What Should I Write My College Essay About?
Brainstorming Tools & Evaluation Checklists


Lauren P.
Head of Essay Mentoring @ Crimson
Summary
Finding a college essay topic starts with reflection, not just description. Prompts about family, childhood, values, and challenges help uncover meaningful stories. Short exercises and self-check questions guide you from surface memories to deeper insights, making your essay both authentic and distinct
The best essays make meaning from moments. Don’t just describe what happened—reflect on why it mattered and how it shaped you.
Instead of focusing on what happened, focus on what changed. Ask yourself:
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What belief did this experience challenge?
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Did I react the way I wish I had?
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How has this moment stuck with me?
Write for 10 minutes about a time you lost your temper, made a mistake, or faced a challenge. When you finish, underline where your perspective changed. That shift, not the event itself is where your essay lives.
Think of your family member as a window into your own growth. Ask yourself:
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What do I admire or fear in this person?
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How have they influenced who I am or who I don’t want to become?
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What values or questions have I inherited from them?
Draw a quick family tree. Next to three names, jot one value, habit, or lesson you associate with that person. Circle the one that feels most complicated or meaningful. That’s your best essay starting point.
Zoom in on one day or one detail. Don’t just describe what happened. Show how it felt and why it still lingers with you now.
List three early memories. For each, write down one smell, one sound, and one feeling you remember. Pick the memory with the strongest details and explore how it connects to who you are now.
Start with a personal story that complicates or questions the value in question. Ask yourself:
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When was a time I thought I was right and realized I wasn’t?
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What’s a belief I’ve had to revaluate?
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Where have I encountered a moral gray area?
Write down five beliefs you hold strongly. Now, star the one you’ve ever doubted, bent, or changed. Draft a short paragraph on what shifted—that’s where your essay becomes honest and revealing.
Let metaphor lead the first draft but ground it in real moments. Ask yourself:
- What larger feeling or idea does this image represent?
- Can I pair this abstract idea with a story?
- Is the style enhancing the content or distracting from it?
Choose an everyday object around you (a shoe, a plant, a snack). Write three sentences comparing it to a bigger idea love, fear, growth, or identity. The best metaphors come from the ordinary.
Choose a setting that changed you—not just a place you liked. Ask yourself:
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What happened there that wouldn’t have happened anywhere else?
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How do I view this place differently now than I did at the time?
Pick a location tied to a strong memory. Write two lists: how you saw the place then, and how you see it now. Compare the lists, the differences reveal the story you need to tell.