How to Write the Cornell Supplemental Essays

How to Write the Cornell Supplemental Essays

Ithaca, New York · Private

Ritz B

Former Cornell Admissions Officer

Writing for Cornell

Cornell's supplemental essays do something most applicants underestimate: they decide fit. By the time your file reaches a reader, the academics have largely been settled in the first read. What the essays establish is whether you understand the specific college you applied to, whether your values line up with Cornell's, and whether you'll throw yourself into a campus built around "any person, any study." Cornell reads your application within the college you chose, so the essays carry the weight of proving you belong in that particular community.
There are two parts, and they do different jobs. Every applicant writes the Cornell University community essay, a 350-word response about a community that shaped you. Then you write the supplement for your specific college, which ranges from a single "why this major" essay to Engineering's set of two long and four short responses. The community essay reveals who you are; the college supplement proves you know where you're going.

Cornell's essays aren't a writing test. They're where a reader decides whether you fit the specific college you applied to, and whether you'll add to Cornell's community, not just pass through it.

The examples and guidance below come from a former Cornell admissions officer who read files for every college, and from Crimson's college-specific prompt analysis. They show what separates an essay that earns a reader's advocacy from one that sounds like everyone else's.

Why do the Cornell essays matter?

The Cornell essays matter because they are where fit is decided, and fit is what Cornell admits on once the academic bar is cleared. Most applicants who reach a reader can do the work. What moves a file from the maybe pile to admitted is whether an officer can see a real person who belongs in a particular college and will add to the community there.
That isn't abstract at Cornell. Readers are asking whether a student will jump into a lively, cross-disciplinary campus, contribute to it, and benefit from it. The essays are the only place you answer that in your own voice. A strong transcript proves you can survive the curriculum; the essays prove you'll engage with everything around it.

You want to make sure that students are not only benefiting from what the university offers, but also able to contribute to it. Will they engage? Will they survive the challenges of the first year and persevere?

Ritz B

Former Cornell Admissions Officer

What is Cornell really looking for in its essays?

Cornell is looking for character, the kind that comes through in how you write. Across the community essay and the college supplements, a reader is building a picture of who you are and whether your values line up with Cornell's. The essays that work read like a real person wrote them about something that actually matters to that person, rather than a performance built to impress.
Here's what that looks like in practice. One admitted student wrote about his hair, specifically, about being mocked for it as a kid, and the quiet fight it caused with his father, who wanted him to keep a style tied to their culture. The essay moved from his wanting to look like the peers who teased him, to realizing he'd hurt his father, to making peace with where he came from.
Then it did one more thing. He took that same steadiness and used it to help people in his community who couldn't manage forms in English. Nothing in the essay was extraordinary on paper. What made a reader want him was finishing it feeling like they'd been through something alongside him, and coming out knowing exactly who he was.

Character

What comes through in how you write, not what you list.

Shared values

Service, engagement, and curiosity that line up with Cornell's greater-good mission.

College fit

Specific, researched understanding of why this college and how its resources serve your goals.

Cornell's own review looks for academic strength first, then for engaged students with real impact and personal qualities like fairness and kindness. The essays are where those last qualities show up.

You're not looking for a brilliant person. You're looking for character. And character is reflected in so many different ways.

Ritz B

Former Cornell Admissions Officer

How should you approach the Cornell community essay?

Approach the community essay as a story about you. The group is the setting; you're the subject. The prompt asks how a community shaped you, and the most common failure is spending all 350 words on the community itself, what it is, what it does, how wonderful it is, and never showing your own place inside it. A reader comes away knowing about your robotics team or your church or your neighborhood, and nothing about you.
The version that works puts you at the center and answers the questions a reader is quietly asking the whole way through. What pulled you into this community, chance or choice? What did you actually do in it? What changed because you were there, and what did it change in you? And the one that matters most, what will you carry from it to people you haven't met yet at Cornell? That last question is the whole point, because Cornell is reading to see how you'll show up in its own community.
This essay matters because community and belonging sit at the center of Cornell's identity, so a reader uses it to understand your values, how you connect with others, and how you'll engage once you're there. You can define community however you like, family, school, a team, a shared interest, an online group, something cultural or local or global. With only 350 words, open inside the community in action and get quickly to what it meant to you.

What makes a community essay work?

The strongest responses go past what an adequate one does. A solid community essay names the community and shows your role in it, that already beats most. A strong one lands on a single value the community gave you and shows you living it in one specific moment a reader can picture. The fencing captain who learns to steady a team under pressure, the volunteer who finds patience with someone difficult: a reader remembers the moment and the lesson long after the name of the club fades. And the essay sinks when it stays high-level, all about the group, with the writer nowhere in it, the failure the callout below guards against.
Keep the focus on you, and don't get lost describing the community.
State briefly what the community is, then spend your words on your role, your contribution, the lesson, and how you'll use it. Don't name your academic major, don't summarize your activities list, don't try to cover more than one community in 350 words, and don't call it "Cornell College."

