How to Write a Law School Personal Statement
Follow each school's prompt. Most law schools accept a personal statement on any subject, but not all do. Some ask you to answer a question or respond to a specific prompt. If this is the case, do as they ask - they ask for a reason, after all.
Don't focus on law too much. It's good to tie your personal statement into law - for example, explain why you want to become a lawyer. But law schools aren't asking you to prove your desire to be a lawyer; they want to learn something about you. That's why the essay is called a personal statement. Pick your most interesting characteristic or something spectacular that has happened to you and focus, or at least start, with that. Write about something you're passionate about. If you strike the committee as an interesting character with sharp writing skills, you'll have succeeded.
Good, clear writing is important. Lawyers do a lot of writing. The personal statement shows the admissions committee if you can do a lot of writing, too. For this reason, be sure to write concisely. Don't get too wordy, and don't use language that's beyond your grasp. Short, punchy, colorful words are almost always preferable to clumsy Latinates. Pick up a copy of The Elements of Style by William Strunk and E.B. White. It's an excellent, if harsh, writing guide that will help you trim your prose into the taut sentences that lawyers are expected to produce. Another good text on writing is On Writing Well by William Zinsser.
Edit, edit, edit. Professional writers read their copy dozens of times before submitting it for publication. You should do the same with your personal statement. Read it until you know it by heart; until you're certain that every word is spelled correctly and every sentence is gramatically solid.
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Takeaways
- Write well and clearly.
- Edit!
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