How To Write Your Common App Essay – Part 8 Of 8

In the last installment of our series, Noodle Pro Jamie Berger discusses Prompt 7 of the Common App essay: 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.

Jamie has been a test prep, writing, and academic coach for 32 years. He has a BA from Columbia University, an MA from City College of New York, and an MFA from University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

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Is the โ€œTopic of your Choiceโ€ the Topic You Should Choose?

In my post a few weeks ago on writing the โ€œfailureโ€ essay prompt, I mentioned that no student Iโ€™ve ever worked with has stepped up and taken the challenge of that topic. Now Iโ€™d like to discuss writing on prompt 7, which is somewhat controversial akin to the โ€œfailureโ€ prompt, but much more enticing to applicants in its open-endedness.

Letโ€™s take this non-prompt prompt apart phrase by phrase and discuss its advantages and pitfalls.

โ€œA topic of your choice.โ€

As I mentioned, this prompt sounds very enticing to some students, and absolutely anathema (look it up!) to others. I usually start working with students on the Common App essay by having them free-write about various aspects of themselvesโ€”hobbies, life-changing eventsโ€”that otherwise wouldnโ€™t appear in their college applications, and then see whether what they come up with might be successfully used as a response to one of the prompts.

If, and pretty much only if, a studentโ€™s chosen topic will not fit into one of the existing prompts, we consider the โ€œtopic of your choice.โ€ Why only then? Because no admissions officer wants to read an essay that could have fit well into one of the given prompts but seems as if the student just wasnโ€™t able to or didnโ€™t make enough of an effort to make it work.

Conversely though, if you know you want to write about your collection of 19th century political cartoons and itโ€™s important to you as a writer/artist/future political scientist or journalist or artist, and it just wonโ€™t fit into one of the given categories, then by all means, do not force it into a prompt for which it doesnโ€™t fitโ€”thatโ€™s why prompt 7 exists.

โ€œIt can be one you’ve already writtenโ€

Be careful with this! Yes, the makers of the Common App have written these words, but schools most definitely do not want to see you recycle a school paper you wrote that doesnโ€™t really do the job of a Common App essay, which is to express an aspect or yourself that you feel colleges wouldnโ€™t otherwise know.

As I say to students over and over, do not fudge, skate, or slack on this assignment. If you do, it will make you seem like youโ€™re not taking your college applications seriously!

โ€œ…one that responds to a different prompt or can be one of your own design.โ€

This just means that you may use a prompt youโ€™ve been given elsewhere, or you can write yourself a prompt and respond to it. Thereโ€™s no easy answer to how colleges will look at an applicant who repurposes another institutionโ€™s prompt, so, unless that โ€œdifferent promptโ€ is one you canโ€™t do without, I suggest writing your own that fits with your topic.

So, to sum up, if, after consulting with your college counselor youโ€™ve decided what aspect of yourself you know you want to write on, and youโ€™ve tried (really tried) and found it just canโ€™t fit into one of the given prompts without feeling like a square peg in a round hole, then go ahead, write that โ€œtopic of your choiceโ€ essay.

As with all my advice on the Common App essay, though, be willing to work hard and write one, even multiple drafts of one, while always leaving room to say to yourself, nah, this just doesnโ€™t work, I should try one of the other prompts.

This is not a twenty-page paper, so you can try one and start overโ€”just make sure you do your very best with it, even if that means โ€œwastingโ€ a few hours of good work. The time isnโ€™t actually wasted if it leads to a good decision and a great essay!

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