【沈阳留学】2022年哈佛大学新生文书(九)-新东方前途出国

您的位置:首页>顾问中心>黄文璐>日志>【沈阳留学】2022年哈佛大学新生文书(九)

欢迎向我提问

*顾问预计24小时内解答,并通过短信方式通知您

留学顾问黄文璐

黄文璐

美本高部后期顾问

    获取验证码
    向TA提问

    温馨提示

    您当前咨询的顾问所在分公司为 北京 为您推荐就近分公司 上海 的顾问

    继续向黄文璐提问 >
    预览结束
    填写信息下载完整版手册
    获取验证码
    一键解锁留学手册
    在线咨询
    免费评估
    留学评估助力院校申请
    获取验证码
    立即评估
    定制方案
    费用计算
    留学费用计算器
    电话咨询
    预约回电

    顾问将于15分钟内回电

    立即预约
    咨询热线

    小语种欧亚留学
    400-650-0116

    导航

    【沈阳留学】2022年哈佛大学新生文书(九)

    2022-09-15

    九、Michelle C.'s Essay

     

    Successful Harvard Essay

     

    You should scrub off the top layer of your skin whenever you lose a round,” my debate teammate once advised me.

     

    That’s not practical,” I replied.

     

    Neither is your refusal to wear clothes you’ve lost important debate rounds in. Your wardrobe has very little to do with your success.”

     

    Half of me disagrees with him. I still bring three BIC Round Stic pencils with 0.7 lead to every test because my gut tells me this fastidious procedure raises my scores. I’m still convinced that labs receive better grades if written in Calibri. And I still won’t rewear clothes in which I’ve lost crucial rounds.

     

    Yet the other half of me is equally dismissive of my own superstitions. I love logic, never failing to check that steps in a proof lead to a precise conclusion without gaps in reasoning.

     

    Fortunately, I often abandon my penchant for pragmatism to accommodate for my unwarranted superstitions. And since I only feel the need to act logicalcally in selective situations, I am perfectly content with the illogical nature of my other habits:

     

    Raised with my great-grandmother, grandparents, and parents all under one roof, I never lacked a consultant to help me transcribe Korean holiday dates from the lunar calendar onto my schedule. Yet whenever all four generations of my family celebrates with a traditional meal of bulgogi, my untraceable and admittedly nonexistent Italian blood flares in protest; I rebelliously cook myself linguine con le vongole that clashes terribly with my mom’s pungent kimchi.

     

    If I plot a graph of “hours I spend in physical activity” versus “week of the year,” the result looks like an irregular cardiac cycle. The upsurges symbolize my battles with colossal walls of water in hopes of catching a smooth surf back to Mission Bay shore. The ensuing period of rest mirrors the hours I spend researching in that one spot in my debate team’s war room that isn’t covered in papers (yet), or at the piano sight-reading the newest Adele song. Then the diastolic tranquility is interrupted by the weekends when I’m sprinting through trenches to avoid paintballs swarming above my favorite arena at Paintball USA.

     

    I find comfort in the familiar. I treasure the regular midnight chats with my brother as we indulge in batter while baking cupcakes for a friend’s birthday, keeping our voices hushed to avoid waking our mom and facing her “salmonella is in your near future lecture. Yet, some of my fondest memories involve talking to people with whom I share nothing in common. Whether my conversations are about the Qatari coach’s research on Kuwait’s female voting patterns, or about the infinite differences between the “common app” and the Oxford interviewing process, or even about my friend’s Swedish school’s peculiar policy of mandating uniforms only on Wednesdays, I love comparing cultures with debaters from different countries.

     

    My behavior is unpredictable. Yet it’s predictably unpredictable. Sure, I’ll never eat a Korean dinner like one might expect. But I’ll always be cooking linguine the moment I catch a whiff of kimchi.

    更多详情
    -老师帮忙评估

    自身软实力标化成绩多维度为您评估留学录取率

    立即评估
    推荐阅读 换一换
    提交成功

    稍后会有顾问老师反馈评估结果

    温馨提示

    您当前咨询的 黄文璐 顾问,所在分公司为 - ,已为您推荐就近分公司 - 的顾问。

    以下为-分公司顾问:

    继续向黄文璐提问