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55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays: With Analysis by the Staff of The Harvard Crimson

Harvard Law School is one of the premier law schools in the world. It as well as other top schools draws thousands of applicants from the best colleges and companies. With only a limited number of slots for so many talented applicants, the admissions officers have become more and more selective every year, the competition has become fierce, and even the best and brightest could use an edge. This completely new edition of 55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays is the best resource for anyone looking for that edge. Through the most up-to-date sample essays from the Harvard Law School students who made the cut and insightful analysis from the staff at The Harvard Crimson, it shows you how best to: * Argue your case effectively * Arrange your accomplishments for maximum impact * Avoid common pitfalls 55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays guides you toward writing essays that do more than simply list your background and accomplishments. These are essays that reveal your passion for the law as well as the discipline you bring to this demanding profession and will help you impress any admissions department. The all-new essays and straightforward and time-saving advice will give you all the insider tips you’ll need to write the essays that will get you into the best law schools in the world.

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55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays: What Worked for Them Can Help You Get Into the Law School of Your Choice

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55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays: What Worked for Them Can Help You Get Into the Law School of Your Choice Paperback – June 26 2007

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50 Successful Harvard Application Essays, 6th Edition: What Worked for Them Can Help You Get into the College of Your Choice

Separate yourself from the pack Competition has never been more intense for admittance into the nation's top law schools. The application essay represents your only chance to plea your case to admissions officers. Why select you over so many other qualified applicants? Your essay needs to do more than simply list your background and accomplishments. It must reveal the depth of your passion for law, the discipline you bring to this demanding profession, and the strength of character you possess for the ethical and moral challenges that lie ahead. Learn by example Harvard Law School is one of the premier law schools in America. Every year, thousands of elite applicants try for a few hundred slots. Of the dedicated few accepted, fifty-five have shared the application essays that helped them make the cut. * Learn what works. * Structure your essay for maximum impact. * Avoid common pitalls. Each essay is analyzed by the staff of the Harvard Crimson , Harvard's daily newspaper, and accompanied by no-nonsense advice on crafting your own. 55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays will give you all the help you need to write the essay that will get you in.

  • ISBN-10 0312366116
  • ISBN-13 978-0312366117
  • Edition First Edition
  • Publisher St. Martin's Griffin
  • Publication date June 26 2007
  • Language English
  • Dimensions 13.97 x 1.91 x 20.32 cm
  • Print length 208 pages
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55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays, 2nd Edition: With Analysis by the Staff of The Harvard Crimson

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  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ St. Martin's Griffin; First Edition (June 26 2007)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 208 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0312366116
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0312366117
  • Item weight ‏ : ‎ 191 g
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 13.97 x 1.91 x 20.32 cm
  • #38 in Graduate School Guides (Books)
  • #65 in Graduate & Professional School Test Guides (Books)
  • #310 in Law (Books)

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55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays, 2nd Edition

