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Blog > Essay Advice , Supplementals > How to Write a Why Us Supplemental Essay
How to Write a Why Us Supplemental Essay
Admissions officer reviewed by Ben Bousquet, M.Ed Former Vanderbilt University
Written by Alex McNeil, MA Admissions Consultant
Key Takeaway
The "Why Us" supplemental essay is an opportunity to show alignment with your chosen college. To effectively write this essay, conduct in-depth research on the school's academic programs, values, and unique features that relate to your interests. Craft your essay to showcase how these elements resonate with your personal, academic, and professional goals. Avoid common mistakes such as vague connections or focusing on unrelated aspects of the school.
This post is one in a series of posts about the supplemental essays. You can read our core “how-to” supplemental post here .
The “Why Us” supplemental essay prompt—also known as the “Why This College” prompt—is one of the most common types of supplemental essays you’ll write during your application journey.
At the most basic level, Why Us prompts ask students to describe why they have decided to apply to the college in question.
Why Us prompts are important for both colleges and applicants.
When admissions officers review applications, Why Us supplementals help them understand how a student’s background, goals, values, and academic inclinations align with the school’s offerings. They also help admissions officers assess how serious a student is about wanting to attend the institution in question.
For applicants, Why Us essays allow you to make your case for school fit. They are the perfect opportunity for you to stand (metaphorically, of course) in front of the admissions committee and explicitly explain why you belong at a school.
In short, Why Us or Why this College essays let you explicitly tell admissions officers how you align with a school so you don’t have to leave the guesswork up to them. Let’s get into how you can write a Why Us essay that stands out.
What is a Why Us Supplemental essay?
Why Us supplementals can have a few variations, but they all get at a common question. Take a look at the following three examples.
1: University of Chicago
How does the University of Chicago, as you know it now, satisfy your desire for a particular kind of learning, community, and future? Please address with some specificity your own wishes and how they relate to UChicago.
2: Duke University
What is your sense of Duke as a university and a community, and why do you consider it a good match for you? If there’s something in particular about our offerings that attracts you, feel free to share that as well.
3: University of Michigan
Describe the unique qualities that attract you to the specific undergraduate College or School (including preferred admission and dual degree programs) to which you are applying at the University of Michigan. How would that curriculum support your interests? (Required for all applicants; minimum 100 words /maximum 550 words)
Why Us Essay Strategy
To write a good one, you need to know something about the school—you’ll need to do your research.
By this point, you probably already know a bit about the schools you’re applying to. After all, you’ve hopefully built your school list based on schools that best align with your academic interests, stats like GPA and test scores, and personal interests like school type and location.
Now’s the time to put those key areas of convergence into action.
The key to writing these essays is to do some deep research into the school you’re applying to. If you’re focused on applying to schools that have esports programs, you need to find a compelling way to articulate your interests that aligns you with the school and its offerings.
A school’s offerings don’t always need to be academic, but it helps. They can also be social, athletic, or cultural.
Often, however, students have a harder time writing essays about cultural or social fit that don’t feel superficial. It’s not enough to write an essay about how nice everyone was when you took a college tour.
Instead of focusing entirely on a single experience you had while visiting the campus, talking to an alum, or being interviewed, do some serious research into the school and how it would fit you as a student and a member of the campus community.
How to do Why Us School Research
School research is an important step in writing good supplemental essays. But it’s absolutely essential for Why Us essays.
Why Us essays are all about making an argument for school fit. They’re your main opportunity to say, “Hey, admissions officer. I belong at your school!”
So what does any good argument need? That’s right—research.
Because schools want to see that you a) have taken the time to get to know the institution and b) can make a case for why you belong at the school, you’ll need to do good research and use it in a way that best supports your case.
The research you do may depend on the specific prompt Why Us prompt you’re responding to. But in general, there are two kinds of research you can focus on.
