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Thinking about Graduate or Professional School?
The Office of Career Services
is here to assist you with all your graduate school questions.
Thinking about whether or not graduate
school is right for you? Need
help finding the right grad school? Need help with the
application process? We can help! For
an appointment with a career counselor, contact
Betty Butterbaugh at x 5242.
Click the links below for more information on:
Graduate School Information
Application Timeline
Application Checklist
Writing a Personal Statement
Graduate School
Application Essays
"The Test"- which admissions test(s) to take,
how to prepare, links to official testing websites
Graduate
School Information
Application Timeline
Junior Year (Fall &
Spring)
- Research areas of interest, institutions, and programs
- Talk to advisors about application requirements
- Register and prepare for appropriate graduate
admissions test(s)
- Investigate national scholarships
Junior Year (Summer)
Senior Year (Fall)
Senior Year (Spring)
- Check with all institutions before the deadline to
make sure your admission file is complete
- Visit institutions that offer acceptance
- Send thank-you notes to people who wrote recommendation
letters, informing them of your success
Application
Checklist
Although graduate school admissions packet requirements vary, the
following checklist will help you remember the essentials:
- A completed, typed application form
- A check for the application fee
-
GRE
(or other applicable exam) scores
-
An official transcript from all undergraduate
colleges you have attended.
Manchester
College transcripts are available at the Registrar's
Office, Administration Building. Most colleges charge a
small fee for official transcripts (MC charges $5). NOTE:
If a grad school asks for an "official" transcript, it must arrive in a sealed envelope
from the Registrar or it will be considered
"unofficial."
-
At
least three letters of recommendation. These letters generally
must be typed on the forms provided by the graduate school.
-
A written essay or personal statement.
The essay is usually part of the application form.
Keep a log of all materials mailed to the
Graduate Admissions Office. Communicate with the Graduate
Admissions Office by phone and letter to make sure all materials
have been received well before the deadlines.
Deadlines vary from January 1 through April 15.
Writing a Personal Statement
The Career Resource Library has many resources to
help you write your graduate or professional school statement(s).
Keep in mind that each grad school has its own requirements for this
essay, and you must adhere to these guidelines. If you have
questions or would like a professional critique of your personal
statement, see a Career Counselor.
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Many of the books on graduate and professional
school specialties contain helpful information on writing your
statement. For an in-depth look at the personal statement,
including advice from admissions officers and examples of exemplary
essays, check out How to Write a Winning Personal Statement,
R. Stelzer (1997).
Below are some questions to ask yourself as you
begin to formulate your statement. Jotting down your answers
as you think through your motivation for pursuing graduate study
will help you write smoother essays later.
Click here for more information on Writing you Personal
Statement.
Graduate School Application Essays
Purpose
The essay is the most personal part of the
application package. Transcripts, test scores, resumes,
recommendations--these all give the graduate school a profile of
your abilities and experiences. The essay presents the school with a
complete portrait: they hear your voice, see you in action, get to
know the person behind the numbers, the lists, the scores. When the
application asks for a personal statement, then you must aim to
write about yourself as clearly, as interestingly, and as honestly as
you can.
Audience
It's always hard to write to people you don't know--especially when
your future hangs in the balance. But putting yourself in your
readers' place can help you write a better essay. You can expect
that your essay will be read by several people: admissions staff,
administrators, faculty, and, in some cases, advanced graduate
students. All of them see the profession which you are trying to
join. You need to impress them, then, as a reasonable, interesting,
and competent future colleague. Although schools use the essay for
different purposes in their admissions procedures, all of them view
it as the best indicator of the kind of person you are and of
whether you are suited for a career in their field.
Your essay will be one of many--hundreds,
perhaps thousands that your readers will see. You can expect that
your readers will be somewhat jaded, perhaps thousand cynical:
they'll feel as if they've heard it all before, and they'll think
that all the essays sound pretty much the same after a while. Your
challenge, then, is to make your essay stand out from all the
others. Its subject and tone need to be distinctive, yet it needs
also to be professional and polite. You need not try to be
flamboyant or dramatic, but you do need to be yourself--your best
professional self. As you plan your essay, you must keep your
readers in mind: they are busy professionals, serious about their
job and their career; they value honest, clear, interesting writing;
they can spot b.s. quickly; and as they read through those stacks of
essays they are looking not for the right answers but for the right
people.
Topics
Applications rarely specify a topic. Instead they ask for an
explanation of why you want to go to graduate school or for an
indication of your career plans. Most essays ask for a response to
this question: "Why do you want to do this?" As you settle on a
topic, you again need to be concerned that you don't write about the
same thing in the same words that everyone else will
write about.