With Analysis by the Staff of The Harvard Crimson

Author: The Staff of the Harvard Crimson

55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays, 2nd Edition

ANNE-VALERIE PROSPER "Hi I'm Joleen! I'm from Wisconsin! Where are you from?" trills the pretty brown-eyed girl in my dorm room. I sigh. I would love to have a simple answer to give her and, usually, when confronted with such a daunting question, I smile politely and answer some version of the truth. I try to read her. I wonder if it would be enough to give her the "I'm originally from Haiti" retort. This immediately evokes images of me as a little girl sitting at the kitchen table as my mother cooks " Grio " and laughs along to her Maurice Sixto tapes, relishing the Haitian comedian's depiction of Haitian politics. When coming from a country like ours, it's nice to be able to laugh at the folly of it all. This would be an honest answer after all. Although we left Haiti when I was one, my parents enrolled us into a French school in Maryland. We spoke French and Creole at home, I spoke French at school, I ate Haitian food, I listened to Haitian music; we even went back to Haiti twice a year every year—until things got really bad that is. I could always go with a different approach and tell her that I went to high school in Kenya. She might think of me as a world traveler. She might see me as riding matatus and playing with orphans, or, she could look at me as some diplomat's child with a driver and uncanny sense of entitlement; unfortunately, back then she would have been right on both accounts. The thing is, the world attributes who we are with where we are from, and so, for a long time I didn't know who I was. I didn't know where I was from and so I couldn't know where I was going. All of that changed when I got to NYU. I moved to the big city alone while my parents remained halfway across the world in Nairobi, Kenya. I chose New York because in fourth grade, on a school excursion, I saw Les Misérables on Broadway and it changed my life. I moved to New York having lived a very contradictory life. On the one hand, I was quite privileged. The international community in Kenya lived in their own world with their own set of rules. On the other, I had always had a heart for children and had spent much of my time in a baby orphanage known as "The Nest." I looked at these two-week-old infants, children of victims of rape who had died from AIDS and I had a piercing sense that something was not right; we were living in a world of disequilibrium and something had to give. I was going to change the world and I knew that I needed to go to New York; the same place that so beautifully told the story of a French orphan girl. I had moved around before. I had lived in four places by the time I was eighteen and so I hadn't expected the culture shock to hit me; you always get hit harder when you don't see it coming. The city's stresses slowly but surely took their toll on me. I didn't know what I was doing anymore. Among the actresses and models, away from the slums and the injustice, my big plans didn't seem so feasible anymore. It wasn't until the second semester of college, when I joined a Christian fellowship on campus that my vision came back to life. I came to Christ that year and, later, with tentative support from my parents I moved into a house in the Bronx and became one third of the nonprofit organization A House on Beekman. We felt the biblical call to serve the poor and for us New Yorkers, Beekman Avenue was where we could do that. It was a far cry from the Kibera slums but it was the land of single teenage mothers who were victims of domestic violence. It was the place where dozens of kids had absentee parents and appreciated a healthy snack and a good story. These people weren't as poor as the people in Kenya, but they were marginalized. I started to see the other forms of oppression that existed. My roommates and I began to share all of our clothes and as we grew in community, God grew our ministry. More kids started showing up for family dinner on Monday night. More "gang members" started calling us "Ma'am" and pulling their pants up as they walked into our home. Living here has shown me what it is to serve in the United States. God continued to grow my intolerance for injustice when I received an internship at an immigration law firm. We mostly worked with asylum cases and as I walked into the conference room wearing a suit, and sat across a girl my age who was being forced to be the fourth wife of a seventy-five-year-old or who had to undergo female genital mutilation to be eligible for marriage, day after day after day, something in me snapped. I decided I was going to law school. I decided that I couldn't live a life that glossed over the gravest injustices of the world. I realized that I could hold orphans for months or give our Bronx kids healthy snacks for weeks, but that one day, I was going to die. One day, my roommates will die as will the lawyers at the law firm that I work at. I need to be a part of systematic change. I need to be a part of something bigger than the one life I have been given. I knew I was graduating in December, and so I applied to the International Justice Mission. I will be working there as the Human Rights intern in D.C. from January through April. My projects will be in Haiti, Ecuador, and Peru. I finally get to partner with lawyers who are changing the system from the inside out. Through all of these experiences I finally realized where I was from. I realized that I am a child of God and a citizen of the world and this has led me to where I am going. I am going to law school. I am going to get a degree that allows my voice to be loud enough for all us world citizens. I am going to be part of the redemption that far outlasts the one small life that I have lived. Analysis Admissions officers certainly see many tropes repeated in application essay after application essay. There's the "overcoming adversity" story. There's the "look at my passion" narrative. There's the "I have finally discovered myself" reflection. Without a doubt, these archetypes can get stale, especially for someone who is reading them as part of their full-time job. The power of this essay arises from its masterful ability to synthesize those well-worn application genres into a compelling story of personal growth. One of the hallmarks of a successful application essay is the ability to capture the reader's attention—to draw him or her out of the monotony of reading prosaic bullet points that do little more than list the achievements that already appear on applicants' résumés. While Anne-Valerie Prosper does not skimp on her personal accomplishments or her coming-of-age story, she takes those tropes and successfully brings them to life. Rather than account important aspects of her life, she grapples with them vividly, giving the reader a privileged look at both the details of her life and the lucidity of her mind. Although Prosper does a formidable job integrating the various elements of her identity and development, she occasionally overextends herself. For instance, the reference to Les Misérables is accompanied by minimal interpretation or explanation. And the attribution "it changed my life" sounds odd and exaggerated, especially beside the compelling, real-world examples she provides. Of course, viewing the play might truly have been transformative, but unless the reader can understand and appreciate that influence, a reference like Prosper's can cause more trouble than it is worth. Nonetheless, after reading this essay, the reader gains unique insight into who this author is and what makes her tick. She isn't as she lays out the case for herself, but she does impart a meaningful message all the same. There it is, right in the essay—impossible to pinpoint but also impossible to ignore. —John F. M. Kocsis Copyright © 2014 by The Harvard Crimson

55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays, 2nd Edition

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Harvard Law School is one of the premier law schools in the world. It as well as other top schools draws thousands of applicants from the best colleges and companies. With only a limited number of...

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Harvard Law School is one of the premier law schools in the world. It as well as other top schools draws thousands of applicants from the best colleges and companies. With only a limited number of slots for so many talented applicants, the admissions officers have become more and more selective every year, the competition has become fierce, and even the best and brightest could use an edge. This completely new edition of 55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays is the best resource for anyone looking for that edge. Through the most up-to-date sample essays from the Harvard Law School students who made the cut and insightful analysis from the staff at The Harvard Crimson , it shows you how best to: * Argue your case effectively * Arrange your accomplishments for maximum impact * Avoid common pitfalls 55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays guides you toward writing essays that do more than simply list your background and accomplishments. These are essays that reveal your passion for the law as well as the discipline you bring to this demanding profession and will help you impress any admissions department. The all-new essays and straightforward and time-saving advice will give you all the insider tips you'll need to write the essays that will get you into the best law schools in the world.

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St. Martin's Griffin

9781250047236

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Fifty-five all-new essays that got their authors into Harvard, showing what worked, what didn't, and how you can do it, too. Harvard Law School is one of the premier law schools in the world. It as well as other top schools draws thousands of applicants from the best colleges and companies. With only a limited number of slots for so many talented applicants, the admissions officers have become more and more selective every year, the competition has become fierce, and even the best and brightest could use an edge. This completely new edition of 55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays is the best resource for anyone looking for that edge. Through the most up-to-date sample essays from the Harvard Law School students who made the cut and insightful analysis from the staff at The Harvard Crimson , it shows you how best to: * Argue your case effectively * Arrange your accomplishments for maximum impact * Avoid common pitfalls 55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays guides you toward writing essays that do more than simply list your background and accomplishments. These are essays that reveal your passion for the law as well as the discipline you bring to this demanding profession and will help you impress any admissions department. The all-new essays and straightforward and time-saving advice will give you all the insider tips you'll need to write the essays that will get you into the best law schools in the world.