Method 1: Find Academic Alignment
The first place you can focus your research is, of course, on academics. Since colleges are schools, showing your academic alignment is a safe bet.
So what is “academic alignment” anyway?
Academic alignment means that your academic background, interests, and goals match up with what a school has to offer. Schools don’t want to admit students whose academic needs they can’t meet, and students shouldn’t seek out schools where they won’t be able to accomplish their academic goals.
This alignment can appear in a variety of places. Here are some of the most common:
- Major options
- Special concentrations or programs
- Faculty research and labs
- Student research opportunities
- Academic initiatives and projects
- Study abroad programs
- Community partnerships
- Classroom philosophies
To find this information, you’ll need to scour not just the school’s website but also the website of the specific department you’re interested in applying to.
In your research, there are lots of places you can look:
- Course lists
- Faculty biographies
- Faculty CVs (these are basically faculty resumes that list all the academic work they’ve done)
- Academic articles and books written by faculty members
- Research lab websites
- News stories about academic research and awards
With these facts in hand, you can write supplemental essays that draw specific points of connection between you and a school.
Method 2: Find Values Alignment
Academic alignment is an obvious and common approach to Why Us essay prompts. But there is also a less common approach. Take your Why Us supplemental essays a step further by looking at school values.
All colleges and universities have specific values that guide the institution. That’s why schools have mission statements that lay out what the institution is all about.
To find school values for your Why Us supplemental essays, look for a school’s motto, mission statement, or strategic plan.
Mottos sum up an institution’s values-based framework. School mottos are typically established at an institution’s founding. Often they’re in Latin and have English translations
Example: Yale’s motto is Lux et Veritas or “Light and Truth.”
Mission statements are statements about an institution’s values and purpose. They lay out and are occasionally revised or updated as institutional priorities change.
Strategic plans are documents published by university leadership. They establish a working plan the university will follow over the next several years. They often lay out strategic initiatives and reveal where the institution wants to invest the most time and resources. These initiatives often revolve around social
Brand identity is a way universities ensure all of their communications sound the same. While these aren’t always public, you can often look up a university’s brand guidelines. These guidelines are written for university employees who communicate to the public on behalf of the university. While there’s no specific way you can incorporate these guidelines into your essays, they can give you a very clear sense of how a university thinks of and markets itself. With that knowledge in hand, you can write an essay that shows exactly how you fit into the ethos of the institution.
Example: Vanderbilt has a comprehensive brand identity page.
Showing that your values align with those of an institution
Method 3: Find Other Alignment
Why Us essays don’t just have to be about academics and values. They can also be about areas of interest that you hold dearly, like music, community service, athletics, and more. If you’re a die-hard Scrabble player and notice that the school has a Scrabble club, then that’s a unique feature that you can draw out in your supplementals.
Pick your strengths and lean in. If you're a track star, find something about the athletic culture. If you're a musician, research the community music program. If you love creative writing... you get it. Schools love to see students who have a clear vision of where they're going and why.
Scour a school’s website and social media channels for these unique and compelling connections.
Step 1: Choose the major you THINK you’d like to study at the school. It’s OK to not know for certain!
Look at the majors and minors offered at the school and get a sense of what interests you. Once you have a decent idea about what specific program you might be interested in exploring…
Step 2: Do a deep dive into that program and learn about the work being done by faculty in the department.
What do the professors study? Are there any interdisciplinary centers on campus that you could see yourself participating in? Learn about what real students do on campus and familiarize yourself with what specific academic and extracurricular opportunities might be available to you on campus.
Step 3: Think about how these opportunities could be applied to your other interests and passions. Try to find an interdisciplinary connection.
Be creative here, and specific. Unlike the Common App essay, where reflection is key, in the Why X essay you are looking forward. Talk about what you will do if accepted. Be as specific as you can. Make your readers feel as if you’ve really done your homework and have a good reason for applying to the school.
Why Us Supplemental Essay Example
It helps to have an example, so I'll walk through how I would help a student research a school and write a Why Us supplemental essay.
