A female student looks happy and determined as she walks across campus near Royce Hall.

Ready to Apply? Here’s How.

Discover all the information you need below to get your UCLA application going. Learn more about the qualities and characteristics we’re looking for in our review process. Also, find out about important deadlines you won’t want to miss.

Students smile next to The Bruin statue.

First-Years

You’ll be graduating from high school or you’ve already graduated but have yet to enroll in any college or university.

Students make their way across campus.

You graduated from high school and have completed some college-level coursework beyond the summer following graduation.

Three students enjoy each other’s company at an outdoor table.

International

You’re in your final year of secondary school or you’ve already completed it but are not currently enrolled in any college or university. Your secondary credential will qualify/qualifies you to enter a university in your home country.

A female student holding a #UCLAbound sign poses with Joe and Josie Bruin.

Application

The University of California (UC) application opens August 1 and the period of time to submit an application for admission is October 1–November 30 .

Important Dates

UC application opens

UC starts accepting applications

Last day to file UC applications

Decisions for most first-year applicants released

Decisions for most transfer applicants released

Several students study and have fun at an outdoor table.

What We Look For

We value applicants who challenge themselves with a rigorous curriculum in high school or secondary school and whose personal stories, rich experiences and leadership skills enhance their perspective and potential contributions to our campus community.

A student smiles as she gets her notebook out to do some work at an outdoor table.

Student Profiles

When reviewing applications, we consider a wide variety of factors. See how the primary academic factors, which are more easily quantifiable, help shape the profile of our students.

Personal Insight Questions

Additional Information

  • First-Generation Students
  • Students With Disabilities
  • Undocumented Students
  • Returning Students
  • Transferring Credits
  • Reporting Changes to Applications

Transizion

The Admissions Strategist

How to write the uc personal insight questions 2021-2022.

The University of California (UC) is one of the most prestigious public research universities in the country.

It’s known for pioneering innovations and its unique ten-campus system.

When it comes to admissions, UC’s application is just as unique as the university itself.

  • UC has its own application portal, and you only need to fill out one application to apply to as many UC campuses as you would like.

UC also takes a slightly different approach to the essay, instead posing eight Personal Insight Questions (PIQs).

In this article, we’ll break down everything you need to know about responding to UC’s PIQs and boosting your chances of admission !

What Are PIQs?

As mentioned above, PIQs are Personal Insight Questions – these are the UC essay prompts.

  • UC asks eight of these questions, but you’re only required to respond to four of them. Each response must be limited to 350 words.

On UC’s website, the university states that the purpose of these questions is “getting to know your personality, background, interests, and achievements in your own unique voice.”

The eight Personal Insight Questions read as follows:

1. Describe an example of your leadership experience in which you have positively influenced others, helped resolve disputes or contributed to group efforts over time. 2. Every person has a creative side, and it can be expressed in many ways: problem solving, original and innovative thinking, and artistically, to name a few. Describe how you express your creative side. 3. What would you say is your greatest talent or skill? How have you developed and demonstrated that talent over time? 4. Describe how you have taken advantage of a significant educational opportunity or worked to overcome an educational barrier you have faced. 5. Describe the most significant challenge you have faced and the steps you have taken to overcome this challenge. How has this challenge affected your academic achievement? 6. Think about an academic subject that inspires you. Describe how you have furthered this interest inside and/or outside of the classroom. 7. What have you done to make your school or your community a better place? 8. Beyond what has already been shared in your application, what do you believe makes you stand out as a strong candidate for admissions to the University of California?

Which PIQs Should I Choose?

In short, it’s up to you!

UC Personal Insight Questions: How to Write Them!

Click above to watch a video on UC Personal Insight Questions.

UC’s website explains that all questions are given equal consideration during the review process, meaning the questions you choose won’t put you at an advantage or disadvantage.

However, UC does recommend that you select questions “that are most relevant to your experience and that best reflect your individual circumstances.”

Basically, you’re on the right track if you choose the questions that best fit your personality and experiences.

