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Texas A&M University Application
Writing A Compelling Personal Statement for Your University of Texas at Austin Application
UT’s new essay requirements include a more open-ended personal statement. All freshman applicants to the University of Texas at Austin must submit a personal essay, between 500 and 650 words, which plays a crucial role in the holistic review process.
This long essay is a student's primary vehicle for communicating the aspects of their personality, perspectives, and relationships that a resume alone can't convey. It's their chance to give the admissions committee a sense of who they are and how they see the world.
HERE’S THE PROMPT
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.
Please keep your essay between 500–650 words (typically two to three paragraphs).
Students are used to writing academic papers, where their teachers provide clear prompts, a list of expectations, and even a rubric that lays out exactly what they need to do to earn full credit. Personal essays are a different beast. This prompt is particularly open-ended. That means the expectations can seem frustratingly amorphous, and no one can tell your student with 100% accuracy what they need to do to succeed. That freedom of thought, though, is representative of what college will be like for your student, so it’s a great chance to embrace that new mindset.
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How to Approach UT’s Personal Essay
Refer to the Common App Prompts
Since this essay prompt aligns with the Common Application's personal statement, students can simplify their application process by using one of the Common App prompts for their UT Austin essay. This will allow them to write a single essay that can be submitted to all their schools.
Choose a Topic that Led to Growth
When choosing a topic for the personal essay, students should explore moments that have produced some type of change in their life or thinking. It could be a significant event or experience that completely changed the course of their life, or it could be a smaller, more personal experience that holds special meaning to them. The admissions committee wants to get a glimpse of who the student is beyond their application, understanding what they care about and how they make sense of the world. Students should choose a story that has a clear narrative arc demonstrating how they have grown or changed as a result of the experiences they describe, while showcasing their personality, values, and growth.
Focus On Recent Experiences
Although the story a student chooses to tell might be rooted in their earliest experiences, the primary focus of the narrative should be on the past three or four years. For most teenagers, high school is a period of rapid personal and interpersonal growth. During that time, students have probably begun to form their own individual ideas and beliefs, explore new interests, and take on more responsibility at school and home. They've also gained experience navigating new social and emotional challenges, and they may have started developing a stronger sense of what they have to contribute to the communities they belong to.
Use Specific Examples and Anecdotes
Specificity and vivid details are what make personal essays come alive and make them memorable for the reader. Students should make sure their essays sparkle with unique aspects of their experiences. This is why revision is key to personal essay writing—sometimes it takes multiple drafts to remember and layer in meaningful details.
Aim for At Least 30% Reflection
While the narrative part of a student's essay tells us what happened, the reflection tells us why living those experiences mattered to a student—not to the person next to them and not to a generic student, but to that student personally. The reflection aspect of the essay helps the reader understand how the student has grown and changed over time. It's where a student will look back at the narrative and think seriously about how they have changed because of it.
Ask for Feedback, But Proceed Cautiously
While we encourage students to have others whose opinion they respect review the essay for feedback on clarity, coherence, and impact, we do caution students not to have too many people weigh in. Sometimes having too many people offering different opinions about the essay can be paralyzing—especially when those well-meaning readers might not understand the job of a personal essay in college admissions. Ultimately, it should be an authentic essay a student feels represents them well, one they feel proud of sharing with admissions.
Proofread Carefully—But Don't Obsess If a Typo Slips Through
It goes without saying that once a student has completed their final draft, they should proofread it carefully. Using apps such as Grammarly can be helpful, but another set of human eyes is always a good idea. Despite a student's best efforts, sometimes a typo or a mistake can slip through, making them paranoid that this one detail will derail their entire application. Admissions counselors assure us that this is not the case. They realize everyone is human and mistakes happen, especially in such a stress-filled process as college applications.
The application process for Texas A&M can feel overwhelming. Our Essay & Resume program provides an experienced coach and a proven framework, working one-on-one to reduce the stress so the student can tell a compelling story.
Our program for students applying to UT Austin includes:
- Resume Coaching: Helping students craft exceptional college resumes that showcase their unique qualities and strengths
- In-Depth Essay Coaching: Guiding students step-by-step through their personal statement and four tailored supplemental essays
- Timeline Management: Expertly overseeing your student's schedule to ensure they stay on track to submit their applications
- Revision Guidance: Offering valuable suggestions and edits to help students refine their resume and essay
Your student will be carefully matched with a coach based on personality, working style, and first-choice major—it’s just one of the many ways we modify our proven process to meet individual student needs.
THE BIGGEST PERSONAL ESSAY WRITING MYTH
Students often assume the admissions committee must want to hear about either their most impressive achievement or their most harrowing defeat. In brainstorming examples from their lives, students tend to focus almost exclusively on extremes (the highest highs, the lowest lows), which are usually things they've already listed on their resume as well.
These don't necessarily make for bad essay topics—in the hands of a thoughtful, introspective writer, virtually any subject can make for a compelling and personally revelatory piece. But both have certain risks.
Focusing too narrowly on extreme highs and achievements (including activities, honors, and so on) can result in essays that read more like long-form resumes than visceral, compelling stories. Too much of an external focus makes the essay flat, giving the reader little sense of the writer's inner life.
By contrast, when students write about extreme lows, including a traumatic event or loss, they can sometimes get too caught up in exploring painful thoughts and feelings. They also may not yet be ready to reflect on the experience. The experience begins to define the writer, instead of the writer defining the experience and placing it within the broader context of their personality and life.
We often remind students that it's okay to pick what feels like a small topic. Often, it's the subtler experiences that are more defining.