To start, let’s say the student in question is interested in studying psychology and wants to get involved in prison abolition efforts.
To add extra granularity, let's pretend this student's top choice program is Lewis & Clark College.
Now let’s go step-by-step through the Why Us research process.
Step 1: Choose the major you THINK you’d like to study at the school.
Our first step is to explore L&C's psychology program. Our hypothetical student is academically inclined. Thus, our focus in the supplemental will be on demonstrating the strong fit between the school's academic climate and the student's intellectual interests.
So we google "Lewis & Clark psychology" and navigate our way to the department page .
We know we want to do research while in college, so the "research" tab on the right side of the page jumps out right away. Let's navigate to that page and see what's up.
We quickly realize that L&C emphasizes research, and particularly emphasizes the opportunity for students and faculty to collaborate on research.
Cool. So now we have some ammo to work with in the supplemental essay. We can "demonstrate fit" by writing about our interest in pursuing research alongside a faculty member while studying psychology. Boom.
Scrolling through the page, I also notice that the L&C Psychology Department is touting their summer research opportunities and their history of placing students in nearby research labs. More stuff to say you're interested in.
Remember, by contrast with the Common Application essay, which is about your life, the supplemental is all about sketching a detailed plan for your undergraduate study.
The next step is to enrich your alignment with one of the department's core offerings (research) by finding professors who are conducting research that you'd actually want to help out with.
Read professor bios and take a look at which courses they offer. Or, start with a course catalog, find ones you're interested in, and then figure out which professors teach them.
Mention these folks by name. Talk about how they could enrich your education and help you become the student you hope to be in a few years' time.
Finally, I would recommend balancing out your essay by nodding to one of your extracurricular interests. In this case, our example student is interested in incarceration and prison abolition.
Given these interests, the student could talk about how she intends to study the relationship between early-childhood trauma and incarceration and co-teach psychology classes in L&C's prison education program.
By bringing her academic focus to bear on her interest, she is creating an interdisciplinary focus in her "Why X" essay that will help her stand out.
Most Common Why Us Mistakes
You’re almost ready to start writing. But before you begin, watch out for a few easy-to-make mistakes.
Not making any specific connections to the school.
Hopefully by this point, you know why this is a problem. A Why Us supplemental essay that makes no argument for why you belong at school isn’t adding much to your application.
Unlike a Common App essay that should be applicable to every school you apply to, Why Us supplemental essays should be customized to each school. They should have the school name and any relevant, specific details you want to include.
Feel free to explicitly state the name of a professor you want to work with or the title of a class you want to take. Including these specifics is much better than being overly general because the details show admissions officers that you’ve done your research.
Making connections that are too broad.
Other students try to make connections, but they make them far too broad.
Let’s say you’re writing a Why Us supplemental essay for a liberal arts college.
An inadequate answer to a “Why us?” question would be, “I want to go to your liberal arts college because of the small class sizes.”
While that may be true, it’s not a very good argument for why you’re a good match for the school. It needs to be more specific—about you and the school.
Focusing on features of a school that don’t connect with your background or interests.
The final major mistake students make when writing Why Us supplementals is choosing to focus on details that don’t actually connect to their backgrounds or interests. In other words, students go wrong when they call upon random facts and figures.
Brown’s Open Curriculum allows students to explore broadly while also diving deeply into their academic pursuits. Tell us about any academic interests that excite you, and how you might use the Open Curriculum to pursue them while also embracing topics with which you are unfamiliar. (200-250 words)
Contrary to popular belief, the Buddha didn’t say “life is suffering”. He said “life is dukkha ”, which roughly translates to anything impermanent , and clinging to that which is impermanent leads to suffering.
