I am currently writing my Personal Statement for law schools and I keep receiving conflicting advice on the direction in which one should take for this essay. I hope the 7sage community can lend their advice. On one hand, some say it is imperative to mention in your PS why you want to go to law school, making this point the anchor of the essay. Others, whom I tend to agree with, emphasis that a PS should be an essay that tells admissions something that they would otherwise never know about you, something crucial perhaps in character development. I don't want to write some boring, vanilla-flavored essay that admissions has read a bajillion times, but rather write something that jumps off the page and is memorable. I suppose the two ideas I'm describing can be amalgamated...smh. Please help me, people..
Comments
You should try to present a narrative about yourself that is honest and conveys who you are. It is hard to give particular suggestions since everyone's life is different, but reflect on things that make you who you are, and if there are instances in your life that reflect that. Since you are someone who wants to go to law school, this is a part of who you are, and optimally should be tied to the narrative.
Sometimes its hard to inspect yourself, and so it might be helpful to ask family/friends etc.. for suggestions of stories or qualities that stand out.
My only two rules for writing a PS are:
1) Don't be boring
2) Write well
If you can write in a way that captures the reader's attention, that is what you really want to do to separate yourself from the pack. The majority of the time you are basically having one person taking home a stack of 50 apps and reading all the apps and essays on their own. If 25 essays are run of the mill "why law?" then if you do the same you are not setting yourself apart and the PS will not be value added for you, when by most measures it is the third most important thing after LSAT/uGPA in the majority of cases.
Thanks for the vote of confidence, @"The 180 Bro_OVO". @Pacifico and @"Chipster Study" also give sage advice, with the one caveat, @"Chipster Study", that an overly dramatic first paragraph can come off as a bit paint-by-numbers. I see a lot of personal statements that try to create suspense by withholding information about setting, and it often makes the author look like he or she is trying too hard.