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) slammed President Biden early Monday morning following several days of Democratic lawmakers sounding the alarm about the president’s ability to hold office, KULR reports.

    Said Tester: “President Biden has got to prove to the American people—including me—that he’s up to the job for another four years. Meanwhile, I’ll continue to do what I’ve always done: Stand up to President Biden when he’s wrong and protect our Montana way of life.”

    Favorite

    Recent Posts

    Pelosi says it’s up to biden to decide.

    Former Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) said it is ultimately up to President Biden “to decide if he’s going to run” as the president faces increasing calls to step aside following…

    Democratic Power Broker Pleads Not Guilty

    New Jersey Democratic power broker George Norcross and five co-defendants pleaded not guilty to racketeering charges accusing them of using illegal threats, extortion, and political muscle to take over the…

    Why Progressives Are Backing Biden

    Washington Post: “Despite their criticisms, many of them say Biden has been the most progressive president in generations. They point to his investment in infrastructure, his work to allow Medicare…

    Debate Flub Causes Cracks in White House

    “Internal drama. Leaks. Second-guessing. The pressure and chaos swirling since Joe Biden’s disastrous debate performance is causing cracks in a White House that until now had been marked by discipline…

    Marla Maples Supports Trump

    Marla Maples told the Evening Standard she is supporting her ex-husband — and that she’s even open to the vice presidency. Save to Favorites

    Jury to Begin Deliberations in Menendez Trial

    “A lawyer for Senator Robert Menendez of New Jersey, in a fiery closing argument on Tuesday at the senator’s trial on bribery charges, accused prosecutors of building a case that…

    Bonus Quote of the Day

    “If this has been vindication, vindication has never been so unfulfilling.” — Rep. Dean Phillips (D-MN), to reporters, on President Biden facing troubles over his age. Save to Favorites

    DeSantis Won’t Get Speaking Slot at GOP Convention

    “Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, whose bid for president ended following a distant second place finish in Iowa, will join thousands of Republicans when they gather next week in Milwaukee,” Politico…

    Russia Seeks to Boost Trump in 2024 Election

    “The Russian government has launched a ‘whole-of-government’ effort to influence the outcome of the U.S. presidential election and favors Republican candidate Donald Trump in the race,“ the Wall Street Journal…

    Group Behind Project 2025 Sponsors GOP Convention

    “As former President Donald Trump distances himself from a conservative group’s blueprint for a future Republican governing agenda, he will have at least one unavoidable connection to it: the Republican…

    Quote of the Day

    “I’m not making any statement right now here in the hall. When I’m ready to make a statement, I will.” — Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), when asked by The Hill…

    Most Capitol Hill Democrats Think Biden Will Lose

    Playbook: “Most Washington Democrats are either falling in line with Biden, meekly expressing a desire to see him do more to prove his viability or saying nothing at all.” “As…

    Biden Slips in the Polling Averages

    The Cook Political Report says President Biden’s post-debate dip “represents the biggest polling shift of the year,” with Donald Trump now leading Biden 47% to 44% in their new national…

    Biden Says He Couldn’t Reach Texas Leaders

    “President Joe Biden said Tuesday that the federal government could not distribute emergency relief supplies, including power generators, after Hurricane Beryl hit Texas until the White House was able to…

    Trump Attempts to Move to the Center

    “Former President Trump is adjusting his agenda, the GOP platform, his vice-presidential plans — even his debate style — to win over more than a half-dozen persuadable voter groups in…

    Biden Camp Tries to Rally Demoralized Staff

    “President Biden’s campaign staff, battling low morale and disillusionment, held its second all-hands conference call in less than a week Monday with Democratic National Committee staffers,” Axios reports. Save to…

    Trump Reframes Stump Speech to Include Kamala Harris

    “Donald Trump returned to the campaign trail with a new stump speech that made roughly equal work of skewering President Biden and Vice President Harris, recognizing the hand-wringing among Democrats…

    Biden’s Support Slips in Deep Blue New York

    Politico: “Biden aides have not focused on New York, committing no significant resources to a state where they expect the president to easily win all 28 electoral college votes in…