My interest in world religions led me to study Buddhism, which led me to practice meditation.(( The writer begins with a compelling hook and jumps quickly into answering the “Why Us” question.)) Soon, I was researching online what neuroscientists observe in the brains of meditators, which brought me to the Mindfulness Center at Brown. Over the past year, I’ve followed an infinite trail of links and videos from the Center’s website about how meditation, an ancient practice present in all religions, influences modern psychology, neuroscience, public health, education, athletics, medicine, and philosophy.
So, I became interested in Brown and just about every academic subject under the sun.(( These school connections are great because they show that the student was learning from Brown’s resources before they even began looking at colleges.)) I want to use my education and career to reduce suffering for others, and this goal transcends disciplines. Brown’s Open Curriculum would allow me to pursue my interdisciplinary interests while embracing my mission of improving lives.
To start, I’d like to branch out from psychology to neuroscience. My most likely path is to emulate neuroscientists like Brown’s Dr. Judson Brewer, who studies the brain on meditation and how mindfulness impacts habit change.(( This reference is specific, relevant, and incorporated seamlessly into the essay.)) I’d also like to try public health courses to learn how organizations impact communities, and biology and chemistry courses to grasp the basics of medicine. All I do is grounded in an understanding of ethics and religion, and I am also interested in the education concentration as I seek to share my ideas with others.(( This final sentence wraps up the essay beautifully by connecting everything back to the writer’s interests and values, which are related to those of the institution they’re applying to.))
Liked that? Try this next.
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How to Write a Why Us Essay
- Sasha Chada
- July 18, 2024
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Each college is unique, but not all students notice or understand these differences. Students are applying to an increasing number of colleges in response to shrinking acceptance rates, and many colleges want to make sure they aren’t the second choice (or the twelfth). The way they do this is through supplemental essays; namely the “Why Us” essay.
This essay is often challenging for students, because universities are not good at expressing what they mean through essay questions, or properly asking what they want to know. In this article, we’ll give you an example of a Why Us essay from a past Ivy Scholars student, explain why it worked, and explore what universities really want to see when they ask this question. Let’s get started!
An Example Why Us Essay
Here is an essay written by a former Ivy Scholars student, answering Columbia’s version of this prompt:
Columbia’s emphasis on multispection (seeing from many angles by engaging with a wide variety of disciplines) will enable me to tackle the pressing social problems of my generation that so desperately need solving. As an Economics-Political Science major, I am eager to dive into the dialectical relationship between economic pursuits and moral responsibility. While classes like Sustainable Urbanism and Inequality in Urban Spaces will fuel my curiosity about how political systems can advocate for social justice, courses like The Business of Nonprofits and The Evolving Social Sector will ground my lofty ideals in concrete data. Morningside Heights is more than just a group of Roman Classical buildings filled with endless classrooms. Organizations like the Committee of Global Thought and the Political Science Students Association will allow me to apply what I’ve learned in the classroom in a real-world urban setting. Furthermore, while engaging with Youth for Debate and Camp Kesem, I will have the opportunity to add a little sweetness to The Big Apple. I can’t wait to immerse myself in Columbia’s vibrant atmosphere as I munch on NYC’s signature bagels, stifling a laugh as I read the latest issue of The Federalist.
Columbia allows for only 200 words for its response, which requires boiling this essay down to its essence. The most important thing to remember, and what this essay demonstrates well, is that this essay isn’t about how great a college is. Admissions officers work there, they presumably already think it’s great; they don’t need you to tell them that. Instead, the point of a Why Us essay is to explain how you and a college are a great fit for each other.
Now, let’s go through this essay point by point to look at how the author does that.
At 200 words, Columbia’s essays may not be afforded the luxury of a hook. While it is possible to work one in, this student is fine jumping right into the action. They begin straight off by declaring what about Columbia attracts them, and how that ties into their own desires.
Essays of 150-200 words can go without hooks, especially if you struggle to come up with a good one. 250 word essays are borderline, and should usually have at least a sentence of lead in. Essays of 300 words and up should have some form of a hook to lead into the action. These are not absolute rules for essay writing, but are good guidelines to follow.
