Re: Good Pharmacy School Essays

0 views
Skip to first unread message
Message has been deleted

Chrystal Dueno

unread,
Jul 11, 2024, 11:11:18 AM7/11/24
to emscorlisa

A personal statement serves as a way to highlight your skills, interests and experiences. Personal statements tend to be somewhat autobiographical, but it is not just a lengthy personal essay of your entire life story.

A cover letter generally serves as a means to sell yourself to a company or school. It introduces your resume and all your relevant school and employment history. A personal statement, however, is meant to be more creative and introduce the school to you as a person in an engaging format.

good pharmacy school essays


Download https://picfs.com/2yLKVX



Since personal statements are more narrative than list-based, start to think about how pharmacists have influenced your life and family. Compelling stories from your own experiences will help admissions counselors see you have a full-bodied connection to the program and career field.

As part of your brainstorming, look at successful personal statements. Websites like Studential and ApplyToUni can give you a good idea of what spelled success for past applicants. Or, if you know anyone who went to pharmacy school already, you can ask them for their best tips.

How do you make sense of all the information you just brainstormed out? One of the best ways to sort through your thoughts is by looking for natural connections between events in your life. Be sure to highlight the aspects of your career and schooling that will make you stand out the most.

If your personal statement was one with a prompt, use this check to be sure you have answered all the questions as fully and uniquely as possible. This is another great place to ask for a second set of eyes to review your statement.

All that can make any student nervous and anxious. Think about the pressure of applying to any institution. Admission officers expect you to write an interesting 1-page essay on relevant subjects, express your interest in the field, and describe your story to let them know you better. Use effective tips to overcome this challenge, consider asking professionaladmission essay writing services for a helping hand, or check pharmacy personal statement samples.

Realize the role it plays in the future career of pharmacists and take your pharmacy school personal statement very seriously. There are many people who want to pursue this career. Most of them have high test scores, good grades, personal achievements, and other strong sides, but only a few of them capture the attention of admission officers.

Use your pharmacy personal statement as a chance to succeed. It should present your personality to the committee. Make sure that it turns uninteresting information, such as awards, grades, courses, and test scores into prominent traits of your individuality. Your personal essay for a pharmacy school should highlight not only your academic accomplishments but also show you as an asset to its community. It makes your application noticeable.

Ask other people (your friends or family) to read your final draft and share their opinions. Their advice can help you transform a mediocre paper into a brilliant and winning one because they encourage you to look at it from different angles. Otherwise, you may revise your essay many times in vain.

This said, most admissions officers to whom we have spoken agree that demonstrating fit is the one quality that most impresses them when reviewing applications. This means showing the school that you understand what makes it unique as well as what you have to offer and, consequently, why you sincerely want to attend that school.

Far too many applicants view the admissions game as purely numeric. Smart applicants realize they need to put 100% of their best effort into each stretch school they target. Consequently, they understand why it is better to apply to 10 schools with each application reflecting 100% of their best effort than to get stretched too thin and apply to 20 schools with each application only reflecting 50% of their best effort.

The key secret of writing a successful application is to convince admission officers in your interest and dedication to the chosen specialization. How can you do that? Tell them about the impulse that led to this decision. Explain your desire to pursue a pharmacy career path clearly to let the committee understand your reasoning and logic behind it.

Helping people was my passion beginning from studying in elementary school. At first, it was mostly assisting my parents and neighbors but later I began reading the special literature and even developed a specific interest in chemistry and microbiology books (as well as related free online content on related Web resources). This was a powerful motivation for me to achieve higher grades during my studies because of understanding of the necessity to enter a higher education institution afterward. After graduating from high school I had to choose between medical sciences and pharmacy services fields and finally decided to stay with the latter.

Applying to this college means a lot to me. I believe that after studying here I can obtain the most valuable knowledge and support to pursue my career in the area of my interest and also to bring some real value and positive results to the society which generally summarizes my ISAT personal statement on this decisive day. Pharmacy terminology is like a special language which I have started to learn and hope to master completely quite soon.

