Scholarship
Essay
Tips for Selecting a College Essay Topic
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Tips for
Selecting a College Essay Topic
Scholarship essay: Why Your College Essay is
Important
As was mentioned in our article, Writing the Application Essay
, the essay part of your college application is important because it is
the aspect of the process that offers you the unique chance to brand yourself.
When you sit down to write the application essay, you can choose to set
yourself apart from the mediocre, so-so, and mostly bad, essays that end up in
the rejection pile.
Free
Scholarship and Financial Aid Request Templates
Scholarship essay:
Our Sample
Templates
In order to get information from either a college or a
scholarship organization, you will need to request necessary materials. We have
provided:
?a
Sample Letter to a College, and
?a Sample Letter for Scholarship Information.
The college
sample letter could be used to request
?a catalog,
?financial aid information, and
?any other materials you might
need.
The scholarship letter is an opportunity to prepare a short statement
summing up why you feel qualified for the scholarship. You will want to also
make sure you have the appropriate contact name and the full name of the
organization that administers the scholarship.
Scholarship essay:
Formatting and
Proofreading
Most word processing programs come bundled with templates that
allow you to choose a format for a letter. If you are using one of these
templates, choose a professional format, avoiding artsy or overly informal
styles.
Any correspondence you have with college or organization officials
should be taken as seriously as the essay you write for your application
. A letter leaves an impression.
Use the spell-check feature in your
word processor or email to make corrections, and be concise. Ask a parent or
school guidance counselor to proofread any letter before you send it. Also, for
postal mail, it is customary to include a self-addressed-stamped-envelope, SASE,
to cover the cost of return postage for materials you have
requested.
Scholarship essay: Sample College Information Request
Letter
Date
Jane Doe
Office of Admissions
College
Name
Street Address
City, State Zipcode
Dear Ms. Doe,
I am very
interested in [College Name] and would appreciate you sending me the following
information: [this list should be modified for your needs]
• Course
Catalog
• Athletic Program Catalog
• Scholarship Information
•
Financial Aid Application
• Residency Information, On-Campus and Off-Campus
• [anything else you need]
Briefly, my academic career has been focused
on [Subject area, or General College Preparatory] and I have consistently
maintained a GPA of [gpa]. I have also successfully balanced my academic
interests with the following activities: [athletics, hobbies, volunteer
organizations, etc].
I look forward to hearing from
you.
Sincerely,
Your Name
Address
Phone Number
Email
Address
Sample Scholarship Information Request Application
Date
Jane Doe
Organization Name
Street
Address
City, State Zipcode
Dear Ms. Doe:
I am very interested in
[Organization’s name, Scholarship Fund Name] or any other financial assistance
opportunities available for [undergraduate, graduate] students.
[Briefly,
craft a few statements that offer information about your academic and
extracurricular activities that make you a suitable candidate for a scholarship
with Name of Organization.]
Please send me the appropriate application and
deadlines, including any other necessary information I would need to complete a
proper application process with [Name of Organization].
I look forward to
hearing from you.
Sincerely,
Your Name
Address
Phone Number
Email
Address
Scholarship essay: A Well-Chosen Topic
In some instances a
college will assign a topic for your essay. Otherwise that choice is up to you.
What will you write about? A more effective question is, what interests you
most?
?What hobbies or extracurricular activities have benefited you
most, and why?
?What has happened in your life that relates to your intended field
of study?
?Did you have troubles with certain things growing up?
?Have you experienced any life
changing events that make you look at the world through a different lense?
?Has there been a singular
experience or set of experiences that have had significance in your life?
Jot words, ideas, events, experiences on paper. This is where fear of the
blank page can really be an obstacle. Remember, this initial brainstorming is
doodle paper. Feel free.
What you allow yourself to explore and ponder might
surprise you.
?Maybe you were more moved by your Grandfather’s life than you had
realized.
?Perhaps a volunteer group you work with has inspired you toward a
particular career;
?Did a teacher stands out as having been a critical component in
your drive to achieve;
?Maybe you have been influenced by the struggles of a close friend
or family member with drugs or depression and as a result you are interested in
studying psychology or social work.
Write about it. The sky’s the
limit.
Most importantly, make the essay personal, a few paragraphs that
really mean something to you and help define your application.
Most people
fail because they blend in , not because they stuck out.
Scholarship essay:
When Topics Are
Assigned
Occasionally a college will assign an essay topic. This will
likely be a very general or broad topic, such as, “Why education is important.”
If you go with these general topics and just write “Education is important
because it helps people learn…..” you are heading in the wrong direction.
Explore the guts of the assigned statement, break it down, make it real and
personal. Once again, jot onto paper the first words or experiences the
statement brings to mind. Find a personal experience in your education that has
stood out and perhaps symbolizes why higher education is still important to your
life. Write about that one thing.


