Thursday, June 18, 2020

5 Tips to Get Started on Your PA School Essay

Hey, You PA School Procrastinators You know who you are squeaking under deadlines by a nanosecond, feeling compelled to vacuum, or worse (when truly in the grips of avoidance), deciding to clean the toilet rather than tackle that pesky research paper. Believe me, as a recovering procrastinator, I can relate. Join the club When I was in college a gazillion years ago, my friends gave me a t-shirt that read, I was going to join the Procrastinators Club, but never got around to it. - Sue Edmondson Maybe putting things off works for you most of the time (there is some reward from the relief that comes from beating that deadline), but it wont serve you well when it comes to writing your personal statement. After all, its likely the one thing that will make the difference between getting that all-important interview and losing that opportunity to someone else with similar grades and experience. When I interviewed a dozen Admissions Directors and faculty from top PA programs across the country for our book, How to Write Your Physician Assistant Personal Statement, they said the essay needs to make them stop and think, This is someone I want to know better. You see why your personal statement is not something to rush through just to get it done. It requires careful consideration, much thought, and many revisions. To help you get going, follow these simple tips. 5 Tips to Get You Started on Your Personal Essay 1. Put your butt in the chair in front of the computer at a specific time every single day. This is a favorite trick of writers, especially when were suffering from writers block. As Ive discovered, you wont get anything written if youre cleaning the toilet. It doesnt have to be for long, 15 minutes will work. On most days, youll be surprised to find an hour has passed. 2. Let your imagination run wild. When youre struggling with what to write it is not the time to actually write. Instead, think about life experiences that brought you to this point and type them up. They dont have to be in formal sentences or in any order. Just as long as you can go back and remember what the heck you meant when you wrote, neighbor kid, six-years-old, worst day ever. Most wont (and shouldnt) end up in your essay. But youll be surprised at the richness of your memories. 3. Decide whats relevant to your personal statement. When Im writing an article, the biggest temptation is to include an amazing anecdote thats just slightly off topic. When I try to make it fit (and even now I am still guilty of trying), the writing is strained. Ultimately, Im forced to delete it. Writers call that killing your darlings, and its one of the best pieces of advice I can give. Sure, its touching that you bandaged your puppys leg when you were nine or saved a baby bird by bottle-feeding it, but those arent the things Admissions folks want to know. Copy them into a different document someday you may want to use them for another purpose, in an interview perhaps, when you are an award-winning PA. 4. Write a paragraph. Now, this comes with a caveat some people prefer to outline, but those generally arent procrastinators, who dont have the time to outline. (Told you I am a recovering procrastinator). So I say, work with your personality instead of against it. Take one of your experiences and put it in paragraph form. Dont worry about the little things character and space count, grammar, spelling or transitions, just put your musings into a three or four sentence paragraph. 5. Write your transition sentences. Youll need to get your essay from point A to point Z. Again, this isnt the time to worry about the details. This is just to help you start to tie those random experiences together. Cohesion is one of the biggest gaps I see when editing personal statements. Make it easy on yourself in the long run by getting a jump on tying it all together. When you do all this a couple of months before your application is due, youve bought yourself time to write a polished essay (and have it professionally edited if necessary) that makes the Admissions folks think, Hmmm, this is someone Id like to know better. This was a guest post by Sue Edmondson. Sue is an award-winning freelance writer who has written in Northern Nevada and Northern California since 1999. She has donated countlesshours editing 100s of PA school essays through our free and paid personal essay collaborative. Her articles have appeared in publications such as Family Pulse, Rlife, Enjoy, Edible Reno-Tahoe and she spent five years as a reporter for the Mountain Echo newspaper. She dabbles in fiction and was awarded first place for short fiction by the Reno News and Review. Shes also sold several short childrens stories. Her other career is as an attorney. You can read her full bio below. Looking for some more inspiration? Take a look at these 31 sample PA school personal statements shared by members of our community. Use it as a guide to see what works and possibly what doesn't as you sit down to write your 5,000 character CASPA essay. View all posts in this seriesHow to Write the Perfect Physician Assistant School Application EssayThe Physician Assistant Essay and Personal Statement CollaborativeDo You Recognize These 7 Common Mistakes in Your Personal Statement?7 Essays in 7 Days: PA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 1, A PA Changed My LifePA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 2, I Want to Move Towards the Forefront of Patient CarePA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 3, She Smiled, Said Gracias! and Gave me a Big HugPA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 4, I Have Gained so Much Experience by Working With PatientsPA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 5, Then Reach, my Son, and Lift Your People up With YouPA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 6, That First Day in Surgery was the First Day of the Rest of my LifePA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 7, I Want to Take People From Dying to Living, I Want to Get Them Down From the Cliff.Physician Assistant Personal Statement Workshop: To say I was an accident-prone ch ild is an understatement9 Simple Steps to Avoid Silly Spelling and Grammar Goofs in Your PA School Personel Statement5 Tips to Get you Started on Your Personal Essay (and why you should do it now)How to Write Your Physician Assistant Personal Statement The Book!How to Write Physician Assistant The PA Grammar Guide101 PA School Admissions Essays: The Book!5 Things Ive Learned Going Into My Fourth Physician Assistant Application Cycle7 Tips for Addressing Shortcomings in Your PA School Personal StatementThe #1 Mistake PRE-PAs Make on Their Personal StatementThe Ultimate PA School Personal Statement Starter KitThe Ultimate Guide to CASPA Character and Space Limits10 Questions Every PA School Personal Statement Must Answer5 PA School Essays That Got These Pre-PAs Accepted Into PA School7 Questions to Ask Yourself While Writing Your PA School Personal Statement101 PA School Applicants Answer: Whats Your Greatest Strength? You may also like -10 Questions Every PA School Personal Statement Must Answer Theres no one right way to craft your PA personal statement. In fact, it should be as individual as you are. However, there are basic things to include, that together, answer the question: Why do you want to be a PA? Here are 10 []How to Write Your Physician Assistant Personal Statement The Book!Admissions Directors and faculty share their expectations for your PA school personal statement and we teach you how to write it! What Makes This Book Unique? We have worked with 1000s of applicants through our Personal []The Ultimate PA School Personal Statement Starter Kit If you are struggling to write your PA school personal narrative, then this message is for you. Here's why . . . PA school admissions teams have an uncanny ability (honed on the job) to detect when an applicant's essay rings []

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