How to Find a Killer Topic

How to Find a Killer Topic

The first step to writing a winning college application essay is to find that perfect topic.

This is the most important step, and often the hardest.

Once you land on one, you are ready to roll.

Things fall in place.

You map out a simple outline, sit down and crank.

One way to spot a killer topic is how it makes you feel.

If it’s spot on, you may be eager and almost excited to write about it.

Trying to write about a lackluster topic can be torture.

Sometimes it doesn’t hurt to give a tepid topic a run.

Every once in a while a topic that sounded just ok at first can develop into an awesome essay.

It’s far easier, and more fun, however, to spend time brainstorming one you can get fired up about.

In my writing guide, The Writing Survival Kit, I share ‘chunks’ of advice on how to use narrative writing techniques, tips and strategies to craft ‘slice-of-life’ essays.

Chapter One, called Packing the Basics, features my best ideas on finding a great topic.

In the next few days, I will share six ‘chunks’ of information from this chapter to help you get going on your own essays. Here’s the first one:

Pick a Killer Topic

Finding a unique and compelling topic is perhaps the most important piece of a effective essay. It is worth spending time brainstorming. Start early!

There are entire blogs and books about this process, but here are some of the best tips to get you started:

  • Look for a ‘defining quality’ or personal characteristic that you can showcase in your essay. Examples: logical, inquisitive, creative, competitive, leader…Find Your Defining Qualities and Characteristics
  • Mundane topics often work best: These are topics from everyday life: singing karaoke, dog sitting, designing T-shirts, riding busses, etc. Check out examples of mundane topics in the essays in Chapter 11: Being Slow; Dunkin Donuts; Christmas tree farm and Lucid Dreaming. More on mundane topics.
  • Don’t try to impress: You don’t need to feature your greatest achievement, experience or talent.
  • Avoid laundry lists: Focus on making one main point about yourself thoroughly instead of listing accomplishments. How to Write Short Essays (Slideshare Tutorial)
  • Show your grit, which is your ability to confront daunting obstacles with raw determination. Look for topics that involved problems. Got Grit? Then Show It!These sample essays from Chapter 11 display grit: Sample Essays for College Applications

It’s exciting to see that word is getting out to collegebound students, and those who support their admissions quests, that real-life stories power the most effective college application essays.

If you are new to this concept, read up on the narrative (storytelling) writing method that I promote all over this blog.

(If you are just starting learning about college application essays, I recommend first reading How to Write a College Application Essay in 3 Steps.good thesis statements for to kill a mockingbird This post you are reading here is intended for students who have a topic and have started writing their first draft.)

Here’s the essence of my writing approach: You use your real-life stories to illustrate or demonstrate one of your defining qualities, characteristics or core values in your college application essay or personal statement.

Once you understand how this works, however, it’s important to find ways to bring meaning and depth to your essay, beyond simply sharing real-life stories.

You must go on to explain what those stories meant to you, what you learned.

Image Via Unomaha.edu

This is your opportunity to display what colleges and others call ‘intellectual vitality.’ That’s just a fancy way to say how you think and learn, and what you value.

Most of the students I work with catch on quickly to the idea of using a real-life story in their essay. But many have trouble when it comes to moving to the next step of explaining what it meant to them. They often stumble when it comes to ‘digging deeper’ in their essay, and developing their ideas and insights.

One common pitfall that I’ve seen is the tendency toward black-and-white thinking, especially when analyzing, reflecting and sharing their thoughts and opinions.

Black-and-white thinking is when everything needs to be all one way or the other, instead of somewhere in the middle. Better known due to the fact gray areas ( what you get when you mix black and white).With so much riding on these essays, there’s a weird pressure on students to sound knowledgable and self-assured. As a result, I believe many feel that they need to draw absolute conclusions in their essays. Or make concrete, all-knowing statements.

My advice is to try to resist that pressure to be certain, to feel that there is only one way or rule.

Here’s the irony of black and white thinking: Even though that ‘I got this’ certainty can make you feel confident and wise, it often reveals the opposite.

The truth is always in the gray.

Nothing is all good or all bad.

