Wednesday, May 29, 2019

The Long Road to Graduate School :: Graduate Admissions Essays

The Long Road to Graduate School   In his poem, The Road Not Taken, Robert Frost wrote, Two roads diverge in the woods, and I took the one least traveled by/ And that has made in all the difference.  In this poem, the narrator had a choice of two roads.  However, Ive discovered that life is a picayune more complicated.  Sometimes the path we embark on is not always the one we choose.  Sometimes we are pushed or pulled in certain directions and we have to act to our environment.   My path to a college education has been filled with bumps, potholes, detours and roadblocks. The signs often read yield and do not enter.  The path has not always been clear, but Ive kept my look opened, focused on the road ahead, and the experience has made all the difference.   During my freshman year in high school, my mother remarried and I had to move from Colorado to Kentucky.  iodin year later, we relocated back to Colorado after they divorced.  During my junior year in high school, my mother remarried again and I had to change schools again, although we remained in Colorado.  Thus, I did not have a sense of continuity during high school and although I recognized that my path would lead me to college, I was not puddle to redact myself to school full time. Instead I went to work full time as a grocery clerk and worked my way up to assistant manager.  I then moved into customer service work and finally fell into an advertising manager position. I took several night courses during this period until I was ready to commit to school full time.  Although I could have continued with work, I knew that it was not what I wanted to do and once I committed myself to attend school and realized that I wanted to study Sociology, I have proven myself to be an above average student.  This past year, I earned all As in my courses.

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