We do have one additional tip when it comes to choosing your four PIQs:

  • Make sure that your questions don’t overlap.

Each PIQ you answer should reveal a new and interesting piece of your “puzzle.”

  • For instance, don’t write about being president of the Math Club for #1, your creative problem solving for #2, your impressive mental math skills for #3, and how Geometry inspires you for #6.

Together, these four questions should form a complete picture of you.

Demonstrate that you’re a well-rounded, unique individual who will make positive contributions to UC.

General Tips for Responding to the PIQs

First, we want to emphasize the importance of starting early . UC’s uniqueness continues with the university’s application deadline:

  • November 30.

That’s a full month before the Common Application deadline (and most other college application deadlines).

For this reason, you’ll want to start as early as possible on your PIQs.

Don’t wait until the last minute and end up submitting work that isn’t your best . You might even want to start over the summer.

  • Once the school year starts—along with the activities and responsibilities that come with it—you’ll be surprised how quickly that November 30 deadline looms.

Luckily, UC is extremely open about their application and admission process.

The university has provided a wide variety of tips about responding to the PIQs.

Below is an overview of UC’s general tips, along with a few of our own:

  • Use first-person “I” statements (per UC).
  • Write in your own voice; your writing should “sound” like you. At the same time, avoid being too informal and/or using slang.
  • Proofread and edit . UC states that you won’t be directly evaluated on spelling and grammar, but errors “can be distracting to the reader and get in the way of what you’re trying to communicate.” (Plus, spelling and grammar errors don’t make a great impression!)
  • Get feedback from friends and family members.
  • Write persuasively. UC explains that you should use “specific, concrete examples” to support your points, rather than relying on lists.

And UC’s last piece of general advice?

The university considers many other factors, and these responses “can only add value” to the application.

Common PIQs Mistakes to Avoid

UC’s website also provides a list of common mistakes to avoid as you complete the PIQs. These mistakes include:

  • Talking about one campus: You’re talking to all UC campuses you apply to in your responses. (Unless you apply to only one UC school, don’t make your responses school-specific. All the UC schools you’ve applied to will read your PIQ responses.)
  • Inappropriate use of humor
  • Creative writing (poems, clichés)
  • Quotations: They want to know your words and thoughts, not someone else’s
  • Generalities: Stick to facts and personal examples
  • Repetition: Provide new information that can’t be found in other sections of the application
  • Asking philosophical questions: Get to the point and say what you mean
  • Acronyms: Spell it out!

.cta_generic_big_1 { background-color: #d9e8fc; box-shadow: 0 14px 29px 0 rgba(0,0,0,.2); display: flex; flex-direction: column; padding: 2.5rem; margin: 1.2rem 0; justify-content: center; text-align: center; } .cta_generic_big_1-button_container { align-self: center; margin: 2rem 0; color: white; } .cta_generic_big_1-link { background-color:#0064EB; border-radius: 2rem; font-size: 1.1rem; padding: .4rem 2rem; } .cta_generic_big_1-link:hover { box-shadow: 0 5px 14px 0 rgba(0,0,0,.2); text-decoration: none; } @media only screen and (max-width: 768px) { .cta_generic_big_1-left { display: none; } .cta_generic_big_1-button_container { margin-bottom: 0; } } /*This button code appears to be broken * * Read More! */ Get personalized advice!

Writing each personal insight question.

Now that you’ve got a good idea of what UC is—and isn’t—looking for in your PIQ responses, let’s take a closer look at each question.

Describe an example of your leadership experience in which you have positively influenced others, helped resolve disputes or contributed to group efforts over time.

UC clarifies that “leadership experience” is a broad term. You don’t have to have an official title to be a leader.

Perhaps you’ve been in charge of a specific task, acted as a mentor to others, or taken the lead role in a project.

A leadership experience could also mean resolving a dispute “at your school, church, in your community or an organization.”

It could be something outside of school as well, like helping out or taking care of your family.

To begin writing this essay, first provide some context about the individual or individuals you led.

  • What sort of problem or dispute existed before you stepped in?
  • Why was this an important problem to solve? (This section should be the shortest, since it’s not yet focused on you and your leadership abilities.)

Then, describe what actions you took.

  • How did you plan to address the issue?
  • Were there any difficulties along the way, and how did you handle them?
  • What were the results of your leadership?

As you wrap up, you may want to reflect on how this experience influenced you.

What did you learn about being a leader? Has your perspective on leadership changed as a result?

Remember to be as specific as possible. Instead of giving a general summary of your role as club president, choose to focus on a particular dispute or issue that you successfully tackled head-on.

Every person has a creative side, and it can be expressed in many ways: problem solving, original and innovative thinking, and artistically, to name a few. Describe how you express your creative side.

For this prompt, UC poses the following questions to consider:

  • What does creativity mean to you? Do you have a creative skill that is important to you? What have you been able to do with that skill? If you used creativity to solve a problem, what was your solution? What are the steps you took to solve the problem?
  • How does your creativity influence your decisions inside or outside the classroom? Does your creativity relate to your major or a future career?

As with the term “leadership experience,” UC is using a broad definition of “creativity” here.

It doesn’t have to be a visual or performance art.

Creativity can be expressed through anything you make or generate, even an idea or theory that didn’t exist before.

Basically, UC is asking how you express creativity in your life. And how does this play a role in your personality, outlook, decisions, or goals?

Start by defining your brand of “creativity.”

  • What do you make or do?
  • What problems do you solve, and how do you solve them?
  • How did you become interested in this activity in the first place?

Next, explain what this creativity means to you.

  • What drives you to be creative?
  • Why do you enjoy this particular activity or pursuit?
  • Does it come naturally to you, or do you have to work hard at it?

As usual, you’ll conclude by reflecting.

  • Do you plan to turn this into a career?
  • What have you learned through this creative pursuit?
  • Has it influenced the way you think or interact with others?

UC PIQ 2 Example

Take one look at my transcript, and you’ll probably assume that I am the quintessential STEM guy: boatloads of computer science courses, AP Physics C and Calculus III my junior year, supplemented by online math videos that I watch just for fun. Still, outside the world of academia, I indulge in the unwavering freedom to create.  When writing equations to solve for the zeros of a quadratic loses its luster, I write screenplays about fake bacon-flavored cure-alls and a lacrosse bench-warmer turned soccer star (due to a gruesome arm injury). My friends and I have always enjoyed listening to podcasts; now, we craft our own, introducing each and every episode with zany bits of copyright-free music and providing commentary on everything from the Dodgers to the latest Assassin’s Creed game. When a novel conceptualization dawns upon me, I take a break from being a questioning historian, astute mathematician, and analyst of rhetoric and transform myself into a set director, podcast host, and game developer. During these  moments of self-determination, I create – not merely for a grade, but to fashion something I am proud of and enjoy watching, listening to, or playing. As I enter my final year of high school, my life has become a world of endless scantrons and mounting review books. The opportunities to create have become increasingly scarce, as the realm of standardized testing only endorses factual regurgitation. However, every time I get the chance to express even the most minute form of creativity, I come alive. Whether I’m filming a music video on Enlightenment philosophers, using Photoshop to design a mathematics Pokémon ball, or designing the logo for my startup, I always make sure to never stop creating and to always preserve a portion of my brain for my imaginative self.

UC PIQ 2 Example 2

Scratch. Python. HTML. C++. Java. These are my creative languages.  After 6 weeks of learning these five languages during a summer immersion program led by Girls Who Code, an organization whose purpose is to empower women in tech, we were given the opportunity to create our own project. One day, passing a food pantry, an idea flashed through my mind: I wanted to create an iOS application that could help individuals, companies, restaurants, and businesses find locations where they could donate excess food.  As the project’s lead programmer, I had to learn a new programming language called “Swift” by spending hours staring at tutorials on YouTube and testing hundreds of versions of code until one combination of different snippets worked. Still, all the hours of gaping blankly at my computer were worth it. We completed our application, naming it EXS, and presented it to an auditorium full of people, including the CTO of Electronic Arts, at our graduation ceremony. What had simply been a vision at first became an actual product that could help people.  The most important aspect of this experience was facing the reality that all programmers encounter in their creative educations: making mistakes – something I had always been afraid of – is fundamental to computer science. It is even considered, by many software engineers, as one of the core truths of coding, and, without it, we would be unable to learn and make a fully-functioning program.  The process behind EXS has taught me that failure and trial-and-error will be significant elements of my future creative ventures. This will allow me to become the best programmer I can possibly be.  Looking forward, I envision myself the leader of my own international computer science company, making video games or applications for social impact that help people on a global scale. Of course, this will involve plenty of failure, but I now know mistakes are inevitable in my field. If my creative failures and ventures will be able to bring a smile upon someone’s face or simply help change one individual’s life, I’m gladly willing to make them. 
What would you say is your greatest talent or skill? How have you developed and demonstrated that talent over time?

UC explains that this is the time to share a talent or skill you’re proud of, even if it isn’t one for which you’ve been recognized or awarded.

The overall tone of this essay should convey passion and excitement about the talent you choose to discuss.

Remember that specificity is key.

So if you have a talent or skill in mind, come up with a specific story that showcases it.

  • What event or experience can you narrate in order to convey your skill/talent to admissions officers?

This prompt also asks about how you’ve “developed this talent over time.”

  • It’s appropriate to talk about struggles or obstacles you’ve overcome.
  • Perhaps this skill didn’t come easily to you, but your determination and persistence eventually paid off.

You’ll also want to reflect on why you feel that this is your greatest talent or skill.

  • How has it impacted you, others, or your future career goals?

You can tell this story in chronological order:

A description of how you first became interested in this skill/talent or struggled to develop it, an event that shows your improvement or accomplishments in this area, and the impact this talent or skill has had on your life.

UC PIQ 3 Example

The air felt different that day. “Have you seen it?” my friend Jordyn exclaimed as I walked into Washington Charter School swarmed by a sea of sweaty fifth graders. She forced her phone into my hands. Bewildered, I scrolled through endless social media posts of my defaced picture. The captions read, “I’m going to burn her house down. Isabelle’s gonna die.” The day before, Edna and I competed in a contest to speak at our elementary graduation. My classmates had nominated me,  and while I was sleeping, Edna had spent hours threatening my life on every social media platform she belonged to.  I was terrified; I had never experienced such vitriol. Seeing the good in everyone, I showered my bully with benevolence and committed to finding opportunities to prevent others from experiencing what I had. Still reeling from the impact of Edna’s hurtful comments, I was motivated to speak out.  When auditions were announced for TED Talk speakers at my high school, I saw an opportunity to bring much-needed attention to the epidemic of teen social media usage and cyberbullying. I knew I had a gift for public speaking, but Edna’s hate and the fear that I might be harassed online again had almost kept me from fulfilling my passion. My Ted Talk was a huge success that year and was posted on YouTube and Facebook. I was surprised by the messages of hope not only from my peers but from strangers with similar experiences.  Since my Ted Talk, I have demonstrated my strong communication skills by crafting emails and blogs as an intern at my local domestic violence shelter, motivating my soccer team during huddles as a soccer captain, and encouraging my classmates to support their community through my work as a rotary club president. Though the lesson Edna taught me was painful, it allowed me an important glimpse into my future. No matter what direction my life takes, I am certain of this: words have power, and using my own voice to spread positivity and encourage and motivate others is what I was born to do.  
Describe how you have taken advantage of a significant educational opportunity or worked to overcome an educational barrier you have faced.

For this PIQ, UC asks you to consider:

  • An educational opportunity can be anything that has added value to your educational experience and better prepared you for college. For example, participation in an honors or academic enrichment program, or enrollment in an academy that’s geared toward an occupation or a major, or taking advanced courses that interest you — just to name a few.
  • If you choose to write about educational barriers you’ve faced, how did you overcome or strive to overcome them? What personal characteristics or skills did you call on to overcome this challenge? How did overcoming this barrier help shape who are you today?

Here, you’re either detailing an educational opportunity you’ve taken advantage of or an educational barrier you’ve overcome.

With both of these approaches, you should be revealing both your commitment to education and your strength of character.

If you write about an educational opportunity:

  • Describe what the opportunity was, why/how you received the opportunity, and why it was so “significant.”
  • Demonstrate that you understood the value of this opportunity and took advantage of it.
  • Was the opportunity challenging? How did you learn and grow from it?
  • What did you do to ensure you benefited from this opportunity as much as possible?
  • Has it influenced your career plans or your outlook on education?
  • Have you discovered new abilities or learned something new about yourself?

If you write about an educational barrier:

  • Describe the barrier. What setback or challenge impacted you academically? It should be something that stood in your way of academic success or prevented you from accessing certain opportunities. As you discuss it, avoid an overly negative tone. Try to speak neutrally and factually about what happened.
  • How did you deal with this barrier? Talk about the steps you took to overcome the barrier and how you felt throughout the process.
  • Reflect on how this experience has affected you. What did you learn about yourself, and how has this experience shaped you?

Make sure that your response to this PIQ showcases positive aspects of your character, such as determination, a love of learning, problem-solving, persistence, etc.

UC PIQ 4 Example

The Lewis Structures before me were as foreign as Hammurabi’s Code I’d seen in history class. Was this even chemistry? My pulse quickened as I saw my classmates scribbling calculations, flipping pages, and bubbling answers. Within fifty minutes, everyone had finished; I had barely completed my first problem.  As I perused my school’s course catalog, an upperclassman whispered, ”Junior year is hard enough. Don’t take AP Chemistry.” Considered one of the most demanding classes offered at my high school, AP Chemistry was notorious for rigorous exams and tedious labs. I was a year younger than my classmates, so I knew this class would be difficult. However, I’ve never been intimidated by hard work, so I confidently enrolled. In the weeks leading up to the test, I felt prepared; I had done endless practice problems, and I was acing my quizzes.  So that morning, as I sat staring at the Herculean task before me, panic set in and my confidence waned. When my test was returned, my heart sank: I had failed. Shock turned to disappointment, anger, and finally, to a determination to stay positive and do whatever it took to succeed. I’d never avoided a challenge before; this wasn’t going to be the first time.  For the rest of the year, Sal Khan, Ms. Jones, and the TAs became my new best friends.  I spent hours on Khan Academy, completed every problem in the textbook, attended office hours, and begged my parents to take me to school early for tutorials. I was the first student in the classroom and the last to leave. By year’s end, I had achieved what had seemed insurmountable: an A each quarter, a passing score on my AP exam, and a scholarship offer for a prestigious summer program to study chemistry for college credit at the University of Utah. This experience reinforced my belief that drive, perseverance, and grit are key to achieving success. As I enter college and encounter new challenges both in and out of the classroom, I am determined to tackle them in much the same way as that AP Chemistry class. 

UC PIQ 4 Example 2

In my experience, High School Musical and Mean Girls are spot-on when it comes to teen conversations; during my first three years of high school, most of the discussions my friends and I had revolved around who was dating whom, criticism of the atrocious basketball coach, and spoilers of the latest Stranger Things season. While I still enjoyed these chats, as my entrepreneurial fervor grew, I found myself feeling disjointed from my peers and looking for a community that would nurture my startup fever. When she noticed my budding interest, the head of a local incubator invited me to apply for their accelerator program. I initially felt unsure, but I gave it a shot, and as time went on, I felt as if I were transported to Ancient Athens during every Monday session. As a program meant to help individuals jumpstart and accelerate their businesses, the incubator prompted participants to think Socratically. We questioned and debated every preconceived notion regarding startups: how to conduct proper market research, when and why to shut down, and even whether a humanitarian venture could also be a profitable one. Our oratories were not dull, 10-minute long PowerPoints followed by the occasional golf clap; they were action-packed, 60-second elevator pitches accompanied by a barrage of inquiries and suggestions about statistical logos and story-telling pathos. Through numerous congregations within the polis, I gave a fellow participant the conviction to pursue his business of educating students on the college recruiting process, emphasizing how all of my friends loved athletics and wanted to go D1.  In return, he helped me see that the biggest problem with teens wasn’t always finding opportunities; it was being ready and professional enough to capture them. Despite channeling Alexander the Great’s cutthroat competitiveness at the beginning, our group personified Aristotle, Plato, and Socrates in the end, as we considered each other’s ventures and employed our own ethos to help one another. We didn’t all have to be our own Homers — our Iliad and Odyssey were the cumulative success of all of our companies, forged by the collaborative intertwining of our stories.
Describe the most significant challenge you have faced and the steps you have taken to overcome this challenge. How has this challenge affected your academic achievement?