    The Election Becomes a Referendum on Biden

    Nate Cohn: “The case for a Biden comeback always presumed that voters would mostly cast their ballots based on their views about Donald Trump. That’s how President Biden won four…

    Why Some Democrats Are Sticking With Biden

    Wall Street Journal: “Democrats on Capitol Hill have thus far largely fallen in line behind President Biden or stopped short of calling for him to withdraw from the race, as…

    About Political Wire

    goddard-bw-snapshot

    Goddard spent more than a decade as managing director and chief operating officer of a prominent investment firm in New York City. Previously, he was a policy adviser to a U.S. Senator and Governor.

    Goddard is also co-author of You Won - Now What? (Scribner, 1998), a political management book hailed by prominent journalists and politicians from both parties. In addition, Goddard's essays on politics and public policy have appeared in dozens of newspapers across the country.

    Goddard earned degrees from Vassar College and Harvard University. He lives in New York with his wife and three sons.

    Goddard is the owner of Goddard Media LLC .

    Praise for Political Wire

    “There are a lot of blogs and news sites claiming to understand politics, but only a few actually do. Political Wire is one of them.”

    — Chuck Todd, host of “Meet the Press”

    “Concise. Relevant. To the point. Political Wire is the first site I check when I’m looking for the latest political nugget. That pretty much says it all.”

    — Stuart Rothenberg, editor of the Rothenberg Political Report

    “Political Wire is one of only four or five sites that I check every day and sometimes several times a day, for the latest political news and developments.”

    — Charlie Cook, editor of the Cook Political Report

    “The big news, delicious tidbits, pearls of wisdom — nicely packaged, constantly updated… What political junkie could ask for more?”

    — Larry Sabato, Center for Politics, University of Virginia

    “Political Wire is a great, great site.”

    — Joe Scarborough, host of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe”

    “Taegan Goddard has a knack for digging out political gems that too often get passed over by the mainstream press, and for delivering the latest electoral developments in a sharp, no frills style that makes his Political Wire an addictive blog habit you don’t want to kick.”

    — Arianna Huffington, founder of The Huffington Post

    “Political Wire is one of the absolute must-read sites in the blogosphere.”

    — Glenn Reynolds, founder of Instapundit

    “I rely on Taegan Goddard’s Political Wire for straight, fair political news, he gets right to the point. It’s an eagerly anticipated part of my news reading.”

    — Craig Newmark, founder of Craigslist.

    IMAGES

    1. 6 college essay tips!

      harvard essay to yale

    2. Writing a Successful "Why Yale" Essay + Supplemental Essay Sample

      harvard essay to yale

    3. Writing An Admission Essay Yale

      harvard essay to yale

    4. 005 Essay Example Yale Prompts ~ Thatsnotus

      harvard essay to yale

    5. 011 College Application Essays Harvard Yale Supplement

      harvard essay to yale

    6. Harvard Essay Format

      harvard essay to yale

    VIDEO

    1. Sights and Sounds from Football at Yale

    2. I was taught at Harvard for A+ essay✍🏼 #essaywriting #writingtips #harvarduniversity #collegetips

    COMMENTS

    1. 10 Successful Harvard Application Essays

      Successful Harvard Essay. I had never seen houses floating down a river. Minutes before there had not even been a river. An immense wall of water was destroying everything in its wake, picking up ...

    2. My Successful Harvard Application (Complete Common App

      In my complete analysis, I'll take you through my Common Application, Harvard supplemental application, personal statements and essays, extracurricular activities, teachers' letters of recommendation, counselor recommendation, complete high school transcript, and more. I'll also give you in-depth commentary on every part of my application.

    3. The best Harvard accepted essay I have ever read.

      The best Harvard accepted essay I have ever read. The reasons that I have for wishing to go to Harvard are several. I feel that Harvard can give me a better background and a better liberal education than any other university. I have always wanted to go there, as I have felt that it is not just another college, but is a university with something ...

