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2/6/2014 A Strategy for Discovering and Describing Student Accomplishments | Edutopia

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A Strategy for Discovering and Describing Student
Accomplishments
May 26, 2014 | Jennifer B. Berns...
Why is the college application essay so difficult?
Some common answers: the stakes are high, students haven't written many personal narratives, and
they don't understand what admissions officers are looking for in their essays. However, theres
something else worth considering.
College application essays require students to have perspective on themselves and the ability to
convey this perspective to others. Many students -- even the ones who've taken challenging classes,
earned perfect grades, aced standardized tests, and made valuable extracurricular contributions -- have
trouble getting beyond describing the details of their experiences.
The Beginning of Self-Reflection
This difficulty isn't too surprising if we consider what John Locke pointed out in An Essay Concerning
Human Understanding. He described how children "growing up in a constant attention to outward
Sensations, seldom make any considerable Reflection on what passes within them." They're immersed
in their experiences, and it's not until they're older that their "Understanding turns inwards upon
itself, reflects on its own Operations, and makes them the Object of its own Contemplation."
Many seniors are just starting to make this transition. In fact, for many, it's the application process
itself that gets them to start turning inward in this way. It takes time to develop perspective, and if
you're trying to do this when you feel like the next four years of your life are on the line, the anxiety
only intensifies.
What can we do?
Let's start teaching our students -- even those in 9th, 10th and 11th grades -- how to create a
curriculum vitae (CV).
Why a CV and not a resume?
Students can get preoccupied with the external form of resumes (e.g., finding a template and
conforming to conventional strategies for organizing activities), and wind up creating documents that
don't reflect the significance of their experiences.
Curriculum vitae -- which means "course of life" and conjures up images of a course, a path, a
current, a direction -- seems like a more suitable option for them.
2/6/2014 A Strategy for Discovering and Describing Student Accomplishments | Edutopia
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5 Phases for Developing a CV
Phase 1
It's important that students start with themselves and, instead of following a form, make a list of all
their activities and accomplishments. The list needs no particular order and can include
extracurriculars, interesting classes, special projects, self-study, internships, volunteering, work,
hobbies, and anything else they would like to include.
They're immersed in what William James described as the "world of concrete personal experiences,"
which is "multitudinous beyond imagination, muddy . . . and perplexed." Our job is to support them
in recording the full range of their experiences without forcing them into premature conclusions or
structures.
Phase 2
Now it's time to move beyond the external, superficial details and start writing about what they found
exciting, challenging, or significant about each of these experiences.
One of my students held leadership positions in Science Olympiad and Model UN. We discussed
what he learned about persistence when he was trying to convince school administrators to keep a
popular AP class, and what he discovered about the art of negotiation when making deals with
delegates.
"Aha" moments that lead -- almost effortlessly -- to interesting topics for application essays often
start happening in this phase, which makes sense because students are starting with themselves and
writing "up" from their experiences instead of staring at the essay questions and starting "cold."
Phase 3
This next phase involves looking for connections between activities, developing categories, and
deciding how to order experiences. Instead of conforming to the classifications found in resumes,
students are creating a structure that emerges out of their own experiences. They're starting to
discover how to find meaning and order for themselves.
Let's go back to my student. He created a leadership section, where he described his responsibilities
and major projects as well as what he found most significant about them. Then he created a blurb at
the top of the section that described how this wide range of leadership experience taught him how to
adapt his method of communication to meet the needs of his teammates, delegates, and
administrators.
This is a great time to discuss the provisional nature of CVs and how you can move categories
2/6/2014 A Strategy for Discovering and Describing Student Accomplishments | Edutopia
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around (and even omit some) depending on how you're positioning yourself. Getting students'
experiences out on the page is an essential first step -- one which helps them start seeing the larger
picture, illuminates their path, and guides them into discovering the connections between their
experiences. Many times they don't feel as though they're on a path, but when they look at their
experiences, they can see how they're heading in a certain way, and they can think about whether
they really want to be on that path or going in a different direction.
Phase 4
Now it's time for students to focus on formatting their CVs, polishing the language they use to
describe their experiences, and proofreading.
Phase 5
It's important to review students' CVs and talk with them about what they wish they'd done
differently and what they wish they could say they accomplished. CVs are not just records of
accomplishments -- theyre springboards for moving students forward into their empowered futures.
Source: www.edutopia.org/blog/discovering-and-describing-student-accomplishments-jennifer-bernstein

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