The author packs this essay with concrete references to Columbia, and ties each into one of their own dreams, values, or desires. While they are not able to dive too deeply into any single element, the use of a sentence to introduce an element from Columbia and tie it directly to the author’s own wants and needs makes the connection between school and author clear.
These shorter essays should either dive deeply into one or two topics, or take a broad and deeply intertwined sampling of many, as this essay did. Use the space however will best aid your own efforts. In either case, every aspect of the school you discuss needs to be tied to your own interests and needs from a university. Everything you bring up needs to come back to you, and concretely demonstrate how a school and you are perfect fits for each other.
Finally, the author clearly demonstrates who they are as a person and scholar, and how they will fit in with Columbia. While the essay is short, their personality still shines through clearly. These shorter essays have a premium on space, but you still need to demonstrate who you are as a person. Universities will be looking for that, to see how your personality will fit in with their ideal of the school.
What Not to Include in a Why Us Essay
There are some things that should not be included in a Why Us essay, either because they are overdone, or because they don’t add anything of substance to the essay (or sometimes even detract from what you are trying to say). These of course don’t show up in an example of a well done essay, so we’re going to go through them separately to make sure they don’t trip you up.
There are many colleges in New York, or Boston, or Los Angeles, and so making the location a big factor in your Why Us essay is often a mistake. After all, if all you want is to attend a school in New York, why pick Columbia over NYU? You can include a sentence or two on why this location attracts you, or the neighborhood around campus appeals, but it should not be your main focus in the essay.
Abstraction
You can get great vibes from a school you visit or hear about, but Why Us essays need to be based on more than that. The more concrete and specific the details in your essay are, the more admissions officers will think you care about the school. Saying a college has a great computer science program is generic; listing specific professors you want to do research with or programs you want to take advantage of are a much better way to show interest.
Fake Passion
If you can’t see yourself enjoying time at a school, it should not be on your list of colleges. If a school is just okay for you, and asks one of these questions, you should not fake your passion about it; instead, do more research about the school until you can find some aspect of it that truly appeals to you. Colleges often have many niche programs and opportunities; finding these can be difficult, but it is worth it.
A Non-Academic Focus
The main reason you are interested in a college should be academic. Other factors can and will appeal to you, and you should cover these in your Why Us essay. The main focus of the essay, and the bulk of what you say, should be about the college’s academic offerings however. Colleges exist as centers of learning first, and your essay should reflect this.
How to Reuse Your Why Us Essay
Colleges frequently ask students for multiple essays, and as high school students apply to ever more colleges, these add up quickly. Indeed, a student applying to 12-15 colleges (which we see regularly) can expect to write thirty supplemental essays. This is on top of the personal statement, and needs to happen while they juggle a senior year course load and a full suite of stellar extracurriculars that colleges expect to see.
Needless to say, we encourage all of our students to reuse their essays as much as possible, and help them do so strategically. Many students understand this intrinsically for some essays; after all a prompt asking about your intended major is going to produce the same essay regardless of school. Many are surprised to learn you can reuse Why Us essays just as easily.
The trick is simple: while all colleges are unique, they tend to be unique in the same way. They all have professors doing research, they all have labs and research initiatives, they all have student organizations and campus traditions, they all seek to create a welcoming and academic atmosphere on their campuses. The specifics of all of these can and do differ greatly, but the broad strokes and outlines are generally the same across schools and programs.
When writing your essay, you should highlight an opportunity that appeals to you, and then spend some sentences explaining why an opportunity of this sort is perfect for you. It’s not enough to say that a particular class ro professor appeals; you must explain how these opportunities mesh with your own goals, and support your educational dreams.
Then, when it comes time to alter the essay for another school, you can simply slot in a similar opportunity. The reasons it will work well for you will stay much the same; you may need some small tweaks to the language used, but the structure and message need not change at all.