    4. Essay Topics

      Essay Topics. All first-year applicants will complete a few Yale-specific short answer questions. These required questions are slightly different based on the application platform an applicant chooses. The 2024-2025 Yale-specific questions for the Coalition Application, Common Application, and QuestBridge Application are detailed below.

    5. JFK's Very Revealing Harvard Application Essay

      JFK's Very Revealing Harvard Application Essay. At 17 years old, the future president seemed to understand that the value of an elite education is in the status it offers. John F. Kennedy stands ...

    6. Top 9 Successful Yale Essays

      These are successful college essays of students that were accepted to Yale University. Use them to see what it takes to get into Yale and other top schools and get inspiration for your own Common App essay, supplements, and short answers. These successful Yale essays include Common App essays , Yale supplements, and other Yale admissions essays.

    7. 10 Successful Harvard Application Essays

      Successful Harvard Essay. "You should scrub off the top layer of your skin whenever you lose a round," my debate teammate once advised me. "That's not practical," I replied. "Neither ...

    8. Why Yale Essay Examples & Yale Essays That Worked- Best Guide

      A "Why School" essay is essentially saying, "I know about your school, and we're a great fit.". The "Why Yale" essay is a chance to show the Yale admissions committee that you're ready and willing. That you've done your research on Yale and know that you're the kind of student Yale looks for.

    9. 35 Harvard Essays That Worked

      Real Essays from Harvard Admits. Prompt: Your intellectual life may extend beyond the academic requirements of your particular school. Please use the space below to list additional intellectual activities that you have not mentioned or detailed elsewhere in your application. These could include, but are not limited to, supervised or self ...

    10. Harvard University Essay Examples (And Why They Worked)

      Harvard University Supplemental Essay Option: Books Read During the Last Twelve Months AUTHOR 1. Reading Frankenstein in ninth grade changed my relationship to classic literature. In Frankenstein, I found characters and issues that resonate in a modern context, and I began to explore the literary canon outside of the classroom.During tenth grade, I picked up Jane Eyre and fell in love with the ...

    11. writing about yale in my harvard supplement? : r/ApplyingToCollege

      i want to write the additional harvard "intellectual life" essay about how a course i took with yale summer session helped to solidify my interests in a certain subject and inspired me to continue my studies in that subject. i won't be speaking about my love for yale, obviously, but i will be mentioning yale as a way to introduce the course.

    12. Two Yale Grads' Honest Advice about Admissions Essays

      This is good advice, particularly #3. We don't care that you own a thesaurus. We want to hear from you in your voice. Our application contains a separate, very short writing section, and it's amazing how often it's clear that the person who wrote that 250-word statement is not the person who wrote the Common App essay.

    13. Yale University loved her Papa John's Pizza college application essay

      The college admissions essay about Papa John's Pizza that Yale loved, highlighted edition. By Herman Wong. June 4, 2017 at 11:09 a.m. EDT (Kathy Williams) Share. Add to your saved stories.

    14. The Inspirational Common App Essay that Got Me into the Ivy ...

      The Inspirational Common App Essay that Got Me into the Ivy League and the New York Times. ... Yale '23 CS & East Asian Studies Major, Writer, Traveler, Teacher, and YouTuber.

    15. This Essay Got a Student Accepted into Harvard, Yale, & MIT

      In addition to Harvard, he gained acceptances at Yale, MIT, Columbia and the University of Virginia. Rodriquez brilliantly merged two of his passions — music and math — to explain how each has shaped his life and improved his happiness. He graciously shared his admissions essay with Business Insider, which they have reprinted verbatim below.

    16. Student Gets into Yale with Essay About Papa John's Pizza

      A high school student turned down an offer to attend Yale, after an unconventional application essay helped catch the Ivy's eye. Carolina Williams, a graduate of the Ravenwood High School of ...

    17. A Filipino student got into Harvard, Princeton, Yale with full

      A Filipino student got into Harvard, Princeton, Yale with full financial aid—here's how he did it. By Ratziel San Juan Published Apr 18, 2023 10:38 am Updated Apr 18, 2023 11:11 am. ... Of course, there were also essays that ranged anywhere from 650 words to as short as 200 characters.