55 Successful Harvard Law School Application Essays, 2nd Edition 2nd Edition With Analysis by the Staff of The Harvard Crimson

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Six Law School Personal Statements That Got Into Harvard By David Busis Published Feb 10, 2021 Updated Feb 10, 2021

The essays below, which were all part of successful applications to Harvard Law, rely on humble reckonings followed by reflections. Some reckonings are political: an applicant grapples with the 2008 financial crisis; another grapples with her political party’s embrace of populism. Others are personal: a student struggles to sprint up a hill; another struggles to speak clearly. The writers have different ideologies, different ambitions, and different levels of engagement with the law. Yet all of them come across as thoughtful, open to change, and ready to serve.

Jump to a personal statement:

Essay 1: Sea Turtles

I stood over the dead loggerhead, blood crusting my surgical gloves and dark green streaks of bile from its punctured gallbladder drying on my khaki shorts. It was the fifth day of a five-week summer scholarship at the University of Chicago’s Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL), and as I shuffled downwind of the massive creature, the pungent scent of its decomposition wafted toward me in the hot summer breeze. Aggressive flies buzzed around my head, occasionally pausing to land on the wad of plastic we had extracted from the loggerhead’s stomach. The plastic had likely caused a blockage somewhere, and the sea turtle had died of malnutrition. When the necropsy was finished, we discarded the remains in a shallow hole under a thicket of trees, and with the last shovel of sand over its permanent resting place, its death became just another data point among myriad others. Would it make a difference in the long, arduous battle against environmental pollution? Probably not. But that dead loggerhead was something of a personal tipping point for me.

I have always loved the clean, carefully objective nature of scientific research, but when I returned to the US from my native XXXX to study biology, I began to understand that because of this objectivity, scientific data rarely produces an emotional effect. It is difficult to initiate change based on such a passive approach. My ecology professor used to lament that it was not science that would determine the fate of the environment, but politics. The deeper I delved into research, the more I agreed with her. Almost every day, I came across pieces of published research that were incorrectly cited as evidence for exaggerated conclusions and used, for example, as a rebuttal against climate change. Reality meant nothing when pitted against a provocative narrative. It was rather disillusioning at first, but I was never one to favor passivity. In an effort to better understand the issues, I began to look into the policy side of biological conservation. The opportunity at the MBL came at this juncture in my academic journey, and it was there that I received my final push to the path of law.

After weeks of sea turtle biology and policy debates at the MBL, we held a mock symposium on fishing and bycatch regulations. Participants were exclusively STEM majors, so before the debate even began, everyone in the room was already heavily in favor of reducing commercial fishing. I was assigned the role of the Chair of the New Bedford Division of Marine Fisheries, and my objective was clear: to represent the wishes of my constituents, and my constituents wanted more time out on the sea. However, that meant an increase in accidental bycatch, which could hurt endangered marine populations and fill up the bycatch quota for commercial fishermen before the season ended.

There were hundreds of pages of research data on novel technological innovations for bycatch reduction that I had to wade through, but with the help of my group, I was able to piece together a net replacement plan that just barely satisfied my constituents, the scientists, and the industry reps. Although the issue of widespread net replacement incentives for the commercial fishermen remained, there was no doubt that I enjoyed the mental stimulus of tackling this hypothetical challenge. I was able to use my science background to aid in brokering a compromise that would reduce the amount of damage done to the environment without endangering the livelihood of the people involved in the industry.

By the end of the symposium, I knew that I wanted to bridge the gap between presenting scientific data correctly and effecting change in the policy world. Although there are many ways for me to advocate for change, I believe that only legal and legislative enforcements will have a widespread and lasting effect on the heavy polluters of the world. I want to combine my legal education and a solid foundation in the biological sciences to tackle the ever-growing slew of environmental challenges facing us in the twenty-first century.

The night the symposium ended, we patrolled the beach for nesting females. As I walked beneath the stars, I thought of that sea turtle and of the repeating migration of my own life, from my birthplace in XXXX to my childhood in the US, back to XXXX and now the US again. With the guidance of the Earth’s magnetic fields, sea turtles are able to accurately return to their birthplace no matter how far they deviate, but I like to imagine that they, like me, do need to occasionally chart another course to get there. Standing on a beach in Woods Hole, thousands of miles from home, I knew that I was on the right path and ready to embark on a career in law.

Essay 2: Joining the Arsonists To Become a Fireman

On the morning of the 2004 presidential election, my sixth-grade teacher told me to watch out for John Kerry voters in the hallways because our school was a polling station. I nodded and went to the water fountain, thinking to myself that my parents were voting for John Kerry, and that as far as I could tell, they posed no risk to students. It was a familiar juxtaposition—the ideas at my dinner table in conflict with the dogmas I encountered elsewhere in my conservative Missourian community. This dissonance fostered my curiosity about issues of policy and politics. I wanted to figure out why the adults in my life couldn’t seem to agree.

Earlier in 2004, Barack Obama’s now famous DNC keynote had inspired me to turn my interests into actions. Even at age twelve, I was moved by his ideas and motivated to work in public service. When Obama ran for president four years later, I heeded his call to get involved. I gave money I had made mowing lawns to my parents to donate to his campaign and taped Obama-Biden yard signs to my old Corolla, which earned it an egging and a run-in with silly string in my high school parking lot.

While I knew in high school that I wanted to involve myself in public service, I wasn’t sure what shape that involvement would take until signs of the financial crisis—deserted strip malls and foreclosed homes—cropped up in my hometown. I was amazed by the disaster and shaken by the toll it took on my community. As I saw it, the crisis wasn’t about Wall Street, but about people losing their jobs, homes, and savings. I didn’t understand what Lehman Brothers had to do with the fact that my neighbor’s appliance store had to lay off most of its employees.