This ambiguity makes people who stick to black-and-white thinking uncomfortable. They prefer labels, generalities, extremes and feeling in control. (Anyone come to mind?)

In writing about ourselves, revealing doubt and vulnerability can be the most powerful way to interact with others. As well as demonstrate true inner strength and integrity.

Embracing the gray of life the uncertain, the vague, the abstract is normally considered higher level thinking.

And guess who loves to see that?

Yup! College and universities.

When you are writing your essay, seek out the gray.

I advise students to share a real-life story in their personal statement essay that involved some type of problem, and then go on to look for what they learned in dealing with that problem. ( It’s a standard writing formula for a personal essay: Learn how it works in How to Write A college Application Essay in 3 Steps.)

I warn them that they do not need to have had solved that problem to write a meaningful essay about it. In fact, this is an opportunity to explore the gray in your life.

Share the steps you took to deal with the problem, and how you felt, thought and learned along the way.

You don’t need to wrap it up with a big red bow, as in ‘problem solved forever.’

Because life isn’t usually like that. It’s complicated. Messy. Gray.

When you share what you learned, you don’t need to have learned that ‘everything’ is one way, or ‘all good’ or ‘all bad.’

It’s okay to not be sure of anything.

You can still share and assert what you think, and how you feel, and what steps you took in dealing with the problem.

Remember, true confidence is knowing what you don’t know. This humility also demonstrates you remain open and eager to learning more. (Guess again who loves to see that?)

Here are some ways to go gray in your essay:

Look out for ‘absolute words’ that flag black-and-white statements: (All, always, everyone, everybody, each, no one, none.)

Include open-ended questions. ‘Sometimes I wondered: ‘‘Why I was born with this strange ability to sense how others are feeling?”

Share what you don’t know. ‘ I was able to figure out the first part of coding equation, but I felt blindsided by the rest of it.’

Confess your missteps or regrets. ‘Looking back, I now see that I should have called the police the first time my father drove us home from the ball game drunk on too many beers.’

Explore both sides to an opinion. ‘ In some ways, i enjoy my ability to learn quickly, but often I notice that I getting going so quickly that I forget to delve deeper into things.’

If you follow my narrative approach to writing these essays, you will be showcasing a defining quality or characteristic, or a core value. One way to ‘go gray’ is to examine and evaluate that quality or characteristic, and include both ‘the good’ and ‘the bad’ about it.

Here’s an example: The quality is ‘stubborn.’

‘All my life I’ve had a stubborn streak. Looking back, I see that my resistance to trying something new or doing what I’m asked has cost me greatly. I’ve missed out on some unique opportunities, and I can never get those back. At the same time, I believe there are times when it’s important to dig in my heels, hold my ground and channel my inner donkey…It all depends on why I baulk and resist, or give in.’

Do you see that the writer is not saying that being stubborn is ‘all good’ or ‘all bad?’ Instead, it just depends. It’s relative to other factors. It’s gray.

The ability to see the gray in the world, and not be threatened by the unknowing, shows humility and trust.

Those who grapple with the gray reveal themselves as open-minded people; truth seekers.

I’ve written about how effective college application essays usually make the writer ‘likable.’

I’m not talking about popularity or kissing up to the admissions officers.

It’s more about letting them see how you think and feel in your essay, and having the confidence to include aspects about yourself that are not 100 percent positive or certain.

This is what makes us ‘likable’ because we come across as self-effacing and open to learning more.

I know there is so much pressure on these essays to wow admissions officers, and many students assume they need to be impressive and self-assured.

It’s counter-intuitive, but the most effective essays do not set out to impress and are meek in tone. They include everyday life experiences and problems instead of impressive feats and accomplishments.

And the writers also share and explain how they handled those problems and what they learned from them and let their gray show in the process.

Dealing with those problems (challenges, mistakes, failures, set-backs, changes, crises and flaws) taught them certain things about themselves, and also forced them to question other parts of themselves and life.

The best essays ended with how much the writer still needed and wanted to learn.

And they weren’t just comfortable with the gray, it actually excited them.

That’s intellectual vitality.

So if you’ve got it, show it!

Go gray!