Law
School Essay Question Help
by
EssayEdge
Why
I Want to Be a Lawyer:
The secret to doing
this theme well is to show why you
want to be a lawyer. Don’t just say
it and expect it to stand on its
own. Admissions officers want believable
details from your life that demonstrate
your desire and make it real to them.
Says one admissions officer:
“Although you do get
tired of reading it, it’s nearly
impossible (and ill-advised!) for
an applicant to avoid communicating
at some point that: “I want to be
a lawyer.” It’s the ones who say
only that that rankle. The ones who
support the statement with interesting
and believable evidence are the ones
who do it best.”
One secret to avoiding
the here-we-go-again reaction is
to keep an eye on your first line.
Starting with “I’ve wanted to be
a lawyer since…” makes admissions
officers cringe. Yes, we know it’s
an easy line to fall back on, but
these poor people have read this
sentence more times than they can
count, and it gets old fast. Instead,
start with a story that demonstrates
your early call to law. Look, for
example, at the first paragraph of
this essay:
“That’s not fair.” Even
as the smallest of children, I remember
making such a proclamation: in kindergarten
it was “not fair” when I had to share
my birthday with another little girl
and didn’t get to sit on the “birthday
chair.” When General Mills changed
my favorite childhood breakfast cereal,
“Kix,” I, of course, thought this
was “not fair.” Unlike many kids
(like my brother) who would probably
have shut up and enjoyed the “great
new taste” or switched to Cheerios,
this kid sat her bottom down in a
chair (boosted by the phone book)
and typed a letter to the company
expressing her preference for the
“classic” Kix over the “great new
taste” Kix.
In telling the story,
this writer demonstrates that the
roots of her political activism run
deep without having to ever say it.
She doesn’t just tell us and expect
us to take her word for it-she shows
us.
Another approach that
is overdone is the “my dad is a lawyer”
approach. Some admissions officers
said that when the only reason an
applicant gives for wanting to be
a lawyer is that it is a family legacy,
it makes them question not only the
motivation but the maturity of the
applicant. While this doesn’t mean
you need to hide the fact that your
parent is a lawyer, it does mean
that you should avoid depending on
that as your sole reason for wanting
to go to law school. If a parent
truly was your inspiration, then
describe exactly why you were inspired
by them, and what you have done to
test your motivation in the real
world.
From
ESSAYS THAT WILL GET YOU INTO COLLEGE,
by Amy Burnham, Daniel Kaufman,
and Chris Dowhan.
Copyright 1998 by Dan Kaufman. Reprinted by arrangement with
Barron's Educational Series, Inc.
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