Some possible topics for open questions:
●
your motivations for going to grad school.
● the specific influences (people, professors, internships, etc.)
that shaped your idea of your career.
● how your education and background have prepared you for grad
school.
● what specifically you want to study in grad school.
● how you plan to use your graduate degree when you finish school.
● what you see as the main issues confronting your future profession
and how you imagine yourself fitting in to that profession.
Be sure you write with a thesis; you need to
focus quite narrowly on your topic, not wander through a whole list
of ideas. You must try to develop a single central idea in the
essay. And stay within the length guidelines (usually 500
words)--save your energy for your thesis or dissertation.
Another possible essay topic: your weaknesses.
The essay is the natural place for you to explain your weaknesses or
an aberration in your preparation. If your GPA is embarrassing, if
you bombed your entrance exams, or if you've taken three years off
to hitch hike through Nepal, the essay is the section of the
application for you to explain how these potential weaknesses are to
be understood. You may not be able to turn your weaknesses into
strengths, to spin straw into gold, but you should be able to
explain to a concerned reader why you are still a strong candidate
for admission even if your record isn't perfect.
Quality of Prose
Everyone who reads mountains of material
values good writing. Although it's unlikely that a school will admit
you solely on the basis of your writing ability, it's not unheard of
for schools to reject otherwise qualified applicants because of
miserable writing skills.
Some guidelines:
- Everything you've been taught about
writing comes to bear on this essay. You need to write with a
thesis; you need to support your main idea with examples, details,
reasons, and arguments; your paragraphs need to be clear, coherent,
and unified; the introductory and concluding paragraphs must be
appealing, accurate, and emphatic. Spend a few minutes thinking back
to your most effective writing class: What would that teacher value
in this essay? What would that teacher look for, criticize, smile
about, or comment on in the essay?
- The tone of the essay should be serious
and professional, but not stuffy and pompous. The style of the
writer has to emerge; the personality of the applicant must be
imprinted on the page. Use your own vocabulary. Sound like yourself.
Again, finding the right tone is a bit of balancing act--you can't
be too informal, too relaxed, but neither can you be too rigid.
You're not talking to your close friends in the essay, but neither
are your writing a scholarly article. Aim for the middle ground of
polite, professional, lively prose.
- The essay must flow smoothly. As you
revise and refine the piece, be sure it has a distinct beginning,
middle, and end. Look for clear transitions between paragraphs, and
make sure your sentences vary in length and structure.
- You can make sure that your writing is
active and lively by double checking the verbs. Often in this kind
of writing the action may be transferred to nouns instead of
verbs--exactly the opposite of what you want. Look for these kinds
of sentences to change:
For Example:
not: After my internship, my conclusion
was to attend grad school.
but: After my internship I concluded that I should attend . .
.
not: The decision was difficult, even
though my preparation was thorough.
but: I
decided only after long hours of consulting experts, reading about
the field, and thinking carefully about whether grad school is right
for
me. I prepared thoroughly, but...
- Many writers have trouble writing about themselves. They
loose their ability to see the essay after a while, and what was intended to display qualifications, they fear sounds
only like empty bragging. Two strategies can help here: First
try to write about your experiences, not about yourself. Beginning
your sentences with nouns instead of the personal pronoun "I" can
help (Not: "I cut grass for three years during high school." But:
"Establishing my own lawn care business taught me self-discipline
and the fundamentals of sound business practice.") Notice that you
can't (and don't want to) get rid of personal pronouns altogether,
but the shift from focus on you to focus on your experience solves a
couple of problems--it gives you distance on yourself, and it
provides variety in sentence structure. The second useful
strategy is to get several readings of the essay from friends,
professors, and writing experts (Come to the Writing Center!) before
you send the essay off. You need to get good responses from several
people to know how your writing strikes an audience.
- If ever you were to write an error-free essay,
this needs to be it. Grammatical and mechanical errors may ruin the
entire application.
"The Test" - Guide
to Graduate Admission Testing
Most graduate schools require scores from an
admissions test (similar to the SAT or ACT you took
before applying to undergraduate schools. The
most commonly required test is the Graduate Record
Examination (GRE). Some schools require the
GRE and specific GRE subject exams. Medical
schools, business programs and law schools often
require other specialized tests. Check the
admissions requirements of schools where you intend
to apply.
You can find information about the common graduate
admissions tests using the following links:
Graduate Record Examination (GRE)
Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT)
Law School Admission Test (LSAT)
Medical College Admission Test (MCAT)
Dental Admission Test (DAT)
Optometry Admission Test (OAT)
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