Intent on understanding what had happened, I started reading up, inhaling books about financial crises and articles on mortgage-backed securities and rating agencies. Along the way, I also developed an affinity for the policymakers fighting the crisis. I admired how time and again these unknown bureaucrats struggled to choose the best among bad options, served as Congressional piñatas on Capitol Hill, and went back across the street to face the next disaster. I decided that I too wanted to work in financial regulation. I thought then and believe today that if I can help protect consumers and mitigate the downturns that force people from their jobs and homes, I will have done something worthwhile.

Strange though it may seem, this decision led me to join Barclays as an investment banking analyst after college. While in a sense I was “joining the arsonists to become a fireman,” as one skeptical friend put it, banking gave me immediate experience working with the firms and people who had played key roles in the response to the financial crisis years before. I was initially worried that I would discover financial rules and regulations to be impotent platitudes, without the power to change the financial system, but my experience taught me the opposite. New regulations catalyzed many of the transactions on which I worked, from bank capital raises to divestitures aimed at de-risking. Ironically, becoming a banker made me even more of an idealist about the power of policy.

I envisioned spending years in the industry before moving to a government role, and I left banking for private equity investing with that track in mind. When I began making get-out-the-vote calls on behalf of the Clinton presidential campaign, however, I realized that I needed to change my plans. I cared more about contacting voters, about the result of the election, and about its policy implications than anything I did at work. Although I’m grateful for what I’ve learned in the private sector, I don’t want to spend more time on the sidelines of the policy debates and decisions that matter to me.

That’s why I am pursuing a J.D. I want to help shape the policies that will make the financial system more resilient and equitable, and to do so effectively, I need to understand the foundation upon which the financial system is built: the law. The post-crisis regulatory landscape is already in need of recalibration; large banks still pose systemic risks, and regulation lags even further behind in the non-bank world. Advances in financial technology, from online lending platforms to blockchain technology, are raising new questions about everything from capital and liquidity to smart contracts and financial privacy. Policymakers need to confront these issues proactively and pursue legal and regulatory frameworks that foster public trust while encouraging innovation. A J.D. will give me the training I need to be involved in this process. I don’t claim to have a revolutionary theory of financial crisis, but I do hope to be a part of preventing the next one.

Essay 3: Populism

Growing up, I felt that I existed in two different worlds. At home, I was influenced by my large, conservative Arizonan family, who shaped my values and understanding of the world. During middle school, my family moved, and I enrolled in a small, left-leaning school with an intense focus on globalism and diversity. I enjoyed being surrounded by people who challenged my beliefs, and I prided myself on my ability to dwell comfortably in both spaces.

In 2015, American political reality disrupted the happy balance between my two worlds. The Republican presidential primary, in a gust of populism, was proposing ideas that I didn’t recognize and wouldn’t condone, like a hardline immigration stance, opposition to free trade, and a tolerance for harassment. I resented this populist wave for hijacking the party, and the voters who created it. I didn’t understand them, and I didn’t think I could.

Despite my skepticism, I decided to make an attempt. As the founder of the Bowdoin College Political Union, a program that promotes substantive, inclusive conversations about policy and politics among students, I brought speakers with diverse ideologies to campus and hosted small group discussions with members of the College Democrats, the College Republicans, and students somewhere in between. In the winter of my senior year, I helped organize a summit that brought together students with a broad spectrum of views from dozens of universities throughout the eastern United States.

As a resident assistant during the 2016 presidential election, I held open-door discussions for individuals from across the political spectrum and around the globe. Facilitating these discussions felt like a natural extension of my role on campus, and I learned not only that having space for open dialogue can ease tensions, but also that the absence of that space does not erase political difference. Instead, it creates feelings of isolation and fosters ignorance.

But it was the death of a family member in early 2016 that helped me understand another perspective, namely the populist views beginning to overwhelm the Republican Party. After the death of my mother’s cousin from cancer, I called my second cousins, all three of whom are around my age, to offer my condolences. I was surprised to learn that none of them had finished high school. Instead, they had worked to help pay for their mother’s treatment. While I had been worrying about which summer internships to apply for, they were worried about maintaining their family home. In the past, I’d thought that their views on economic policy and immigration came from a place of ignorance or spite. I realized over the course of our conversation that I had no idea what it was like to not have a high school degree and compete for employment in a rural area where wages are low. For the first time, I was engaging with people in the demographic that was generating the populist wave that was sweeping the country. This conversation led me to expand my studies in politics and to think beyond the left-right spectrum to consider class and urban-rural divides within my own party. Ultimately, reconnecting with my extended family informed my decision to write my senior thesis on populist movements and why economics drives them. It also changed the way I thought about politics and its effect on people like my second cousins.

After my college graduation, I took a job with a political and opposition research firm called XYZ in Washington, because I felt that my understanding of 2016’s populism was still lacking. XYZ gave me the opportunity to work with people from different parts of the Republican Party: both establishment operatives and grassroots operations. This enabled me to work within the framework of Republican politics that resembles my own, while being exposed to the perspectives of people working to represent people like my second cousins. My time at XYZ helped me see the power of the populist movement, but also understand the limitations of its proposed solutions, like a resurgence of manufacturing. Now that I have interacted with populist groups, I see that ultimately, the valid frustrations of many working-class Americans need to be addressed by empathetic leadership and challenging but necessary evaluations of policy in the areas of economics, education, and culture.

I want to apply my passion for political discourse in law school and in my career as a lawyer. My passion for engaging with others will serve me well in the classroom and in a career at the intersection of law and politics. I hope to continue to make connections between people of diverse backgrounds and viewpoints and to engage in meaningful, bipartisan discourse.