They talk high level: this is my community, and they do these things, but they never express who they are in the community. They don't tell what their role is. Then it's hard for the reader to see how this applies at Cornell.

Ritz B

Former Cornell Admissions Officer

How should you approach the college-specific supplements?

The college supplement is your proof that you understand the specific college and major you applied to, and why it fits you. Cornell reads your file within your chosen college, so a generic "I like engineering" or "I'm passionate about business" is the fastest way to look like every other applicant. Every supplement is a version of "why this major, why this college," and the bar is the same across all of them: real, sustained interest backed by experience, plus specific knowledge of what the college offers and how it serves your goals. Naming a professor or a course isn't enough on its own; a reader expects you to connect those resources to where you're trying to go.
Each college asks a different question because each wants something different, and the guidance below breaks down what readers want from every one. Use the table to see the structure at a glance, then read the section for your college.
College
Prompt focus
Word limit
Arts & Sciences (CAS)
How your curiosity and intended study fit the CAS curriculum
650
Agriculture & Life Sciences (CALS)
Why this major at CALS (direct entry to one of 20 majors)
500
Engineering (Duffield)
Two long essays plus four short answers
200 each / 100 each
SC Johnson Business (Dyson or Nolan)
What kind of business student you are, and which school fits
650
Human Ecology (CHE)
A challenge you want to address through your CHE major
600
Industrial & Labor Relations (ILR)
The issues you care about and how they align with ILR

Brooks School of Public Policy
Why policy, and why Brooks

Architecture, Art & Planning (AAP)
Why architecture, art, or urban studies, with a creative example


You can't just come into architecture saying, oh, I'm interested in architecture. You've got to show that you've investigated the field over a long time, that you've done some projects, and you really know that this is what you want.

Ritz B

Former Cornell Admissions Officer

College of Arts & Sciences (650 words)

CAS folds "why this college" and "why this major" into one essay, so a strong response names an intellectual or career goal, ties it to a specific area of study, and explains why CAS is the place to chase it. What sets the essay apart is interdisciplinarity, and the test is whether you can show two fields combining in your own work, not just admire that the curriculum allows it. The move that lands is connecting disciplines that don't obviously belong together, art and neuroscience, psychology and computer science, and being concrete about how you'd actually use them.
Show your curiosity through something real, research, deep reading, a course you took beyond what was required, and show that you know what CAS offers across its courses, labs, advising, and faculty. Working closely with professors is a hallmark of the Cornell experience, so it helps to say what it would mean to study with a particular scholar, while stopping short of claiming you fully grasp their research. Don't restate the rest of your application here. This essay should add a dimension the reader hasn't seen yet.

College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (500 words, plus optional short-answers)

CALS admits you directly into one of 20 majors, so vagueness is fatal, specificity is the whole game. A strong response shows real understanding of your chosen major, how it connects to other fields at CALS and across Cornell, and how it maps to your goals, backed by what you've already done in the area. Listing professors and labs isn't enough; a reader wants to see that you understand the major itself and want to learn through undergraduate research, which sits at the center of a CALS education. Focusing on one or two scholars whose work genuinely connects to yours beats name-dropping a list.
The deeper move is the mission. CALS describes itself around purpose-driven science aimed at real-world challenges, so show what that means to you and where your own experiences already reflect that ethos of service and the greater good. CALS also offers two optional 100-word short-answers, one on a real impact you've had on people, a community, or the environment, and one on any background in agriculture, defined broadly, from soil and crops to livestock. Treat the impact short-answer the way Cornell treats all service: one specific story, told with feeling, about something you committed to over time rather than a one-off.
CALS rewards specificity and service.
You're applying to one named major out of 20, so be exact about which and why. Skip vague praise of interdisciplinary courses, and on the optional impact short-answer, build it around one cause you've stayed with over time, not a list of activities or a single day of volunteering.

Cornell David A. Duffield College of Engineering (two long essays plus four short answers)

