The Ethics of Writing College Application Essays | Doing College | Elizabeth LaScala | DanvilleSanRamon.com |

Local Blogs

Doing College

By Elizabeth LaScala

E-mail Elizabeth LaScala

About this blog: I post articles to offer timely and substantive college admission guidance on important topics and issues. Originally from New York, I have a B.S. from Hunter College in NYC and advanced professional degrees from the University of...  (More)

View all posts from Elizabeth LaScala

The Ethics of Writing College Application Essays

Uploaded: Jul 6, 2015
Understanding some fundamentals about the essays colleges ask students to submit with their applications can help you make more informed decisions about getting assistance with this process. Many parents ask me if I can help their student with "The College Essay." These three words suggest a single piece of writing and a lack of understanding about how much writing is required. The average college applicant in our communities will tackle far more than one essay before the application process is completed. Last cycle, students I worked with wrote an average of 8 essays and the range was from 2 to 16. Students who wrote two essays typically applied only to the University of California system (which requires a personal statement consisting of two separate responses) and the California State University system (which requires no essays). Students who wrote three essays developed responses to the UC application's personal statement as well as one central essay for the Common Application. With some modification, one of the essays for the UC application was suitable for responding to one of the central prompts on the Common Application, but not always.

If a student applies beyond California's public system, and uses the Common Application or Universal Application to apply to more schools, more often than not, colleges and universities ask applicants to respond to more questions (or prompts). These are called 'supplemental essays.' Supplemental essays help the college to evaluate the writing ability of the student, get to know the student better, and assess how well the student has researched their college. Having several and varied writing requirements (and this is especially important) also helps the school determine if the student is writing their own essays?they look for consistency across the essays (of voice, writing quality, knowledge of conventions, overall presentation, and so on). Often, at the last minute, a student will find questions on the application and hurriedly write them, hitting the send button with errors and all. This is a clear signal to the college that the student may have had support in earlier writing, but what is sent off just prior to the midnight deadline may be used by the college to determine the real quality of the student's writing.

Over the full course of the application process students may be able to economize on the number of essays they must write, but they must also be prepared for more. If you know that the UC is keeping its personal statement the same as the previous cycle's, and if you know the Common Application prompts are the same as last year's, you can write your essays for these applications as early as you wish (e.g. summer after junior year). But you can't develop supplemental essays until you have a school list, and even then, you can access them only after each college has released all of its essay requirements for the current application cycle. Sometimes this does not happen until August, or even September or October of your student's senior year. This is not uncommon, and although some schools post their essays and supplements early, others do not.

For various reasons (i.e. adding colleges to your list, finding 'hidden' questions that pop up only after you have started filling out the application), the number of essays may continue to expand over the course of the fall application cycle. After the student has done a substantial amount of writing, many essays can be recycled with smart editing and minor revisions, often including expansion or reduction in word or character count. It is a truism that good writing takes time and effort to witness rewards. These rewards are generally witnessed toward the end of the application cycle, not at the start or midpoint.

It is important for families and their students to understand that getting "the college essay" written for a small price tag over the summer months is problematic, if the student is then overwhelmed by more required writing as the weeks and months of fall cycle progress. Ethical essay writing vendors (seminars, workshops) should fully explain that writing one or two essays only gets a small part of the job done. If they don't, look elsewhere for assistance. It's difficult enough for students to write strong college essays. Uncovering them late in the process, makes a tough job even harder.

For professional and reputable assistance with college essay writing, write elizabeth@doingcollege.com or call 925 385-0562. Visit Elizabeth and learn about all of the comprehensive college advising services provided by Doing College and Beyond.
Local Journalism.
What is it worth to you?

Comments

Posted by Conservator, a resident of Danville,
on Jul 13, 2015 at 9:36 am

Dr. LaScala,

The 'rapscallion' pirates that seem to troll your column like remoras to a shark due to its focus on post-secondary education for your reader's children.

I strongly encourage you to enable the option for commentary that requires personal disclosure so that, perhaps, these unethical devils find somewhere else to post these services.

Please think about it. You wrote a very nice column on "The Ethics of Writing College Application Essays" and one of these individuals sullied your post with a couple of poorly written sentences and an advertisement for an essay writing and book report generating service. As sure as the sun will rise tomorrow, two or three more will attach themselves to this comment block shortly after this one posts.

On a positive note, I personally find your column and corresponding thoughts to be spot-on and relevant for helping advance today's newly minted high school graduates.


Follow this blogger.
Sign up to be notified of new posts by this blogger.

Email:

SUBMIT

Post a comment

Sorry, but further commenting on this topic has been closed.

Stay informed.

Get the day's top headlines from DanvilleSanRamon.com sent to your inbox in the Express newsletter.

Burning just one "old style" light bulb can cost $150 or more per year
By Sherry Listgarten | 6 comments | 1,835 views

Reflecting on lives this Thanksgiving Day
By Tim Hunt | 0 comments | 1,010 views