Essay 4: Pop Warner

One summer, when I was eight years old, I signed up to play Pop Warner Football for my hometown. After the calisthenics, scrimmages, and the rest of practice concluded in the midst of the sweltering early August sun, I would sprint thirty yards up a hill steep enough to go sledding down. I had to lose nine pounds in order to make weight for my junior pee-wee football team. I wanted nothing more than to be on the team, so it didn’t faze me that I was the only one running up and down the hill. A dirt path marked the grassy knoll from my countless trips up and down. I usually managed to hold back the tears just long enough until I got home. As an eight-year-old, this was the most difficult challenge I had ever been tasked with. But the next day, I would get down in a three-point stance and sprint up the hill under the red sky of the setting sun.

When I finally made the team, I was elated; I had achieved a goal I often felt impossible in those moments of sweat and tears. The excitement was, nonetheless, short-lived. The other kids still called me “Corey the Cupcake,” a nickname I thought I’d left behind with the extra pounds. In every game of the season, my first playing football, I received my eight minimum plays and rode the bench the rest of the game. It was an unusually wet September, and I caught a cold a few times from standing there for two and a half hours in the nippy morning rain. I hated it, but I kept playing.

I continued to play every fall through high school. My freshman year, during a varsity practice, I broke both the radius and ulna bones in my left arm and simultaneously dislocated my wrist, which required a plate and four screws to repair. To this day, I can’t help but flash back to that frigid November afternoon when I look at the five-inch scar on my left arm or when the breaking point is hit precisely. Sophomore year, I was introduced to a coach who frequently criticized me for “not being black enough,” or sometimes, contradictorily, for acting “too black.” I was even benched for my entire junior year for being unable to attend football camp over the summer.

Why did I play football for eleven years? It might have been for the Friday nights in front of the school, as there was nothing more thrilling than making a crucial catch and hearing the whole town cheer. It might have been because I wanted to fit in with my athletic classmates. It might have been because I felt that I was improving after each catch, each hit, and each drill. But I believe, above all else, it was because I just don’t like to give up.

My first job as a project assistant at a large law firm was somewhat similar to my experiences as a young football player; both required grit and determination to push through difficult circumstances. Late one evening, two days before Thanksgiving, my supervisor asked me to complete and organize the service of eighteen subpoenas for the following day. The partners and associates were so busy with internal politics—one of the head partners was leaving the firm—that no one was available to walk me through the process. I felt ridiculous when I Googled “How to fill out and serve a subpoena,” but it was important to me that I complete the project properly.

I am appreciative of the challenges that I faced as a project assistant. If it weren’t for those experiences, it is unlikely that I would have been fortunate enough to be hired by the Delaware Office of the Attorney General, where I work today. My job here has confirmed that law is exactly what I want to do. I realized this through several opportunities to draft written discovery. I loved fashioning objections to each individual request in a given set. Developing legitimate grounds for disputing discovery on its merits and intent was inspiring to me. I can’t wait to do this more and on a larger scale as an attorney.

The steadfastness that I obtained as a young athlete defines who I am. I couldn’t see it at the time, but every day on which I gave something my best effort, whether it was on the practice field or in my tiny office on the twenty-seventh floor, I became a little bit stronger, a little bit wiser. I am confident that my perseverance and dedication will facilitate my future success, both in law school and afterwards.

Essay 5: Speech Therapy

When I was very young, I was diagnosed with a severe phonological disorder that hindered my ability to verbalize the most basic sounds that make up words. It didn’t take my parents long to notice that as other children my age began speaking and communicating with each other, I remained quiet. When I did speak, my words were mostly incomprehensible and seemed to lack any repetition. I was taken to numerous speech therapists, many of whom believed that I would never be able to communicate effectively with others.

From the age of three until I was in seventh grade, I went to speech therapy twice a week. I also regularly practiced my speech outside of therapy, eventually improving to such an extent that I thought I was done with therapy forever. This, however, was short-lived. By tenth grade, I realized my impediment was back and was once again severely limiting my ability to articulate words. That was also the year my family moved from Vancouver, Canada to Little Rock, Arkansas, which complicated matters for me.

I knew that my speech was preventing me from making new friends and participating in classroom discussions, but I resisted going back into therapy. I thought that a renewal of speech therapy would be like accepting defeat. It was a part of my life that had long passed. With college approaching, though, I was desperate not to continue stuttering words and slurring sentences. I knew that I would have to become more confident about my speech to make friends and to be the student I wanted to be. During the summer before my freshman year, I reluctantly decided to reenter speech therapy.

I see now that this decision was anything but an acceptance of defeat. In fact, refusing to reenter therapy would have been a defeat. With my new therapist, I made significant strides and the quality of my speech improved greatly. Using the confidence that I built in therapy that summer, I pushed myself to meet new people and join extracurricular organizations when I entered college. In particular, I applied to and was accepted into a competitive freshman service leadership organization called Forward.

The other members of Forward were incredibly outgoing, and many of them had been highly involved in their high school communities—two things I was not. I made a concerted effort to learn from those who were different from me. I was an active participant in discussions during meetings, utilizing my unique background to provide a different perspective. My peers not only understood me, but also cared about what I had to say. I even began taking on leadership roles in the program, such as directing a community service project to help the elderly. My time in Forward made it clear to me that my speech disorder wouldn’t be what held me back in college; as long as I made the effort, I could succeed. The confidence I gained led me to continue to push past the boundaries I had set for myself in high school, and has guided the bold approach I have taken to new challenges in college.

When I first finished therapy in seventh grade, I pretended that I had never had a speech disorder in the first place. Having recently finished therapy again, I can accept that my speech disorder has shaped the person I am today. In many ways, it has had a positive effect on me. My struggle to communicate, for example, has made me a better listener. My inability to ask questions has forced me to engage with problems on a deeper level, which has led me to develop a methodical approach to reasoning. I believe these skills will help me succeed in law school, and they are part of what motivates me to apply in the first place. Having struggled for so long to speak up for myself, I look forward to the day when I can speak up for others.

