Want to find your best material to start your college essay?

x

Enter your email address, and the guide is yours, free!

  • Skip to content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Essay Intensive

  • About EI
  • Services
    • Admissions Essay Support
    • Tutoring & Coaching Plus
    • Applying to High School in NYC and Admissions Writing Help for your Middle School Student
  • Featured Essay
  • What They’re Saying!
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Login

reader

First line, first impression

November 4, 2015 by Sara Nolan

Your first sentence of your essay decides if you have a future... That is, if your college essay has a future in the eyes of your reader. There, got your attention.  See? First impressions matter.  Your college essay is no exception.  And your first line of your personal statement is your first impression, so here's how to make it good and have the adcom begging (well, maybe not begging, but ready) for more. Consider Context You wouldn't go for a job interview with tomato sauce rubbed across your face, go on a first date in a stained shirt, show up for the first day of school with a busted notebook from last year. Don't start your essay without thoughtful craft-- you want it to entice. In fact, make that first line work for you so you have the best chance at getting the prize-- that is, the adcom's attention. Figure out the techniques Here's Stanford University's sample first lines from admitted students. If you take a few minutes to study each first line, you'll see that A) there is a range of winners and B) there is no formula and C) each line has a reason it's successful.  We'll look at a few different ones to give you a primer on why they work. First Lines of college essays we love "I change my name each time I place an order at Starbucks." First, clever, and why not, do you have an obligation to be you?  Second, the reader is given a fact, but no explanation for it: perhaps the writer likes the freedom to swap out identities in low-stakes situation; perhaps the applicant hates his or her first name; perhaps something traumatizing happened with a Starbucks employee -- point is, we have just enough information to be intrigued, but not enough to be satisfied. Simple sentence, but big opening. "When I was in eighth grade I couldn't read."  Again, simple fact, but begs the biggest question: Why?  (Especially, perhaps, because we know this student was submitted to Stanford at least partially on the strength of the essay). "On a hot Hollywood evening,  Continue Reading …

Filed Under: Practice, Revising, Solutions, Uncategorized, Writing Tips Tagged With: a twist, adcom, attention, college essay, college essay tips, first lines, good impression, reader, Stanford University Magazine, student sample writing, subvert expectations

Primary Sidebar

About Our Conversations

At Essay Intensive, we are listening for the Big Challenging Questions to arise–physically, mentally and emotionally. We jump, word-ninja style, at the chance to be stimulated and engage in a true conversation.

Our bodies are holistic, courageous homes with a singular mission (in a multi-faceted world): live! It’s up to us to realize and share the rich outcomes of that drive. “A conversation” is a place for members of our community to do just that.

Think, feel and write deeply. Question. Sweat. Speak.

Find a topic

Tags

admissions officers advice anecdote anxiety authenticity brainstorming Brown University college acceptance college admissions essay college admissions essays college application college essay college essay tips college essay writing College essay writing process Creativity Essay Writing exercise feedback Free-writing freewriting ideas inspiration Letter from Birmingham Jail love Martin Luther King Jr. meditation parents personal essay perspective poetry prompts self-awareness stress stress reduction student stories supplemental essays topics voice writer's block Writing writing advice writing process writing prompts writing tips

Recent Posts

  • You don’t have nothing to write about in your college essay
  • Common App Essay Prompts 2025-2026 Are Live! How to start writing
  • College Essay Topics to Avoid or Rethink
  • Anatomy of a college essay (a primer)
  • College Essay Writing Process (A Primer)

Subscribe below to receive new posts in your email

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn