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Writing, for most of us, is bound up with anxiety. It's even worse
when it feels like your whole future--or at least where you'll
spend the next four years in college--is on the line. It's easy to
understand why so many high school seniors put off working on their
applications until the last minute or end up with a generic and
cliched essay. The good news? You already have the "secret sauce"
for crafting a compelling personal essay: your own experiences and
your unique voice. The best essays rarely catalog how students have
succeeded or achieved. Good writing shows the reader how you've
struggled and describes mistakes you've made. Excellent essays
express what you're fired up about, illustrate how you think, and
illuminate the ways you've grown. More than twenty million students
apply to college every year; many of them look similar in terms of
test scores, grades, courses taken, extracurricular activities.
Admissions officers wade through piles of files. As an applicant,
you need to think about what will interest an exhausted reader.
What can you write that will make her argue to admit you instead of
the thousands of other applicants? A good essay will be
conversational and rich in vivid details, and it could only be
written by one person--you. This book will help you figure out how
to find and present the best in yourself. You'll acquire some
useful tools for writing well--and may even have fun--in the
process.
There are hundreds of books available that coach kids on writing college application essays, improving SAT scores and trying to beat the admissions system. Admissions Confidential is a definitive look at why those books don't work. Toor lifts the veil on a process that anxious parents and high school students have never had decoded before. And they may be shocked to find out:
--that elite colleges spend thousands of dollars recruiting students they will never admit --why some students at the bottom of their high school classes are admitted to top schools when the valedictorians are rejected --how pricey independent college counselors can hurt an applicant's chances --why admission to a top school depends on who reads your application --why the top of the class at a high-performing high school may end up at their second and third choice
Written in engaging first-person and covering the entire admissions process--from recruiting to enrollment--Admissions Confidential is a year in the life of a college admissions officer.
Rachel Toor was a bookish egghead who ran only to catch a bus. How
such an unlikely athlete became a runner of ultramarathons is the
story of Personal Record, an exhilarating meditation on the making,
and the minutiae, of a runner’s life. The food, the clothes, the
races, the injuries, the watch (and Toor loves her watch) are all
essential to the runner, as readers discover here, and discover
why.
           Â
A chronicle of Toor’s relationship with the sport of running,
from her early incarnation as an Oreo-eating couch potato to her
emergence as a hard-bodied marathoner, this book explores the sport
of running, the community it brings into being, and the personal
satisfaction of pursuing it to its limit. Alternating with Toor’s
account of becoming a runner are the stories—meditations,
examinations, celebrations—of how runners become a pack. An
homage to running, a literary take on how an activity can turn into
a passion, and how a passion can become a way of life, this book
runs all the way from individual achievement—a personal
record—to the world of friendship and belonging, the community
that runners inevitably find.
Writing, for most of us, is bound up with anxiety. It's even worse
when it feels like your whole future--or at least where you'll
spend the next four years in college--is on the line. It's easy to
understand why so many high school seniors put off working on their
applications until the last minute or end up with a generic and
cliched essay. The good news? You already have the "secret sauce"
for crafting a compelling personal essay: your own experiences and
your unique voice. The best essays rarely catalog how students have
succeeded or achieved. Good writing shows the reader how you've
struggled and describes mistakes you've made. Excellent essays
express what you're fired up about, illustrate how you think, and
illuminate the ways you've grown. More than twenty million students
apply to college every year; many of them look similar in terms of
test scores, grades, courses taken, extracurricular activities.
Admissions officers wade through piles of files. As an applicant,
you need to think about what will interest an exhausted reader.
What can you write that will make her argue to admit you instead of
the thousands of other applicants? A good essay will be
conversational and rich in vivid details, and it could only be
written by one person--you. This book will help you figure out how
to find and present the best in yourself. You'll acquire some
useful tools for writing well--and may even have fun--in the
process.
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