Essay 6: Ting Hua

“Ting hua!” I heard it when I scalded my fingers reaching above the kitchen counter to grab at a steaming slice of pork belly before it was served; I heard it when I hid little Twix bars underneath the bags of Chinese broccoli in the grocery store shopping cart; I heard it when I brought sticks back home to swing perilously close to the ceiling fan. Literally translated, “ting hua” means “hear my words.” Its true meaning, though, is closer to “listen to what I mean.” Although the phrase was nearly ubiquitous in my childhood, that distinction—between hearing and listening—did not become clear for me until much later in life.

That childhood began in Shanghai, where I was born, and continued in Southern California, where we moved shortly after I turned four. Some things stayed the same in the US. We still ate my mom’s chive dumplings at the dinner table. On New Year’s, I could still look forward to a red envelope with a few dollars’ worth of pocket money. But other things changed. I stopped learning Chinese, and my parents never became proficient in English. Slowly, so slowly I almost didn’t realize, it became harder and harder for me to communicate with them.

Because I didn’t feel like I could talk to them, I could never resist opening my mouth with others. I talked to good friends about Yu-Gi-Oh, to not-so-good friends about Pokemon, and to absolute strangers about PB&J, the Simpsons, and why golden retriever puppies were the best dogs ever. Even alone, I talked to my pet turtle Snorkel and tried out different war cries—you know, in case I woke up one morning as a mouse in Brian Jacques’s Redwall .

The way I communicated with my parents didn’t change until I came back for Thanksgiving my freshman year of college. I was writing for the school newspaper—a weekly column on politics. I had written an article in support of gay marriage. My parents had asked me about it, and in the way I was wont to do, I answered briefly before moving on to talk about my friends and my floor and my classes.

While I was brushing my teeth that night, my dad came into the restroom. He stood in the doorway and said, “Hey. I read the article you wrote about gay marriage… you should be careful saying things like that.”

His words—you should be careful saying things like that— sounded to me like homophobia. I knew that in China, same-sex relationships were illegal, stigmatized, banned, so I thought I understood where my dad was coming from, even though I also thought it was bigotry. I was about to brush him off, to accept that we had different views, but when I looked up, I didn’t see the judgment I was expecting. In the way he stood slightly hunched in the doorway, in the way he touched his chin, in the way his eyebrows drew together, I saw love. So I swallowed down “don’t worry about it” and asked what he meant. He told me about a cousin of his, someone I would have called Uncle, who was expelled from his school and sent to the countryside for his political comments. In that moment, I realized that my dad wasn’t concerned about my politics—he was concerned about me. Had I not stopped to listen , rather than just to hear, I would not have understood that. I would not have known why he told me to be careful.

Although I still enjoy talking to other people about PB&J sandwiches, I have learned to listen, to actively engage with my parents when we communicate. More importantly, whether I’m interviewing witnesses on the stand in mock trial, resolving disagreements between friends, or sitting in a chair while teachers and professors give me advice, I’ve made an effort to remember those words my mom has spoken since I was a toddler: “ting hua.”

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The Eight US Presidents Who Went to Harvard

55 successful harvard law essays

By Eric Eng

Harvard University, where most US Presidents went to

A quick look at Harvard will help you understand what kind of university it is, including how many presidents went to Harvard. The year 1636 marked the beginning of Harvard University, a private institution. The Harvard Radcliffe Institute and 12 graduate and professional schools make up Harvard University, located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, just outside Boston. Eight presidents went to Harvard , making it one of the most successful universities in the country. Knowing which US presidents went to Harvard highlights the school’s prestigious reputation.

Additionally, there is an undergraduate college and the Harvard Radcliffe Institute. Its schools include the top-ranked Business School and Medical School as well as the highly-ranked Graduate Education School, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Law School, and John F. Kennedy School of Government. When considering which US presidents went to Harvard, it’s evident that the institution provides exceptional education across various fields. This is an important factor to consider when discussing the presidents that went to Harvard.

In 1636, the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in colonial America established the private, non-profit institution now known as Harvard University. According to the university’s archives, the school’s original purpose was to provide education for members of the clergy. The Puritan minister John Harvard, who in 1638 bequeathed his 400-book library and half of his estate to the young school that would later bear his name, is the inspiration for the name Harvard. In 1642, when Harvard held its first graduation ceremony, nine students received their degrees. The historical significance of which US presidents went to Harvard can be traced back to these early years.

The vast library system at Harvard University is home to the oldest collection in the United States and is the largest academic library in the world. In addition to academics, Harvard’s athletic teams participate in the Ivy League and have a traditional football rivalry game against Yale every year. A significant component of student life is the provision of on-campus residential housing, consisting of 12 undergraduate houses and a central location on the campus for first-year students. Understanding which US presidents went to Harvard also provides insight into the notable alumni network and the legacy of leadership associated with the university.

Why Choose Harvard?

So, why choose Harvard for your education? Despite knowing which US presidents went to Harvard, the decision to attend Harvard University, which is widely considered among the most prestigious and well-known educational institutions in the world, can be made for various reasons. Here are some examples:

1. Excellence in Education

Harvard University is consistently ranked among the best universities in the world and is well-known for the demanding academic programs it offers. The university has a well-deserved reputation for turning out graduates who are among the most successful and accomplished in the world. Its faculty comprises some of the most prominent experts in the world across a wide range of disciplines, including knowledge about which US presidents went to Harvard.

2. Resources and Facilities

Harvard has some of the best options when it comes to the resources and facilities that are made available to students. The libraries are extensive and well-stocked, and any other institution’s research opportunities are unmatched. The university offers its students the opportunity to participate in various extracurricular activities and clubs outside the classroom, fostering a well-rounded education that includes understanding which US presidents went to Harvard.

