I tried to send this as a message, but clicking send sent me to a blank page, and didn't send the message. Has anybody else experienced problems with messaging recently? (If you have, you can get the message back by clicking your browser's "go back one page" button...but I didn't realize this the first time I tried to send a message, alas.)
Hi!
I was so happy to read your introduction and discussion posts- you seem very clicky, and many of your interests are very near and dear to my heart too!
For your essays, a few ideas:
It seems like your essay topics would need to either assume lots of background knowledge or run over by explaining the background. Have you considered only explaining the background (eg game theory for Newcomb's Problem) and then at the end mentioning Newcomb's Problem, and how you were inspired by, I dunno, Nozick's original paper or Marion Ledwig's thesis?
Writing multiple first drafts of your essay, with different topics, is probably worth it; it's not that much more effort, and you can then rely on others' feedback to select the best one to revise further.
Don't trust Word/Writer's character count; for me, at least, the Common App website gave a different number.
On the plus side, I'm told that most people's essays typically give very negative first impressions, as boasting about what they've done, so you've got a leg up on many people already!
If you'd like, shoot me a message at richard4@stanford.edu or on Facebook and I'll send you my essays (you may want to wait until you've written your first drafts, though, so as to avoid bad priming.)
Also, if you're interested in getting to know other highschool LessWrongers (and, by now, a fair number of college freshmen), there's a LW Highschoolers FB group:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/201577993258819/
1/8 of the members will be freshmen at Stanford this year! (Yes, it's a small group. ;))
Cheers, Alex Richard
Thank you very much for your advice, but...you seem to be affiliated with Stanford. Are you a student or a faculty member? If the latter, I'd feel a little...uncomfortable taking any more specific help from you. Even if it's legal, it feels like cheating, and that kind of thing would eat at me.
Your idea to write multiple drafts is a good one; they're really short essays after all.
On the plus side, I'm told that most people's essays typically give very negative first impressions, as boasting about what they've done.
See, that's what I really hate about...
I need help writing a college application essay that will maximize my chances of getting into a school that the world considers prestigious. (17 years old, preparing to enter 12th grade at a central California high school as of this writing.)
Throughout high school, I resisted being over-scheduled, and basically eschewed all extracurricular activities in favor of having time to think and read. Even when my parents pushed me into things like tennis, dance, or debate clubs (ugh), I was secure in the belief that I could forgo them and rely on my grades and test scores to get me into a college that was good enough to earn a useful engineering degree and find a few interesting friends. (I was right.)
However, my priorities have changed, and I’m starting to really value the extra leverage prestige can bring me. I plan to start a Less Wrong/80,000 Hours club at whatever university I end up attending. I would have access to more intelligent, interested people at Stanford than at, say, UC Irvine. Perhaps more importantly, the club itself would have a better standing in the outside world if it were founded in Stanford. (This in addition to the fact that Stanford already has a world-class Decisions and Ethics Center that may be able to help.)
This is not to say I now regret not being an officer in a dozen useless clubs or participating in endless extracurricular activities. I do, however, regret not doing at least one really impressive, externally-verifiable thing like writing a book. Nothing in my life would make someone say, “Wow, how the hell did she do that?” If admissions officers could scan my brain, they would find a lot that would make them say, “How the hell could she think that?” – but not much of it would be positive.
So my question is, how do I write a personal statement essay, 250-500 words, that will leave an impression in an admissions officer’s mind, without lying or plagiarizing, given that my adolescence was spent thinking and reading, not *doing*? Each university then has 2-4 follow-up prompts (<= 250 words), such as these from Stanford:
The problem with answering these is that all of my *best* answers for these questions (“Newcomblike problems,” “Hey, do you want to join this rationality club I want to start?”, and “optimal philanthropy,” respectively) would take way more than 250 words to explain.
The focus on Stanford, by the way, is because my parents would be extremely unwilling to send me to a university on the East Coast, even if it were really prestigious. But feel free to give me general advice or advice specific to another university. :) If it actually happens, I'll be in a better position to convince them.
May Be Relevant:
I once tutored a girl in Algebra 1 over a period of three months, bringing her grades up from a D to a B. She stopped needing help and I didn’t go looking for another tutee.
I completed NaNoWriMo my freshman year – yeah, it was pretty bad.
I’ve been writing a daily essay on 750 words since December 2010, and have written over 518,000 words in 562 days – writing something 98% of the time, and completing my words 95% of the time. (Although a lot of the missed days were due to glitches in the early website eating my words.)
I entered the Science Fair with a couple friends, hated it because it crushed the spirit of curious inquiry under a predetermined experimental procedure with a predetermined result, and unsurprisingly didn’t win – although we got a certificate from the US Army.
I joined a community service club, hated it because we were just unpaid labor for rich people who didn’t need much help, but stayed anyway because my friends were in it.
General SAT: Reading and Writing scores slightly above the median for most prestigious universities, Math score slightly below. 800's on SAT Math II (Pre-calculus), SAT Biology Molecular, and SAT US History.
5's on AP Calculus AB, AP English Language, and other, less relevant AP's. Five AP classes so far taken, received A's, planning to take 6 more next year.
High probability of a good letter of recommendation from APUSH and Calculus teachers.
Thank you!
Edit: Fixed the hyperlink formatting.