This holds true for every opportunity offered, both academic and otherwise. There are clubs for every interest at pretty much every college, and these can be exchanged as easily as research initiatives or the names of faculty. In every case, the message stays the same: you and the college have complimentary needs and interests, and are a perfect fit for each other, like twinned puzzle pieces.
School Visits
One exception to this is if you have visited a particular college personally. Including this note, and any tidbits that particularly stood out to you on your visit, is another good way to properly demonstrate your interest to admissions officers. This will need to be rewritten for each school you visited, and excised completely for those schools you did not.
This should be a very minor section of the essay, but this and other personal connections help an essay to stand out more, and give it more weight when read. After all, personal experience with something is the best way to really know it, and tying in any personal experiences you have with a university will make your essay that much more impactful.
Final Thoughts
Every college is unique, in much the same way every snowflake is. If you pull close in you see the beauty laid bare in detail, but from a far off view there is nothing but an undifferentiated expanse. Colleges want to know that you care enough to find the detail, and commit to them should you be admitted. These essays are your way of showing that you and a college are perfect fits for another, and reassuring admissions officers that their school is your first choice, even if it isn’t.
We hope this article has given you insight into how Why Us essays function, and how you can write your own. Of course, writing college essays is often challenging, especially when combined with all of the other demands high school seniors have on their time. You don’t need to do it alone though. If you want help drafting the perfect essays, or with any other aspect of the admissions process, schedule a free consultation today. We have years of experience helping students find their collegiate home, and are always happy to hear from you.
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The Ultimate Guide to Writing College Supplemental Essays
What are supplemental essays? Our top tips for writing supplemental essays that move the needle on your admissions decisions.
Photo by Glenn Carstens-Peters on Unsplash
Supplemental essays are a key component of any good college admissions strategy. These small but powerful essays are a great way to differentiate yourself, particularly at competitive schools. This blog dives into what they are, how they differ from your personal essay, and how to write them well.
What is a supplemental essay?
A supplemental essay is an additional essay that colleges ask applicants to write alongside their personal statement. These essays usually respond to specific prompts that reflect a school's values, interests, or expectations. Colleges use supplemental essays to gather more personalized information about an applicant beyond grades and test scores, allowing students to showcase how they align with the institution’s academic programs, culture, and community.
Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash
What is the difference between a personal essay and a supplemental essay?
A personal essay and a supplemental essay have different purposes in the college admissions process and each have a unique focus. The personal essay is not tied to any specific school and the topics are often decided by the Common Application or its alternative, the Coalition application. Supplemental essays, on the other hand, are school-specific, often asking applicants to answer targeted questions or prompts related to that particular institution.
The primary purpose of the personal essay is to allow the applicant to share something significant about themselves, their experiences, and their personal or intellectual journey. It is more general and focuses on who you are as a person. Typically, this essay provides an opportunity to communicate your character, values, and how past experiences have shaped you. It can touch on personal growth, challenges, aspirations, and passions.
Conversely, supplemental essays help admissions officers understand why you want to attend that school, how your academic and personal goals align with what the institution offers, and how you will contribute to their campus community. For example, many schools ask "Why this college?", where you are expected to demonstrate knowledge about the school and how it fits into your academic goals. Supplemental essays can also explore your academic interests, potential majors, or specific aspects of your identity.
What should I write my supplemental essay about?
Your supplemental essay should effectively address the prompt provided by the school and tie into the overall ethos, or theme, of your application. You should use the supplemental essay strategically and tailor your response to each school and program. It should reflect your genuine interest in the college, and highlight how you fit with their programs, culture, and values.
How long does it take to finish a supplemental essay?
How long it takes to finish a supplemental essay varies widely. How confident you are in what you are writing, how easy it is for you to write, and how long you want to give yourself to proofread and make edits all determine how long it takes to write a supplemental essay. That being said, supplemental essays are generally short (250 words or less) and a first draft can typically be written in 20-30 minutes. It is the refining process that makes the process longer, as well as the total number of supplemental essays you need to write.
