Unlike tired topics, you want your essay to stand out, to hold the reader’s attention, to be unique, to be outstanding. To be outstanding, you want it to ooze with your style, illustrate your positive character traits, and to SHOW how you are different and unique.
Incorporate your style and voice:
Write in a casual, conversational tone that is true to your voice. That doesn’t mean it’s filled with run-ons and poor grammar construction and slang. You can have a casual tone with professional organization and proper editing. Don’t approach the essay like a science report, informational piece, or research paper. Write it in first person not third person.
Illustrate your positive character traits:
Colleges want people with ethics, leadership tendencies, honesty, humbleness, and kindness. They want to see changemakers, independent thinkers, and persisters. People who will take advantage of their programs and all the opportunities that colleges offer. Be sure your essay offers a glimpse into the kind of person you are.
Show how you are unique and interesting:
Everyone is unique and has a great story to tell. You just need to find that story. A good way to get started is by brainstorming a list of 25 things that are unique to you, not just academics and extracurriculars but everything from favorite songs and movies to odd habits and interesting hobbies. Those are the things that make you stand out from your peers and things that interest the admission readers. Explain how or why you found those interests and why they are important and link those interesting things about you back to your academics and extracurriculars, your past and future, to your personality and character traits.
SHOW DON’T TELL.
“Show” is the opportune word here. This was the mantra of creative writing teachers. Look at the opportunity to write your personal statement as a short story, as creative nonfiction. Use narrative writing and literary elements like detailed sensory imagery, metaphors, analogies, personification, and active verbs. Narrative writing is storytelling. Think of it as telling a story, a tiny short story of an event in your life that made an impact or allowed you to show a certain positive characteristic, and think of yourself as an author, not just a student writing an essay.
Read samples of successful essays.
You can buy books and find website that share “college essays that worked” or successful personal statements.” Practice creative writing techniques. Brainstorm unique details about yourself. Ask friends and family for incidents that allowed you to show positive characteristics, challenged you to rise above hardships, or instances where you were forced outside of your comfort zone but forged on.
Who can help?
Parents, your English teacher, neighbors who are great writers or secondary or higher education educators, Independent Educational Consultants and other professionals who do college consulting either online or in your community.
The 2025-2026 Common App Prompts:
- Some students have a background, identity, interest, or talent that is so meaningful they believe their application would be incomplete without it. If this sounds like you, then please share your story.
- The lessons we take from obstacles we encounter can be fundamental to later success. Recount a time when you faced a challenge, setback, or failure. How did it affect you, and what did you learn from the experience?
- Reflect on a time when you questioned or challenged a belief or idea. What prompted your thinking? What was the outcome?
- Reflect on something that someone has done for you that has made you happy or thankful in a surprising way. How has this gratitude affected or motivated you?
- Discuss an accomplishment, event, or realization that sparked a period of personal growth and a new understanding of yourself or others.
- Describe a topic, idea, or concept you find so engaging that it makes you lose all track of time. Why does it captivate you? What or who do you turn to when you want to learn more?
- Share an essay on any topic of your choice. It can be one you've already written, one that responds to a different prompt, or one of your own design










