admissions essay

What Makes a Successful Admissions Essay?

What Makes a Successful Admissions Essay

Many students imagine college admissions officers as some of the most brilliant people in the world — carefully judging every sentence and measuring a student’s worth with a fine-tooth comb. That idea can feel overwhelming. 

That’s not the reality — not by a long shot, not even for the most selective of schools. 

Admissions officers are regular people doing a busy job. They may read 50 to 100 essays in a single day. They’re not searching for perfection — nor are they required to, as perfection is fantasy. 

They’re looking for essays that capture their interest and help them remember a student among many.

So how can you make your essay stand out?

Tell a clear, personal story

Strong essays focus on a specific moment or experience. You don’t need a dramatic life story. Students often stress about not having a story that’s tragic enough to tell: this is a good thing! Most reasonable adults aren’t hoping for severely traumatized students who had to face horrors and injustices before their brains were fully developed. 

Even small, ordinary moments can be powerful if they show something meaningful about you. 

The only task you have as a student is to make meaning and engage your reader. 

A well written story helps the reader stay engaged and understand who you are.

college writing

Use your authentic voice

Many students try to sound overly formal or “impressive.” 

One common mistake that we see in admissions essays is using the essay to recreate your resume in prose form rather than bullets. 

Furthermore, they focus on overselling themselves: they discuss how they are ALWAYS honest, ALWAYS eager to learn, ALWAYS perfect, perfect, perfect. 

But this often makes the essay feel fake. 

Admissions officers can tell when a voice isn’t genuine. 

Write the way you naturally speakclear, honest, and true to yourself. Don’t be afraid to use humor or reveal your dreamy nature. 

Your real voice is what makes your essay memorableit turns an essay into a human voice rather than just another robotic resume. 

Your personal essay also shouldn’t be written in the same formulaic style in which you write for school: it’s a place to flex your creative muscles and show some of your unique flourish. 

Show reflection and growth

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It’s not enough to describe what happened in a story. 

For students who choose to detail descent into the underworld narratives, this is often the big mistake: they detail a severe trauma…and then expect the reader to make meaning of it and choose them out of sympathy. 

Empathy is something that’s on a spectrum: it can’t be guaranteed your reader will feel the way you feel or even have sophisticated skills of emotional empathy. Admissions officers are ordinary, diverse peoplelike anyone in any career field. 

Therefore, you need to explain what you learned. You need to make meaning.

Surprise the reader: bloom from mud like a lotus flower. 

How did the experience change you? What did it teach you about yourself or the world? 

Reflection shows maturity and critical thinking, while helping the reader see your personal growth and individual personality.

Trying to include too many topics can make your essay confusing. 

A common error in personal essays for college admissions is treating it like an autobiography of your life story from birth do current day when you really need to be treating it like a miniature memoir. 

Instead, choose one central theme or story and build your essay around it. 

A focused essay is easier to follow and leaves a stronger impression.

Use specific details

Avoid general statements like “it was important” or “I learned a lot.”

This is where your skills of creative writing matter. 

Use strong verbs, vivid adjectives, and descriptions that appeal to the senses. Show, don’t just tell.

Make the reader feel as if they are with you by providing clear examples. Describe small details, actions, or moments. 

These rhetorical choices bring your story to life and make it more interesting to read.

Keep your writing clear and simple

Another problem that is see-through: the student that tries to drop “ten-cent” words every other sentence. 

They discuss their ignominious feelings after losing a contest.

 They describe their truculent fights with a sibling. They bemoan the ubiquitous toxic messages on social media.

They have the admissions officer scrambling for a dictionary, even at schools like Harvard. 

You don’t need complicated sentences or big words to impress anyone. 

In fact, simple and clear writing is often stronger. Admissions officers read quickly, so your ideas should be easy to understand. 

Clear writing shows confidence and strong communication skills.

Save the ten-cent words for SAT studies. 

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Show your values and purpose

A main goal of admissions isn’t to choose a PERFECT student, but to choose a student that fits with the values and ideology of the campus and its student demographics. 

Therefore, by the end of your essay, the reader should understand what matters to you. 

What do you care about? What motivates you? 

Your essay should give insight into your character.

Revise and improve your draft

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As I always tell my students, real writing IS revising. 

It’s not until you’re revising that you’re actually writing. 

Before then, you’re drafting. 

No great essay is written in one try. (And no, ChatGPT doesn’t write great essaysit writes mostly grammatically sound and minimally competent essays, but not great). 

Strong essays go through many revisions. 

This is where tutoring can be especially helpful. 

A tutor or mentor can guide you, give feedback, and help you strengthen your ideas and structure.

In the end, a successful admissions essay isn’t about being a genius (why would you need college at all if you’re already so great?) 

It’s about being authentic, caring, curious, clear, and committed to continued growth. 

Remember, the person reading your essay is human. They’re tired, busy, hungry, and reading many essays in a row. 

When your writing feels honest and engaging, it gives them a reason to pauseand to remember you.

Getting support on your admissions essay

Whether your student is still finding their voice on the page or working through their fifth revision, Jamie The Scholar can help. Our tutors work alongside students — not over them — to strengthen ideas, sharpen structure, and make the writing feel like theirs.

Call us at 888-577-3224 or visit jamiethescholar.com.

Visit jamiethescholar.com or call us at 888-577-3224 for a free consultation to get started