Photo by Alexander Grey on Unsplash
What Are the Different Types of Supplemental Essays?
There are many different topics - and even formats - of supplemental essays: far too many to list them all! Below we cover a few of the most common and what colleges are looking to see in each.
1. "Why Us?" Essays
- Purpose : Schools like Cornell and Penn use these essays to assess applicants’ knowledge of the institution’s unique resources and culture. This prompts students to demonstrate genuine interest in the school’s specific programs and values.
- What Colleges Seek : Admissions readers look for evidence that the applicant has researched their institution and can articulate a specific fit, including majors, faculty, clubs, and research opportunities. Authenticity, specificity, and alignment with the institution's ethos are key.
2. Intellectual Curiosity or Academic Passion Essays
- Purpose : Universities often request essays that reveal a student’s passion for a subject area, like public health, environmental science, or data science.
- What Colleges Seek : Schools like UChicago encourage unique, thought-provoking approaches, pushing students to demonstrate an inquisitive, critical-thinking mindset. Admissions officers assess how the student's curiosity translates into research, community projects, or in-depth self-study, seeing it as a precursor to academic contributions on campus.
3. Community Impact or Service Essays
- Purpose : Prompts related to community service and impact ask students to detail their contributions to their local or school communities, illustrating their awareness and proactive involvement in societal issues.
- What Colleges Seek : Colleges value stories that highlight students’ proactive problem-solving, empathy, and long-term commitment. This demonstrates a capacity for leadership and a civic-minded approach to challenges that will benefit the campus community.
4. Identity and Perspective Essays
- Purpose : Many top schools ask about applicants' personal backgrounds, often phrased as questions about their identities or unique viewpoints.
- What Colleges Seek : Admissions committees evaluate how students’ identities inform their values and perspectives. For example, writing on “identity” at a reach school like Penn might require an introspective, nuanced answer that showcases critical thought rather than a straightforward description of heritage.
5. Video Supplements
- Purpose : Video essays or supplements are a newer trend where students are asked to answer a prompt via a short, recorded video. These formats offer admissions committees a chance to observe a student’s personality, passion, and communication skills directly. Brown University has become particularly known for its requirement of a video supplement.
- What Colleges Seek : Schools use video supplements to assess applicants’ engagement and authenticity, giving them insight into their character and enthusiasm in a way that written essays can’t always capture. The videos also allow students to add a new dimension to their application narrative, such as creative flair or humor, as well as real-time responses to potentially unrehearsed questions.
Do colleges really look at supplemental essays?
Colleges definitely look at supplemental essays. Since the personal essay is a multipurpose essay often used for all or most of the schools to which a student is applying, the supplemental essay(s) gives admissions officers the chance to really understand why a student is interested in a specific program or school. They are particularly important as a differentiator for highly selective schools and programs, since many applicants will have strong grades and test scores. The supplemental essay is where you can emphasize unique experiences, perspectives, and academic interests that align with the college’s programs.
Supplemental Essays in 2024
When will the supplemental essay prompts for 2024-2025 be released.
The 2024-2025 supplemental essay prompts were released over the summer of 2024 and can be found in the Common Application portal under the “Writing Supplement” Section (sometimes called “Other” or “Additional Essay”) for each school to which you are applying.
When Do Schools Release Supplemental Essays?
Supplemental Essay prompts are officially released on Aug 1 each year for the Common Application. Individual schools may choose to release their supplemental essays slightly earlier in July or later in August. Schools change their supplemental essays frequently so make sure you are using the correct prompts for your admissions cycle before beginning.
Colleges Without Supplemental Essays
Not all colleges choose to use supplemental essays ( here’s a nice list) . In some cases the supplemental essays are optional. If your school does not require supplemental essays but offers them, it is definitely advantageous to complete them.
