
Yale Supplemental Essays
New Haven, Connecticut · Private

Eduard C.
Former Yale Admissions Director
Yale's essays aren’t a writing test. They’re the part of the application where curating an impression should stop, and where writing honestly about who you actually are is the only approach that works.
Intellectual Curiosity
A mind at work, returning to real questions rather than résumé summaries.
Specificity Over Generality
Precise details make the person feel real and the essay harder to forget.
Community Awareness
A student who notices others, celebrates peers, and thinks beyond themselves.
Restraint and Sophistication
Answers the deeper prompt, trusts the reader, and knows when to stop.
Authentic 17-Year-Old Voice
A voice that sounds like the student across every prompt length and format.
Whimsy and Lightness
Playful, specific moments that feel memorable because they sound real.
Students can be whimsical, they can be lighthearted in those moments. When you can relax and have fun with the questions that are asked, admissions officers have fun reading the application.

Eduard C.
Former Yale Admissions Director
Yale isn’t asking you to prove you’re extraordinary. It’s asking you to be specific, honest, and entirely yourself – and to trust that those things, done well, are extraordinary enough.
Students would just feel the need to prove that they had done research into Yale. A laundry list of checkpoints was a little bit less successful. Pick one thing that is most intriguing and most exciting, and share that.

Eduard C.
Former Yale Admissions Director
In the short answers, Yale isn’t looking for the most impressive answer. It’s looking for the most honest one and the two are rarely the same thing.
What we wanted most was just to hear the student in their own words. If that didn't come through, the essay always fell flat -- no matter how perfect the grammar or the structure.

Eduard C.
Former Yale Admissions Director
The reflective essay isn’t asking what Yale can do for you, or what you’ve achieved. It’s asking who you are when you are paying close attention to your own life – and whether you have the self-awareness to say something true about it.
Reflect on an element of your personal experience that you feel will enrich your college. How has it shaped you?
Admitted Student | Yale University, Class of 2030
I was 16 the first time a poem made me cry. The priest began not with scripture, but a poem: I am the swift uplifting rush / Of quiet birds in circled flight. It articulated my grief in a way I couldn't. I kept returning to it, wondering how just a few words could carry so much. I began to read and translate poems from languages other than English. In Mandarin, Mongolian, Spanish, and French, it was always the natural world that held the heaviest emotions -- love, loss, hope. Centuries apart, co...
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The student who wrote about poetry across languages -- what I loved was that it wasn't about what they had done. It was about how they saw the world. That's the essay that makes a reader sit up.

Lauren P.
Head of Essay Mentoring at Crimson
Very polished essays were harder to differentiate. As long as it sounded like an authentic 17-year-old's voice – and not something clearly piecemealed together or way more mature than the level the student was at -- those were some of the things that raised little flags.

Eduard C.
Former Yale Admissions Director
“Every part of the application tells the student's story. Don't reserve that only for the essays. From what you share in the most mundane parts of the Common App -- all of it is reviewed, all of it is seen, and all of it gets connected together.

Eduard C.
Former Yale Admissions Director
Your essays and your activities aren’t separate parts of the application. They’re two halves of the same argument. When they point toward the same person, the file advances on its own momentum.