Engineering is the outlier. It asks for two 200-word essays and four 100-word short answers, more writing than any other Cornell college, because it reads engineering as a collaborative science rather than a solo one. Across all six responses, the themes a reader is tracking are the same: research, collaboration, solving real problems, and what you'll bring to a team.
— The two long essays. The first, "why do you want to study engineering," rewards the story of how you arrived at the field and what you want to do with it, not a recital of what engineering is. Show you know the relevant science without performing expertise; a reader already assumes the academic background and cares about how you got here and which real problem you want to solve. The second, "why Cornell Engineering," is where one professor and a course or two won't carry it. Go deeper: connect your goals to a specific research area or faculty whose work matches them, and name two or more things Cornell offers that tie directly to your own experience. The applicants who stand out read as people who want to use engineering to solve human problems, not just to build impressive things.
— The four short answers (100 words each). What brings you joy; what you'll contribute and what voice you'll add; one activity, team, job, or family responsibility that means the most to you; and one award or achievement that mattered. These exist to surface the person a math-and-science file might otherwise hide. Keep each one specific and true to you rather than chasing a "correct" answer: hold "joy" to a single concrete thing, treat the contribution question as a chance to show how you connect to others, and on the activity and award answers, spend your words on why it mattered and what you took from it, not the accolade itself.
Engineering wants collaborators, not lone geniuses.
Don't recite theory or echo what Cornell already says about its own labs and faculty. Show how you found your way to engineering, the human problem you want to solve, and how you'll work alongside a team. Keep money and prestige out of it, and keep the focus on what you did, not what others have done.

Cornell SC Johnson College of Business (650 words)

The business prompt asks what kind of business student you are, and which of the two schools fits, the Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management or the Nolan School of Hotel Administration. A strong response uses personal, academic, or work experience to show the issues you care about and how you've explored them, then ties those interests to the specific school. Don't write about business in the abstract; these programs are distinct. Keep Dyson's "business for a better world" emphasis and Nolan's hospitality and people focus in view as you decide which you're writing toward.
What separates the strong essays is exploration and fit. Tell the story of how you found your interest, through a class, an internship, a summer program, a leadership role, and how you used what you learned to help the people around you, because SC Johnson signals that work, activities, and community experience all count. Roughly half of Nolan's students arrive with work experience, so hands-on exposure carries real weight there. Then get specific about what Dyson or Nolan offers, the entrepreneurial and interdisciplinary resources, the experiential learning, the freedom to pursue other interests across Cornell's colleges, and connect those to where you want to go.

School of Industrial and Labor Relations (650 words)

ILR asks you to describe the issues you care about and show how they line up with the school. The structure is simple: your experiences, the issues that matter to you, and how both connect to ILR. It works best when you anchor it in a real connection to labor and work, then link that to the program and where you want your career to head. ILR is research-driven, so it's a chance to show intentional, sustained exploration of subjects tied to labor, work, and community, with concrete examples of how your experiences feed those interests.
ILR has a single major, so understanding how flexible its interdisciplinary curriculum is matters, students combine electives from ILR and other Cornell colleges to build a path through the labor field. Pointing to ILR-specific resources like the Catherwood Library shows you grasp what the school actually offers. ILR is also public-service minded, so service that means something to you can show alignment with its values.
Keep ILR's focus on labor and work.
Don't build the essay around electives in other colleges, and don't lean on "law school is the plan," ILR is the point. Don't drift into broad social commentary; tie the issues you care about to work, labor, and management.

College of Human Ecology (600 words)

CHE asks you to identify a challenge, in your community or in the career you're heading toward, and explain how a CHE education, your chosen major, and the range of CHE majors will help you take it on. A strong response names your major and how you arrived at it, then connects it to your goals and a real understanding of CHE's programs, research, and faculty. CHE centers the human experience and leans heavily on public service, engagement, and research, so tying your past experiences to service and to what you plan to do next helps a reader see your values clearly.
The deeper move is multidisciplinary thinking, showing how you'd draw on disparate fields across CHE and the rest of Cornell, and being specific about which courses elsewhere would advance your CHE major rather than praising interdisciplinarity in the abstract. Use the essay to surface a personal quality that doesn't appear elsewhere in your application and that connects directly to your major or your goals.

Cornell Jeb E. Brooks School of Public Policy (650 words)

Brooks asks why you're drawn to policy and why you want to study it there. Answer all three parts: why the field pulls you, how your experiences back that up, and why Brooks specifically. Let your background do the arguing rather than stating your passion outright. Specificity is what separates these essays, so commit to one of Brooks's majors and support it with real experience and clear goals. Show you understand what Brooks offers, its multi-college, research-driven approach and hands-on opportunities like the State Policy Advocacy Clinic and the Washington program, and say why those matter to you in particular. A general appeal to interdisciplinarity won't set Brooks apart, since plenty of schools claim it; the value is in the specific resource that moves your goals forward. Keep money, status, and family out of it.

College of Architecture, Art, and Planning (650 words)

AAP is among the smallest and most selective colleges at Cornell, with an architecture program ranked among the country's best, so it reads as a "why this major" essay with the bar set high on specificity. Match the response to your track: B.Arch applicants give an example of a creative project or passion driving them toward a five-year professional degree; BFA applicants think about how they'd pull their interests and Cornell's resources into a coherent art practice; URS applicants show real depth of interest in urban and regional questions. AAP wants an artistic scholar, creative ability, range across the sciences and humanities, a research focus, and real cultural and community engagement.
The strongest responses describe a passion for the field rather than a passing interest, backed by what you've done and where you're going, and they show commitment built over years. This is where long-term investigation matters most. AAP students spend long nights in the studio in Sibley Hall, drafting and building, so a reader is looking for evidence that you understand that life and actually want it.

