If you want to develop a winning law school personal statement, you'll need to
approach it from the perspective of organization, hierarchy of evidence, showing
progress, and themes. Here's how:
Organization
The purpose of this
section is not to delineate one structural approach that will work for
everyone's individual essays, but rather to discuss principles of organization
that should guide you in constructing your argument. In previous sections, we
have cautioned that the criteria we set forth could not be used as steps to be
followed, because there was so much overlap and interdependence. Here your task
grows even more challenging, because some of the principles can be mutually
exclusive, and you may have to decide between them to determine which approach
best suits your material.
Hierarchy of Evidence
Because your
reader will be reading quickly and looking for the main points, it's often a
good idea to start with your strongest evidence. You may even highlight your
most interesting experience in the introduction.
This applicant
recognized that his most compelling, in-depth experience was his tenure as a
deputy clerk in the local Superior Court. He jumps right into his discussion
without unnecessary prefacing. He demonstrates his "hands-on knowledge of the
inner workings of the legal system" first, because he hopes this firsthand
exposure will help him to stand out.
By the third paragraph, he moves
backward chronologically to explore the origins of his interest in law. This is
an important discussion, and in real life, his initial exposure to the law
through his father's work formed the foundation for his recent work in the
Superior Court. The applicant is correct to start with the present; it is more
engaging because it shows the applicant in action and exercising his
understanding of the law.
Showing Progress
This approach might
invite a chronological order, but we maintain that chronology should not be
reason in itself (as explained in the sidebar of the Essay Structures
introduction) to organize material in a particular manner. The guiding principle
here is to structure your evidence in a way that demonstrates your growth, from
a general initial curiosity to a current definite passion, or from an early
aptitude to a refined set of skills. It differs from the Hierarchy of Evidence
approach because your strongest point might come at the end, but its strength
lies precisely in the sense of culmination that it creates. Chronology might not
apply if you choose to show progress within a number of self-contained areas,
thereby combining this approach with the Juxtaposing Themes approach described
later.
This applicant chronicles the growth of her interest in
international development. The growth she describes is not merely a matter of
accumulating one experience after another, but rather a process of enrichment in
which she learns from new angles and adds layers each time. Her interest begins
through her work with underrepresented citizens, which encourages her to
undertake international ventures. These experiences in turn inform her academic
pursuits and further global exploration. The writer shows progress by using
effective transitions such as the following:
"When I returned to college
in the United States, I decided to combine my newly-piqued interest in
underdeveloped economies with my intensified interest in the Spanish
language."
The writer moves effectively from experience to experience;
the result does not feel like a list or a haphazard construction, but rather a
logically flowing piece. Moreover, the applicant's final points have more force
because we have witnessed a process of growth, and her individual ideas combine
to have a synergistic effect.
Juxtaposing Themes
The strongest
argument against a straight chronological order is the value of juxtaposing
related themes and ideas. If two experiences are closely related but occurred
years apart, it makes more sense to develop them as one set of ideas than to
interrupt them with unrelated points.
This applicant devotes his first
three paragraphs to his disadvantaged background and the obstacles he overcame.
He explores his growth from a child who had to work at the age of twelve and
help raise his sisters to an overwhelmed college student who struggles to
survive financially. After discussing this self-contained unit of progression,
he shifts gears in the fourth paragraph to describe his work in a nonprofit
organization over the past three years. Although he likely began this experience
during the period described in the first three paragraphs, the non-chronological
placement makes sense. Interrupting the flow of the first point not only would
be confusing, but also would take away from the impact of each point being fully
developed on its own terms.
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