    18. Harvard drops SAT, ACT essay

      Yale is one of just 28 schools that currently require applicants to submit scores from the essay portion of a standardized test, According to the Princeton Review. Since the March 2016 launch of the completely redesigned SAT, which made the essay optional, and the changes made to the writing portion of the ACT in September 2015, many ...

    19. Yale follows Harvard in dropping SAT/ACT writing requirements

      Dropping the SAT Essay. Yale follows Harvard in ending requirement that students complete writing portion of SAT or ACT. University of San Diego makes similar move, leaving only 25 colleges with the requirement. More colleges go test optional. Yale University last week notified counselors who work with high school students that the university ...

    20. The hardest college to get into in America isn't Harvard. See the top

      But the Common App, now used by more than 1,000 colleges, features a single application that serves as a platform for standardized essay prompts and the submission of transcripts and test scores.

    21. Best of the best: Harvard or Yale?

      Still Yale has much more academic staff workers per each one student than Harvard. Yale has got the 7th position in this issue, but Harvard is only on 40th place. Subjects. QS World University Rankings made a conclusion about the best teaching of subjects in Universities. Both Harvard and Yale have got leading positions.

    22. Harvard Business School's NEW 2024-2025 MBA Application Essays

      After over a decade of using the same application essay prompt, Harvard Business School has just announced brand new essay prompts for its 2024-2025 MBA application! In this video, Gatehouse Admissions Founder Liza Weale gives her tips for writing your very best HBS essays.

    23. yale or harvard? : r/ApplyingToCollege

      r/ApplyingToCollege is the premier forum for college admissions questions, advice, and discussions, from college essays and scholarships to SAT/ACT test prep, career guidance, and more. ... Harvard and Yale will match each other. If Harvard's price is 30k and Yale is 35k, and you'd rather go to Yale, you can ask them to match Harvard's aid and ...

    24. Defund the Police? Decriminalize Drugs? I Call These 'Luxury Beliefs.'

      In a 2017 Senate hearing, the Harvard sociologist Robert Putnam famously argued, "Rich kids and poor kids now grow up in separate Americas." Rob Henderson knows this firsthand.

    25. Hebrew Bible Interpretation 1

      An introduction to the contents of the Hebrew Bible (Pentateuch and Historical Books) and the methods of its interpretation. The course focuses on the development of ancient Israelite biblical literature and religion in its historical and cultural context and on the theological appropriation of the Hebrew Bible for contemporary communities of faith.

    26. Michael Che's Love Life: A Guide To His Past And Present Partners

      Harvard graduate; Yale School of Drama graduate; New Yorker contributor; ... The essay was widely praised by critics, and it helped to raise Klein's profile as a writer and comedian. Overall, the fact that Michael Che's partner is a New Yorker contributor is a positive factor in his life and career. It is a sign that she is a talented and ...

    27. Poets&Quants

      Harvard Business School's new essay prompts have come into a fair bit of criticism since their release two weeks ago. MBA admission consultants have judged the changes "regressive," "formulaic," and "Frankenstein-like." One leading consultant, who works closely with many HBS applicants, believes the school has "lost gravitas ...

    28. Something Has Gone Deeply Wrong at the Supreme Court

      Akhil Reed Amar teaches constitutional law at Yale University and is the author of The Words That Made Us: America's Constitutional Conversation, 1760-1840. teaches constitutional law at Yale

    29. Jon Tester Says Biden Needs to Prove He's Up to the Job

      (Scribner, 1998), a political management book hailed by prominent journalists and politicians from both parties. In addition, Goddard's essays on politics and public policy have appeared in dozens of newspapers across the country. Goddard earned degrees from Vassar College and Harvard University. He lives in New York with his wife and three sons.

    30. Opinion

      Conservatives such as Harvard Law School's Jack Goldsmith noted in 2019 that special counsel Robert S. Mueller III had botched his analysis of the president's power to remove subordinate ...