Harvard University street sign

3. Opportunities for Networking

Harvard University is well known for its robust alumni network, which can serve as a helpful resource for students as they move forward in their careers. Being a part of the Harvard community makes it possible to gain access to internships , job opportunities, and connections that may not be available in other environments. Knowing which US presidents went to Harvard can provide additional inspiration and motivation for students.

In recent years, Harvard has made significant strides toward becoming more diverse and inclusive, focusing on recruiting and supporting students from various backgrounds. This is because Harvard strongly emphasizes diversity in its student body . For that reason, it is an excellent environment to meet people from all over the world and gain knowledge from their distinct viewpoints and experiences, much like learning which US presidents went to Harvard and their varied contributions to society.

A degree from Harvard is highly esteemed in various professions and can be an extremely useful qualification on a resume or curriculum vitae (CV). Attending Harvard is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that can open doors and provide students with a lifelong source of pride and accomplishment. This is because Harvard is one of the most prestigious educational institutions in the world, and being aware of which US presidents went to Harvard further emphasizes its esteemed reputation.

Understanding which US presidents went to Harvard adds to the allure and prestige of attending such a renowned institution, highlighting the significant impact Harvard alumni have had on the world stage.

Which US Presidents Went to Harvard?

The following are the eight alumni of Harvard University who then went on to become presidents of the United States:

1. John Adams

John Adams was a native of Massachusetts, where he also received his early education, and in 1751, at the age of sixteen, he enrolled at Harvard. He was the first president to be an alumnus of Harvard, which is significant when considering which US presidents went to Harvard. As a result of reading the works of ancient authors such as Plato and Cicero, he developed an interest in education and evolved into quite the intellectual.

After four years, he received his Bachelor of Arts degree and graduated. Adams’s father wanted him to become a minister, but Adams was determined to pursue more noble work, desperate for a reputation like the men of Harvard who came before him. Adams decided to pursue a career in law and subsequently went back to Harvard, where he graduated with a Master of Arts degree in 1758.

When John Adams was finally elected as the second president of the United States in 1797, all of his arduous labor was finally rewarded. In addition to that, he had previously held the position of first vice president. His journey is often highlighted when discussing which US presidents went to Harvard.

One of the US Presidents to study at Harvard

2. John Quincy Adams

Another president who went to Harvard was John Quincy Adams. He received most of his education from private tutors while growing up in Massachusetts. At age ten, in 1778, he traveled to Europe with his father, John Adams. He attended a private school in Paris and the University of Leiden in the Netherlands, which is notable when considering which US presidents went to Harvard.

John Quincy Adams was the sixth president of the United States. He worked for an American diplomat even while stationed in Saint Petersburg for some time. He continued his travels throughout Europe until 1785, when he returned to the United States to continue his education at a higher level. Following in his father’s footsteps, he did exceptionally well at Harvard and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1787, placing second in his class of 51 students. After that, he pursued a career in law and, in 1790, passed the bar in Massachusetts. Before entering politics, he began his career as an attorney in Boston by establishing his practice.

From 1825 to 1829, John Quincy Adams carried on the presidential legacy of his father by serving as the sixth president of the United States of America. His achievements are often highlighted in discussions about which US presidents went to Harvard.

3. Rutherford B. Hayes

After finishing high school in Connecticut at a boarding school that prepared students for college, Rutherford B. Hayes moved back to his home state of Ohio and enrolled at Kenyon College the following year. Before graduating as the valedictorian of his class, he developed an interest in Whig politics while he was there.

Hayes began his legal education in 1843 by enrolling at Harvard Law School, which is significant when considering which US presidents went to Harvard. During the breaks in his studies, he went to hear renowned former students of the university lecture, such as John Quincy Adams. After earning his Laws degree, he established his legal practice and began working as an attorney.

After serving as a major during the American Civil War, he pursued a political career. Hayes won the election to become the nineteenth president of the United States in 1877. This has made him the third of the presidents who went to Harvard. As a result of his decision not to run for reelection, he was only in office for one term. His connection to Harvard is often mentioned when discussing which US presidents went to Harvard.

One of the US Presidents to study at Harvard

4. Theodore Roosevelt

During his formative years, Theodore Roosevelt received his education at home. In 1876, he decided to pursue his interest in natural science by enrolling at Harvard University, which is notable when considering which US presidents went to Harvard. He is arguably the most famous among the presidents who went to Harvard. During his time at the university, he participated in various academic organizations, including the literary, natural history, and finance clubs.

He was also an exceptionally talented athlete. On the other hand, his classmates had the impression that he was quite strange. This impression was bolstered by the fact that he held ‘radical’ beliefs regarding women’s equality and that he kept a small zoo in his room. Regardless, in 1880 he received his Bachelor of Arts degree magna cum laude after graduating with honors . Understanding which US presidents went to Harvard highlights Roosevelt’s unique and influential time at the university.

In the end, Roosevelt decided against pursuing higher education in natural science. Instead, he returned to New York, where he enrolled at Columbia Law School. There, he developed a stronger interest in history and naval strategies, ultimately leading to him dropping out of school to pursue a career in politics. In the end, he would be successful, eventually holding the position of the 26th president of the United States from 1901 until 1909.

One of the US Presidents to study at Harvard

5. Franklin D. Roosevelt

Franklin D. Roosevelt’s father and his cousin both received their degrees from Harvard, so it was natural that he would follow in their footsteps. He was a self-starter, but he was always more concerned about his social standing than the grades he received in school . While attending college, he was a fraternity member, worked as a reporter for the school newspaper, captained the freshman football team, and was also a cheerleader, all of which are notable when considering which US presidents went to Harvard.