Chemistry and biology were my favorite subjects during the whole process of studying, particularly because some of my relatives have been working in these spheres. There were a lot of specialized books (not only in the English language) on related subjects at my home so as a passionate reader I have explored all of them early enough, during my free time. Eventually, it led me to building solid plans of continuing my learning in a pharmacy college, improve my medical skills and obtain great experience.

After graduating from my high school with a diploma with honors, I feel prepared to enter this college and to successfully obtain a degree which will allow me to proceed to higher levels of scientific research and reach the maximum of content because of this knowledge. My skills include all basic kinds of chemistry operations, basic knowledge about microbiology, familiarity with most widespread kinds of germs and medicine (antibiotics and others), first aid services, vitamins and their influence on children and adults, volunteering, etc. In this letter of intent, I would like to express my hopes and dreams which might come true as a result of this application day.

Apart of basic chemistry and biology knowledge received in the process of my general learning and additional online training, I have read a lot of specific research works and eventually became familiarized very well with the history of pharmacology theory and practice in the U.S and Canada beginning from the late 19th century up to the modern day, particularly with problems and challenges which have been noticed lately in this sphere (antibiotics overuse is one of the brightest examples). My dream is to play a notable part in dealing with those challenges and making certain contribution to the development of better results of medicine services for everyone!

In college, I became interested in advocacy when I learned the story of the drug Eflornothine, which worked miracles on the deadly disease African Sleeping Sickness but was discontinued because it did not make the company money. Like many pharmaceutical companies, this one kept the patent, disallowing other companies from making this medication cheaply, thereby condemning millions of people to suffer. When I learned of this, I felt ashamed and wanted to be a part of changing aspects of the industry that could be harmful. I began volunteering for an NGO that advocated for certain patents to be lifted, to allow patients suffering from treatable diseases to receive life-saving medicine. My task was to research the age of a patent, find out if it had been renewed, and if the company had any exceptions. We often found that patents had expired but the medicine prices had remained high; it was therefore easy to lower these prices, allowing patients in lower-income countries to afford medications. Through this experience, I learned that it is important to advocate for those who do not have the power or resources to advocate for themselves. I also learned important research skills that I aim to sharpen in the pharmacy program, such as conducting literature reviews and developing focused quantitative analyses. I will continue advocating for patients, both at home and abroad, and in the years to come, I aspire to change policy surrounding patent laws and life-saving medications.

When my mother was diagnosed with breast cancer, I remember feeling numb, confused, and scared. But within our first few trips to the hospital, I was reassured that she was in competent and compassionate hands. While not every family member will have the outcome that I did, when I am working as a pharmacist, they can rest assured that their loved one will receive the best care possible. As a future pharmacist, I promise to: collaborate with my team, continually striving for better methods and better outcomes; advocate for my patients and for those who cannot advocate for themselves; and actively listen and empathize with my patients and their families to ensure they receive patient-centered and compassionate care. While I know the road ahead will be challenging, pharmacy is a field I am honored to pursue, and I look forward to the day that I can inspire the next generation of pharmacists, as I was inspired a decade ago. (918 words)

Though there may not have been a magic pill to rid me of my mounting social anxiety, hard work seemed like an unlikely solution, too. For months, I put on a happy face, trying to convince myself that there was nothing to fear in locker-side conversations and that my worth was not determined by what a group of gangly middle-schoolers thought of me. Eventually, my parents took me to see a psychiatrist, and after many sweaty-palmed conversations, I was diagnosed with social anxiety and handed a prescription for anti-anxiety medication. Of course, the medication I received was no miracle, but with other coping mechanisms, my world began to seem a little more welcoming. Gradually, I interacted with peers more, who became friends. I still had to work hard in therapy, but the capsules I took in the morning each day removed my constant, debilitating worry.

7fc3f7cf58
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages