the landscape make me think back to my visit to the house of one of my students, Dari. I remember
looking into his room and seeing a wooden table on his dirt floor. Close by,
a bamboo shelf was
filled with books. The globe he had won for being on the Honor Roll was proudly displayed on the
bookshelf among his prized possessions. Smiling ear to ear, he told us that JPA was the best thing in
his life. I realize that it really is too late to go home. I’ve already fallen in love with my students.
As the bus pulls into JPA’s driveway, the rest of the teachers begin gathering their materials. I
remain seated, deep in thought. “Are you coming?” I hear a familiar voice ask me. I look up and see
Deidre looking at me.
“Of course I am.”
REVIEW
In essays about community service, it is easy to fall into the trap of self-aggrandizement—
emphasizing your own personal sacrifices and good deeds and in the process making yourself look
like someone more interested in self-service than community service. Josh’s essay, on the other hand,
steers well clear of this pitfall, skillfully conveying compassion, humility, and devotion to the people
with and for whom he works—he does not stay on because he pities his students, but because he loves
them. As a result, instead of coming off like résumé padding, Josh’s
work feels motivated by a
genuine desire to do good.
Structurally, Josh’s essay is solid—it traces the trajectory of his thought process from uncertainty
to renewed resolve. This seemingly straightforward story arc is enlivened by choice details and
images—the off-hand conversation about dengue fever in the first paragraph, for example,
adds a
good jolt of surprise, and the descriptions of the Cambodian countryside are vivid and well-executed.
The passage detailing Josh’s visit to his student Dari’s home is one of the essay’s highlights, a scene
that is both believable as the essay’s “inspiration moment” and memorable for the deep empathy it
contains.
While it’s true that Josh has the advantage of a rather unique experience—not every Harvard
applicant is in a position to write their personal statement about volunteering with the Peace Corps—
the main strengths of his essay are certainly translatable beyond this context. Josh’s essay is a
personal statement at its best: it not just narrates an experience but hints
at deeper elements of his
personality and expresses them in a way that does not come off as forced. Someone reading Josh’s
essay can tell that his volunteering experience was far more to him than résumé fodder. And as the
admissions office gets deluged with more and more applications every year, this spark of sincerity
goes very far indeed.
—Erica X. Eisen