- Mon Jan 04, 2016 2:10 pm
#21467
Hi Dave/PowerScore Staff! I saw Dave's tweet about reviewing personal statements and would love if someone could take a look and any feedback is appreciated! It is a very rough draft and I feel the beginning starts out strong and gets weaker as it goes along with the second half needing the most work. I also need to shorten it a bit so it fits into two pages. Let me know what you think, thank you!
I walked into my professor’s office, introduced myself to the woman sitting at the table and sat across from her. Although I had never met this woman before, I felt as if she was an old friend. I opened her file, which I had already read over and over, again making sure I knew every detail of her case; I was prepared. I began asking questions about the information she provided and she began crying. Taken off guard and unsure of what to do, my reaction was to reach out and hold her hand. “It is going to be okay.” I told her. She seemed reassured but faced with the same situation, I do not think I would not have actually believed it We finished collecting information for her bankruptcy petition, she thanked us, multiple times, and she left. After acting as a paralegal for my first bankruptcy case through Bay Path University’s Bankruptcy Clinic I knew I was going into the right profession. I knew this woman needed our help and I was going to do everything in my power to help her. My professor and I worked on her case together all semester and seeing her smile after the case was over, made it all worth it.
Now as a volunteer in the clinic and a future lawyer, I find myself thinking about my first client. I often wonder how she and her granddaughter are doing, how their life is different now. Does she think about how we changed her life as much as I think about how much she has changed mine? Not only did she help to solidify my decision to go to law school, she also helped me to realize my desire to help others while learning more about a subject I am passionate about. The following semester I studied in Washington DC through the Washington Semester Program at American University. Because of my work in the Bankruptcy Clinic, I applied and received an internship with DC Law Students In Court, a non-profit law school clinical program that provides free legal services to Washington DC tenants in housing court. Once again I met clients, like my first client, who were faced with some of the most difficult decisions and were at the most difficult time in their life. I would have never thought about assisting in pro-bono legal aide without my first client’s influence.
I always knew I had a desire to help others, in whatever way I could and through opportunities on my undergraduate campus, I truly immersed myself in multiple leadership opportunities. As a Senior Orientation Leader, I helped first-year students move all of their belongings from the place they have called home for the last eighteen years to the place I now call my home, Bay Path University. As a peer tutor, I explain legal concepts to students who have the same eagerness about them that I did as a first year student; I love the look in their eyes when they finally “get it” and share the same passion for law as I do. Finally as a Resident Assistant for first year students, I have listened to my residents tell me their stories and I could never imagine dealing with the difficulties these young women have encountered in their short eighteen years. No matter how many times people tell me, “It’s just a job, don’t stress yourself out over other peoples problems” when referring to all of my roles on campus I cannot help but lay awake some nights worrying for them; Did this student do okay on her test? Is that student still unbelievably homesick? I haven’t seen her in a while, I wonder if she is okay? For me helping others through my “jobs” is more than a job, it is a responsibility that I truly and deeply care about.
All of these experiences have made me realize how fortunate I am to have been given the opportunities I have had and show people that even the first generation college student of Irish-Immigrant grandparents can succeed. With all of these opportunities, I have found my passion for law and helping others.
I have come to realize the things you do and experiences you have influence the person you become. For me, my experiences in Bay Path’s bankruptcy clinic, my semester in Washington DC and my role as a student leader on my undergraduate campus have made me who I am today but I know there is still room for improvement and growth. *I would also add a sentence or two to tailor it to the law school in which I am applying*
I walked into my professor’s office, introduced myself to the woman sitting at the table and sat across from her. Although I had never met this woman before, I felt as if she was an old friend. I opened her file, which I had already read over and over, again making sure I knew every detail of her case; I was prepared. I began asking questions about the information she provided and she began crying. Taken off guard and unsure of what to do, my reaction was to reach out and hold her hand. “It is going to be okay.” I told her. She seemed reassured but faced with the same situation, I do not think I would not have actually believed it We finished collecting information for her bankruptcy petition, she thanked us, multiple times, and she left. After acting as a paralegal for my first bankruptcy case through Bay Path University’s Bankruptcy Clinic I knew I was going into the right profession. I knew this woman needed our help and I was going to do everything in my power to help her. My professor and I worked on her case together all semester and seeing her smile after the case was over, made it all worth it.
Now as a volunteer in the clinic and a future lawyer, I find myself thinking about my first client. I often wonder how she and her granddaughter are doing, how their life is different now. Does she think about how we changed her life as much as I think about how much she has changed mine? Not only did she help to solidify my decision to go to law school, she also helped me to realize my desire to help others while learning more about a subject I am passionate about. The following semester I studied in Washington DC through the Washington Semester Program at American University. Because of my work in the Bankruptcy Clinic, I applied and received an internship with DC Law Students In Court, a non-profit law school clinical program that provides free legal services to Washington DC tenants in housing court. Once again I met clients, like my first client, who were faced with some of the most difficult decisions and were at the most difficult time in their life. I would have never thought about assisting in pro-bono legal aide without my first client’s influence.
I always knew I had a desire to help others, in whatever way I could and through opportunities on my undergraduate campus, I truly immersed myself in multiple leadership opportunities. As a Senior Orientation Leader, I helped first-year students move all of their belongings from the place they have called home for the last eighteen years to the place I now call my home, Bay Path University. As a peer tutor, I explain legal concepts to students who have the same eagerness about them that I did as a first year student; I love the look in their eyes when they finally “get it” and share the same passion for law as I do. Finally as a Resident Assistant for first year students, I have listened to my residents tell me their stories and I could never imagine dealing with the difficulties these young women have encountered in their short eighteen years. No matter how many times people tell me, “It’s just a job, don’t stress yourself out over other peoples problems” when referring to all of my roles on campus I cannot help but lay awake some nights worrying for them; Did this student do okay on her test? Is that student still unbelievably homesick? I haven’t seen her in a while, I wonder if she is okay? For me helping others through my “jobs” is more than a job, it is a responsibility that I truly and deeply care about.
All of these experiences have made me realize how fortunate I am to have been given the opportunities I have had and show people that even the first generation college student of Irish-Immigrant grandparents can succeed. With all of these opportunities, I have found my passion for law and helping others.
I have come to realize the things you do and experiences you have influence the person you become. For me, my experiences in Bay Path’s bankruptcy clinic, my semester in Washington DC and my role as a student leader on my undergraduate campus have made me who I am today but I know there is still room for improvement and growth. *I would also add a sentence or two to tailor it to the law school in which I am applying*