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Writing Persuasive Personal Statements

Monday, February 25, 2013
12:00 AM
Rackham - Common Room

This session considers personal statements as a form of argument and focuses on their underlying rhetoric.

co-sponsored by the Rackham Graduate School

This session considers personal statements as a form of argument and focuses on their underlying rhetoric. The workshop will:

  • Review examples of calls for proposals and decode their language to see more clearly how best to respond
  • Construct general principles about audiences for statements of purpose and how to write to meet their needs
  • Offer tips on easy ways of preparing to write and enrich the statement
  • Share exercises on how to conceive of the statement as an argument
  • Consider what UM statistics say about why proposals are rejected
  • Review a list of things (and words) to avoid in statements of purpose

This workshop will be useful for any graduate student applying for fellowships, grants, or other opportunities whose applications require some form of statement of purpose.  It will not address how to identify grant or fellowship opportunities.

Paul Barron teaches a variety of writing courses in the English Department, Lloyd Hall Scholars Program, and the Sweetland Center for Writing, where he also serves as co-director of the Dissertation Writing Institute.

Click image above for a 1920x1080 digital signage version.

View the complete Winter 2013 Sweetland-Rackham Workshops on Writing Calendar.

Speaker:
Paul Barron