Louiselab Posted August 27, 2008 Posted August 27, 2008 Hello all- I'm evaluating my writing sample options now for fall '09... I have two options: 1. a paper in the history field and general time period I want to study but not directly in my field. There were more sources so it's much better researched, an overall better paper that I've already gotten a lot of compliments on and would re-work anyway for publication. -or- 2. a paper in the field I want (suburban history) but a dearth of primary sources, I planned on doing more research over the summer, but had a really hard time finding sources and it's not coming out the way I anticipated with classes starting in a week and I don't think I have the adequate time to devote to it. I'm not really sure which one to choose because it says I should pick one that's ideally in my field... but I'm not sure if they mean "20th century us history" just a "history" paper or "this is totally the first half of my dissertation..."
missycari Posted August 27, 2008 Posted August 27, 2008 Option #1 all the way. I was successful last year doing just that. Same time period for me but other than that, totally different. I think the MOST important thing you want to demonstrate with your paper is critical thinking/good writing. Good luck!
rising_star Posted August 27, 2008 Posted August 27, 2008 Why would you use a writing sample that you already admit is not as good?
thelowendhz Posted August 27, 2008 Posted August 27, 2008 I really believe that the quality of the paper is the most important thing, so go with number 1. At the time that many of my applications were due, a 15-page US history paper I had written was much more vetted than some early drafts of my senior thesis in my field (medieval Europe), so I decided to go with the US paper. My decision turned out to be a good one as I was admitted into my top program with full funding. I think what is important is that your paper clearly demonstrates the quality of writing and your ability to do historical research. Being in your exact field is of course a plus, but overall quality is the most important factor.
Louiselab Posted August 31, 2008 Author Posted August 31, 2008 I really believe that the quality of the paper is the most important thing, so go with number 1. At the time that many of my applications were due, a 15-page US history paper I had written was much more vetted than some early drafts of my senior thesis in my field (medieval Europe), so I decided to go with the US paper. My decision turned out to be a good one as I was admitted into my top program with full funding. I think what is important is that your paper clearly demonstrates the quality of writing and your ability to do historical research. Being in your exact field is of course a plus, but overall quality is the most important factor. Did you mention the unfinished thesis in the statement part or just totally omitted it?
thelowendhz Posted September 29, 2008 Posted September 29, 2008 I apologize for not responding until now; I've been busy moving across the country and starting my program. I did state in my personal statements that I was working on a senior honors thesis and elaborated a little on what the topic was; however, I did not explain why it wasn't my writing sample and hoped that potential advisors would arrive at the conclusion that given the time I was applying (mostly late November through December) I most likely didn't have anything substantial to show them yet. One potential advisor ended up e-mailing me and asking me for the first chapter of my thesis regardless of whether or not it had been edited. Anyways, it worked out fine for me. I hope you have the same luck!
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now