Despite these activities, he maintained a grade point average of C. After his distant cousin Theodore was elected president, Franklin D. Roosevelt became more determined than ever to dominate the social scene at Harvard by gaining admission to the Percellian, the most exclusive club on campus. In the end, he was turned down, which served as a source of annoyance for him for many years. Despite his resentment, he received his Bachelor of Arts degree in history from the university in 1903. Understanding which US presidents went to Harvard sheds light on the diverse paths they took during their time at the university.

The following year, he enrolled in Columbia Law School , but he left in 1907 after passing the New York bar exam, so he missed a year of school. In 1908, he joined a well-known law firm, but in time, he followed the path of the other individuals on this list and transitioned into politics instead. More than two decades after his cousin, Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) became the 32nd president of the United States. He held this position until April 1945, missing Germany’s surrender from the war by only a few weeks. FDR was succeeded as president of the United States by Harry S. Truman (HR).

6. John F. Kennedy

John F. Kennedy, born into what is commonly referred to as America’s royal family, was groomed for politics at an early age. In 1936, following a brief two-month stint at Princeton , he registered for classes at Harvard. Despite being one of the presidents who went to Harvard, which is notable when considering which US presidents went to Harvard, he had some difficulty succeeding academically because he was always in his brother Joe’s shadow.

He did not develop an interest in academics until much later in his education at Harvard when he began to study political philosophy. Before starting his senior year , he traveled throughout Europe and the Soviet Union to gather information for his honors thesis, which was going to be about Britain’s participation in the Munich Agreement. This thesis would eventually be turned into the book Why England Slept, which became a best-seller. In 1940, John F. Kennedy received his Bachelor of Arts degree in government from Harvard University, with a concentration in international affairs.

His academic and political journey is often highlighted in discussions about which US presidents went to Harvard. He would go on to win the election in 1960, exactly twenty years later, ultimately becoming the youngest president ever elected in the history of the United States of America.

7. George W. Bush

In more ways than one, George W. Bush followed in his father’s footsteps, beginning with his enrollment at the same university his father had attended. In 1968, he received his degree in history after completing his studies. His application to the University of Texas School of Law was not accepted, so he enrolled at Harvard Business School instead.

In 1975, he earned a Master of Science degree in business administration, regardless of the circumstances. Before running for president, Bush got his start in business in the oil industry, rather than beginning his career, as many others had before him, in the legal profession. In 2001, less than ten years after his father’s presidency ended, he began the first of two terms as president.

One of the US Presidents to study at Harvard

8. Barack Obama

One of the last presidents who went to Harvard was Barack Obama. Obama spent his childhood in Hawaii, where he attended a high school that prepared students for college. He later moved off of the island state to attend Columbia University. He received his degree in international relations in 1983. After spending some time in Chicago, he pursued a legal education at Harvard in 1988. By the end of his second year, he was an outstanding student who had become the first black president of the Harvard Law Review, a significant achievement when considering which US presidents went to Harvard.

As a result of this accomplishment, the media took notice of him, and he was offered a publishing deal. In 1991, Barack Obama received his Doctor of Jurisprudence degree from the prestigious Harvard Law School, magna cum laude. After that, he spent the next twelve years teaching constitutional law at the University of Chicago Law School. During that time, he was elected to the Illinois Senate in the middle of his tenure.

In 2009, he made history by becoming the first person of color to be elected president of the United States. His journey adds to the discussion of which US presidents went to Harvard, serving in that capacity for two full terms.

One of the US Presidents to study at Harvard

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Twenty Years of Post-Soviet Union Urban Land Use Change of St. Petersburg

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  • Xiaoling Li 1 ,
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  • Chunliang Xiu 3 ,
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Since the 1990s, Russia (the former Soviet Union, FSU) has undergone radical institutional transformation and drastic economic, political, and social changes. These changes have resulted in complex transformations of the urban land-use patterns. We extracted four major urban land-use classes (residential, industrial, social well-being, and green land) before (1987) and after (2015) the transformation of St. Petersburg. In particular, we focused on residential and industrial land use. In the core and peripheral areas of St. Petersburg, we calculated the percentage of each land-use class and conducted spatial pattern analyses for 1987 and 2015. Specifically, we measured the degree of interspersion/juxtaposition, aggregation and contagion for the major land-use classes in the study area. Results indicated that St. Petersburg experienced significant urban land restructuring from 1987 to 2015. While the city retained some urban land structure from before FSU, it showed trajectories of urban development similar to those of developed counties in Western Europe. The FSU period was the main stage of the outward expansion of urban administrative boundaries. The process of deindustrialization in the urban core during the post-Soviet Union period lagged behind other international cities. The most significant change in the urban land-use pattern was suburbanization in the peripheral area. The suburbanization of St. Petersburg was different from that of other developed countries in that it had its own unique characteristics, both in the residential style and in the resident class. Russia's institutional transformation had strong impacts on urban land-use patterns in the post-Soviet Union period, thus providing a rich practical and theoretical basis for analyzing new models of urban land-use change.

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This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 41801108 and No. 41871162), and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (No. 2412018QD018).

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Li, X., He, H.S., Xiu, C. et al. Twenty Years of Post-Soviet Union Urban Land Use Change of St. Petersburg. Appl. Spatial Analysis 13 , 1019–1033 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12061-020-09340-9

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Harvard Law School is one of the premier law schools in the world. It as well as other top schools draws thousands of applicants from the best colleges and companies. With only a limited number of slots for so many talented applicants, the admissions officers have become more and more selective every year, the competition has become fierce, and even the best and brightest could use an edge.

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