Write A Scholarship Worthy Essay
Brainstorm. Get out a pencil and paper and go to town thinking
about your subject. This means you should write down everything that comes to mind.
Even ideas that seem disconnect should be jotted somewhere so that you can refer
to them later if you discover a logical way to use them. When you brainstorm, brilliance
shines through. Too often, by censoring ourselves, we toss out our best ideas. Put
a stop to this before you get to college. Think critically; don't be critical of
your thoughts.
Organize. When you are done brainstorming, organize your ideas
into the most logical order. From these ideas, you should be able to see an outline
for your thesis.
Research. You've established which brilliant ideas have made the
cut, so support them. Textual support from noted authors or literary texts is always
helpful. Use their ideas to add commentary onto your own. Just be sure to cite your
sources.
Write.
- Be enthusiastic. Your interest in the topic you are writing about
will shine through. If your writing says, "my mom made me write this essay and my
hand hurts," it will not distinguish you. If you don't know your subject, involve
yourself in it by doing research.
- Share information. When you write, you give another person (the
reader) access to your thought life. For many people this is why writing is so intimidating.
If you can get past the intimidation however, and be entirely honest with your audience
something magical happens—your voice/thoughts become something of interest to another
human being.
- Teach your audience. By sharing with your audience, you create
an opportunity to teach them. You've got their attention; after all, they believe
you are a credible individual with interesting insight. Now they can learn. And
guess what that makes you? Their teacher.
Be sure your essay includes all criteria designated by the scholarship provider.
Avoid an unconventional format. Now is not the time to test out
your creative abilities. If you are serious about the scholarship you are applying
for focus your creative energy into your synthesis of ideas. By playing with the
formatting too much, you detract from your writing abilities. Your essay should
include:
- Introduction. Include your thesis within the introduction. If you are a talented
theses writer it can extend into two sentences. Keep your introduction short and
punchy. A long artistic introduction is tempting, but resist the urge. You have
a point to get to, and likely, a word limit.
- Body. Make at least three discernable points within the body of
your essay. Each point should be in a paragraph of its own so that it can be easily
identified by the reader. Additionally, weave sources into the body of your essay
if possible. It will make your writing stronger and also show that you committed
yourself to researching the topic at hand.
- Conclusion. "In conclusion," statements are out. Lead into your
conclusion clearly and gently. The body of the piece should work towards the conclusion,
so your final comments should be captured your own reflections. A conclusion does
not appear to be the introduction regurgitated—your reader will catch on to this.