How To Write A Supplemental Essay: 7 Tips For A Good Essay
To write a strong supplemental essay, our Director of College Admissions, John Morgenelli, Jr., shares his top tips based on the BluePrint Method he developed and his insights from years in the college admissions space.
- Understand the Ethos of the Essay. The ethos is the core message or character of your essay. It should align with the prompt and strategically reflect your application narrative. Before writing, ask yourself: What message am I trying to convey through this essay? Your ethos should make clear your values, interests, and the role you would play at the university. Each supplemental essay should contribute to your overall narrative, complementing other parts of your application.
- Tailor Your Response to Each School. Each college has its own unique culture and expectations, so it’s crucial to tailor your responses accordingly. Schools often ask for essays about why you want to attend or how you would contribute to their community. Research the specific programs, faculty, and opportunities that align with your goals, and reflect those details in your essay. Show that you’ve done your homework and understand how you fit into the school’s environment.
- Be Specific and Personal. Avoid vague or overly general answers. Use concrete examples from your experiences to illustrate your points. If you’re discussing a future academic interest, describe specific engagements or research projects you've been involved with that align with the program you’re applying to. Personalizing your response by connecting it to your own narrative makes your essay more authentic and engaging.
- Be Creative and Thought-Provoking. Especially for reach schools, it’s important to stand out with creativity and originality. When choosing prompts or topics, consider those that allow you to showcase your unique perspective. Approach the essay in an unexpected way—avoid clichés and predictable answers. Think of creative ways to address the prompt, like challenging an assumption or posing an intriguing question.
- Use an Intellectual and Strategic Tone. Admissions committees are looking for critical thinkers. Even in personal essays, demonstrate depth of thought by explaining why your experiences or interests matter in the broader context of your future goals. Don’t just state facts—reflect on them and discuss how they have shaped your intellectual journey and potential contributions to the college.
- Create a Coherent Narrative Across Essays. Each supplemental essay should serve a purpose within your overall application, contributing to a cohesive narrative. If one essay focuses on your academic interests, another might highlight your leadership or community involvement. Together, they should paint a full picture of who you are and what you will bring to the school.
- Be Honest, but Strategic. While authenticity is important, your essays should also be strategic. Focus on the aspects of your personality and experience that best align with the program and the ethos of the school. If you’re not sure which qualities to highlight, consider what the school values most (e.g., intellectual curiosity, leadership, collaboration) and emphasize those traits in your essays.
By following these strategies, you can craft supplemental essays that not only stand out but also complement your overall application narrative, making you a more compelling candidate.
If you’re concerned about the strength of your supplemental essays, or have yet to craft an overall application strategy, consider working with Ivy Tutors Network. We offer college essay coaching , college admissions coaching , and our trademarked BluePrint plan to help you achieve your college admissions goals.
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Let’s start by taking a look at real prompts that fit under the “Why This College?” archetype: Tufts: Which aspects of the Tufts undergraduate experience prompt your application? In short, ‘Why Tufts?’ (150 word…
This guide will provide a step-by-step strategy and tons of “Why this college?” (sometimes called “Why us?”) essay examples to help you stand out on your essay and even help you decide what kind of school you want to go to.
Strategies for addressing the “Why us?” essay: Work backward. Think about what your big dream is—what or who you hope to become—and identify a few specific things about each college you’re applying to, asking …
Key Takeaway. The "Why Us" supplemental essay is an opportunity to show alignment with your chosen college. To effectively write this essay, conduct in-depth research on the school's academic programs, values, …
In this article, we’ll give you an example of a Why Us essay from a past Ivy Scholars student, explain why it worked, and explore what universities really want to see when they ask this question. Let’s get started!
A very common supplemental essays is the “Why Us” essay. In this type of prompt, a university attempts to zero in on exactly why a student has chosen to apply. Let’s consider a couple of examples.
That being said, supplemental essays are generally short (250 words or less) and a first draft can typically be written in 20-30 minutes. It is the refining process that makes the …