Last-Minute Tips

by Ryan Hickey on December 29, 2009

With deadlines looming, the holidays in full swing, and applicant stress levels rising, I thought that today’s post would be a perfect opportunity to provide some tips for those who may find themselves rushing to get everything about their applications, essays included, finished and submitted within the next several days. Even if you complete your essays at the last minute, consider the following five tips before pressing the “Submit” button or sealing the envelope:

  1. Spell check doesn’t work if a word is misused but spelled correctly. Consider the following sentence: During my junior year, I spent countless ours volunteering at my church. The miscue in that sentence, though glaring, would be completely missed by traditional spell-check functions. Thus, while spell check can be a useful tool, it is unwise to rely on it too heavily. Nothing can replace a couple good old-fashioned read throughs.
  2. Whether you finish your essay a week, day, or hour before your deadline, try to take at least a short break from it before your final proofread. If you have time, the best thing to do is put the essay aside for a full 12 hours, preferably 12 hours that include a good night’s sleep. Don’t work on or even think about the essay at all during that span. If you don’t have that much time, set the essay aside for as long as you comfortably can and do something else. Make a meal/snack. Tidy up your room. Watch some TV or a YouTube video. Whatever you do, take your mind off the essay for as long as possible. Doing so will give you fresh eyes, so to speak, when you return to the essay and help you polish it as effectively as possible.
  3. Another proofing tip: try reading the entire essay starting with the concluding sentence and working your way back to the introduction. Since you’ve probably got much of the essay memorized by this point, you may be looking at the words but actually reading from memory when going from start to finish. Working backward will help you examine each sentence individually to eliminate small errors you may have overlooked.
  4. Don’t forget about the word limit. Sometimes essays can grow slowly throughout the editing and proofing process. A draft that starts at 480 words can end up close to 600 after a revision or two. Thus, it’s just as important to use the word count feature in your word processor as it is to use spell check before finalizing your draft.
  5. Watch out for formatting artifacts when cut/pasting your essay into text boxes. Some online applications ask you to place your completed essay into a text box for submission. Because you probably wrote your essay in a program such as Microsoft Word, cut/pasting from document to text box can cause unwanted characters to appear in your essay. Punctuation marks such as apostrophes, quotation marks, and semicolons are particularly susceptible to such formatting problems. To ensure that your pasted essay is as clean and polished as the version in your document, take time to read through the entire pasted version before submitting it.

If you have more than 24 hours before your deadline, why not have an EssayEdge editor take a last-minute look at your essay. We offer 24-hour turnaround for virtually all of our services.

Lastly, be sure to check back on the blog tomorrow; we’ll be offering a special deal for our blog readers similar to the one that was offered on Christmas day – you definitely don’t want to miss it this time around!

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