How To Write A Personal Statement For Your Thesis}

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Submitted by: Albert Barkley

Graduate schools, fellowships, grants, and other competitive programs often require each applicant to submit a short essay about her history and goals. These essays are sometimes written in response to very specific questions. Theyre written in response to a generic prompt. In both cases, the good personal statement carefully balances its authors history and aspirations. The personal statement is a chance to communicate to your reviewers information about your interests, skills, experiences and goals that is not readily apparent from your resume and transcript.

Start by examining the prompt. Applicants are asked very specific questions about why they are applying to a particular program and what, specifically, qualifies them to be part of that program. Think about the question youve been asked. Decide how your experience is different, interesting, or special. Personal statements succeed when they are specific. Research the program. The program youre applying to is also unique in some ways, and you should make it clear that you chose it carefully from among its competitors. Think about how your goals will best be served by this particular fellowship, internship, or university. Again, be specific. Make your goals clear. Just as your past is interesting and specific, so is your future.

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Once youve thought about your history and your goals, start writing. Its often very tempting to put this off. Writing a personal statement is stressful. But its important to start writing as soon as possible especially because youll be revising again and again. Show how your personal history relates to your goals, and how youre a good fit for this particular program. If your first attempt looks halting and a little half-baked dont worry. The first draft is supposed to look this way.Once you feel the personal statement says what you want it to say, show it to somebody. The Writing Center can be useful here. It might also be useful to get feedback from a professional in your field. Many personal statement conventions are discipline-specific.

Things to Include in Personal Statement:

Origins of your interest in a particular field: This could be a book you read, lecture you attended, or experience you had said. It can also be hiking with your family in the summers as the source of your interest in forest eco-systems. Ways in which you have developed your interest: Additional reading, experiments, internships, course work, summer jobs, science fairs, travel experiences, writing projects, etc. Special skills you have developed relevant to the planned research.

This could be general knowledge of a field acquired through reading and study, or special practical skills. Knowledge or skills that you hope to acquire through participation in this research opportunity. Future plans and goals character traits, talents, or extra-curricular activities outside the field that help to qualify you. If you are particularly tenacious about overcoming obstacles, creative at problem-solving. Adaptable to unfamiliar circumstances, or just great at organizing teams of people. These qualities can be mentioned as relevant to the research experience.

About the Author: Albert Barkley is a social critic who loves to look at the changing social trends closely and criticize accordingly. He is an English Literature lecturer. However due to his interest in writing and sharing thoughts with others, he writes articles for different blogs. Visit his website here

theacademicpapers.co.uk/

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