What are the most common mistakes in Cornell essays?

The most common Cornell essay mistakes share a cause. The student is writing to impress, when the essay's actual job is to show fit. They reach for the biggest topic, describe a community without showing their place in it, or claim interest in a college without proving they understand it.

All group, no self

Community essays that detail the group but never show your role or contribution.

Generic college fit

“I like engineering” or “I'm passionate about business,” with no specific knowledge of the college.

Repeating the application

Restating your activities list or achievements instead of revealing something new.

Writing to please

Chasing what you think Cornell wants to hear, not what's true to you.

A subtler mistake is treating the supplements as interchangeable. The business school wants to know whether you're a Dyson or a Nolan student; ILR wants the focus kept on labor and work, with law-school ambitions left aside; CALS wants specificity about one of its 20 majors over vague interdisciplinary enthusiasm. Each college reads for its own thing, and a recycled answer reads as a recycled answer.

They just want to tell a story just to get through the essay. That essay is so critical.

Ritz B

Former Cornell Admissions Officer

Annotated essay example

The two essays below come from a Crimson student admitted to Cornell's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, annotated by Lauren Pluchino, Director of US Essay Mentoring at Crimson, who has guided and mentored hundreds of applicants through the Cornell essays. Her comments appear exactly as she made them. Together the pair shows how one applicant handled the two halves of the Cornell supplement: the community essay every applicant writes, and a college-specific short-answer. Read them for how consistently the same person comes through in both.

Essay 1: The Cornell University community essay

Prompt: We all contribute to, and are influenced by, the communities that are meaningful to us. Share how you've been shaped by one of the communities you belong to. Define community in the way that is most meaningful to you. This community example can be drawn from your family, school, workplace, activities or interests, or any other group you belong to. (350 word limit)

Community, to me, is best embodied in my fencing team. The fencing strip is where we push each other to grow, not just as athletes, but as individuals.

During my freshman year on the fencing team, my team faced multiple challenges: school was academically draining because of midterms and our bodies were tired from our training. It was especially hard to maintain a positive outlook through tough losses. Following a defeat after our match to qualify for playoffs, each team member slowly stopped fen

The CALS impact short-answer (100 words)

Prompt: Optional Short-Answer (100 words): Elaborate on an experience where you had a meaningful impact on people, a community, or the environment.

During my first volunteer shift at Animal League, I met an anxious terrier. Although I'd been living with dogs for six years and knew dog body language, I was unable to socialize with Holly. For three months, I used squeaky toys and treats to encourage her playful awareness during interactions with other dogs. My work with Holly helped her become a sociable companion and better integrate into her family. It also inspired me to continue serving a community that is important to me, the animals in

What makes this work:
— This essay shows that impact doesn't have to mean large scale change. By referencing the anxious terrier Holly, she highlights that sometimes showing up for what we care about consistently, is ultimately what defines us. This student's care for Holly embodies empathy, persistence and a belief that even the furry members of our community matter.
— Through highlighting a connection to a larger cause, she presents herself as someone who, in her own interest for animal safety, is not above caring for one animal at a time. This adds a heightened sense of credibility and relatability to her work.
Key Takeaways:
— Small moments can hold big weight in these kinds of essays that are often overloaded when students try to amplify what they have done. Leaning into the unique approach of how the student cared for a single dog, strategically paints a picture of how she'll show up in other parts of her activism and work.
— Empathy prevails even in impact essays, where showcasing the dog as anxious and not very sociable, presents the student as willing to take the time to support and understand animals who may not be the easiest to work with. This deepens our understanding of her individual character and contributions she'll make on campus.

"I want to be able to walk through their story with them, and feel what they felt, and come out saying, wow, this person really grew.

Ritz B

Former Cornell Admissions Officer

How do the Cornell essays connect to the rest of the application?

By the time a reader reaches your essays, they've seen your transcript, your activities, and your recommendations. The essays are where those pieces resolve into one person, or don't. A reader is checking whether the student in the essays matches the one the rest of the file describes, and when the answer is yes, the application reads as a single, clear case rather than a stack of parts.
So write the essays last, once you can see what the rest of your file already says, and use them to make it say one thing clearly. The activities and the academics establish what you've done. The essays are where you make sure a reader knows who did it, and why it points to Cornell.

The essays are where your application stops being a set of separate parts and becomes a person a reader can advocate for. Coherence is what makes that case easy to make.

Book a free consultation with one of our expert advisors.