|
下面是一所学校的Guide Line:
The first paragraph of your personal statement, one or two sentences,
should make clear the purpose of your writing: to present an interpretive
summary of your background, academic interests, and future goals as justification
for your admission to a program of graduate study.
The second paragraph interprets your background for the graduate admissions
committee. This paragraph should establish your academic preparation for
the program to which you have applied. If you have been a strong student
throughout your undergraduate years, you may call attention to what you
believe have been strong combinations of courses which seem to fit your
prospective graduate program well. If you have had ups and downs as an
undergraduate, you may call attention to progressive improvement in your
studies: i.e., the difference between your junior/senior GPA and your
freshman/sophomore GPA or your record in selected course work that is
directly related to the kinds of course work that you will undertake as
a graduate student. If you scored well on whatever graduate examination
that you took, you may want to cite that fact as well. Keep in mind that
graduate admissions committees want assurance that you will be a successful
student. If you have had relevant experiences, you may mention them here,
too. Some graduate programs such as applied sociology or social work or
resource development, etc. look for evidence that you have already sought
out ways to translate your academic background into practical, professionally
oriented applications. In short, this paragraph should assure the graduate
admissions committee that you have matured during your undergraduate years,
that your intellectual and professional interests have taken shape, and
that you have begun a conscientious progress toward professional development.
In this example format, the third paragraph will be a description of your
professional goals. (This paragraph and the next, however, could be reversed.)
Though your letter takes the general shape of a summary of your interests
and background, it also builds an argument for your admission to a particular
graduate program. The logic of this argument runs this way: I know what
interests me; I know that I would like to engage in this work as my profession;
and I believe that the necessary, most logical way to assure me of success
in this profession is to earn this graduate degree. This paragraph describes
what you know about the professional careers to which this course of graduate
study may lead. Generally, people who pursue graduate degrees tend toward
any of four professional occupations: academic, public service, private
industry, or self-employment (i.e., writers, lawyers, physicians, etc.).
Though you do not have to commit yourself to one career only, you are
best served by presenting to the admissions committee as specific as ideas
as possible about what you intend to do with their degree. If you know
that you would eventually like to be a business consultant specializing
in labor market analysis, say so. Such a statement indicates to the committee
that you are goal oriented, that you are capable of identifying what you
want and of developing a systematic means to attain it. This paragraph,
in conjunction with the previous one, assures the admissions committee
that you are an applicant with a purpose.
The fourth paragraph, which describes what you intend to study in graduate
school, should tighten your argument. Now that you have made clear your
interests, background, and professional goals, you must make the case
that the best way for you to bridge your undergraduate years and your
successful performance as a professional is to study what this particular
graduate program offers. Be as specific as you can. Learn what courses
this graduate program offers. Identify its faculty members and what research
they are conducting. Know the program's reputation, its strengths and
its weaknesses. Your undergraduate professors can be of very great assistance
in this regard. If, say, you are interested in pursuing advanced work
in cognitive psychology, your application will not be most appropriately
sent to a department that is trying to make its name in industrial/organizational
behavior. As you describe your reasons for applying to this particular
program try to link your interest with what you know is available through
that program and its parent college or university. If you know that it
encourages practicum experience, something you want, say so. If some of
your undergraduate texts or assignments have utilized materials produced
by that program, say so. Offer suggestions about combinations of courses
or faculty advisors that you think might be especially imaginative or
productive. This paragraph, thus, accomplishes two ends: you place this
graduate program in the continuum of your own professional development
and you demonstrate that you have applied to it as the result of an informed,
reflective selection process of your own.
Your personal statement should close with a brief summary of your background
and goals, again just a sentence or two. This last statement reaffirms
both your preparation and your confidence that your choice of this graduate
program is right.
|