This essay is similar to the “educational barrier” option above. However, this PIQ gives you a bit more freedom to discuss any challenge, even if it’s not directly related to education.

Remember, you’ll still need to explain how this challenge impacted you academically.

  • Start by describing a problem or challenge. Again, don’t dwell on negativity or point fingers; simply convey what happened.
  • Then, describe how you solved this problem.
  • This shouldn’t be a story about how someone else solved a problem for you.
  • Instead, you should be demonstrating your creativity, persistence, and resiliency. What specific steps did you take to overcome your problem?

Go for a bit of suspense. Sure, the admissions officer knows you’ll succeed in the end (otherwise you probably wouldn’t be telling this story).

But you can add a bit of tension by including details about how you initially struggled to solve the problem or faced additional setbacks along the way.

And of course, don’t forget to reflect.

  • How did this experience affect different aspects of your life, including school?
  • What did you learn from overcoming this challenge?
  • Did you change anything about how you think, view the world, interact with others, or approach difficulties?

UC PIQ 5 Example

My mother peaked through the window with worried eyes. I could hear her in the adjacent room, talking to the educational therapist she sent me to after my fourth-grade teacher reported I was having trouble keeping up in class. I felt quarantined. Soon after, the therapist explained I had a deficiency in my cognitive development, comprehension, and thinking.  It took me longer to think than the majority of kids in my class, and I had difficulties describing things I was picturing. When I would leave class early to see a specialized tutor, I was assailed by classmates who constantly questioned where I would go. Certain weeks, I even lied about having an appointment in order to hide in the bathroom stalls, where I would be at peace reading comic books. When teachers offered me more time to finish tests, I would refuse because I thought accepting preferential treatment would mean I’d be accepting that I was different. My disability was a weight dragging me down. To unshackle this weight, I put in overtime to hone my academic skills. Through this perseverance, I developed a strong work ethic and genuine drive for success in challenging academic situations. For a law project during my sophomore year, I was required to present a Nature vs. Nurture argument in front of a judge, jury, and attorneys to defend an individual. This challenge required me to perform extensive research on psychology and criminal backgrounds, despite my obvious lack of expertise in the field. Standing in front of the prosecuting attorney and keeping my poise, I recalled an oft-forgotten piece of evidence that I had found only due to my practiced diligence. I proved my case and won because I’ve had to regularly practice twice as hard to remember key details. What used to be a necessity to survive academically became a feature of my identity that has heightened my tenacity. For a long time, I refused to accept that I had a learning disability. Today, I view every challenge as an opportunity to better myself and rectify my weaknesses. 
Think about an academic subject that inspires you. Describe how you have furthered this interest inside and/or outside of the classroom.

UC asks you to consider the following:

  • Many students have a passion for one specific academic subject area, something that they just can’t get enough of. If that applies to you, what have you done to further that interest? Discuss how your interest in the subject developed and describe any experience you have had inside and outside the classroom — such as volunteer work, summer programs, participation in student organizations and/or activities — and what you have gained from your involvement.
  • Has your interest in the subject influenced you in choosing a major and/or career? Have you been able to pursue coursework at a higher level in this subject (honors, AP, IB, college or university work)? Are you inspired to pursue this subject further at UC, and how might you do that?

This PIQ is another that requires an enthusiastic, passionate response.

You don’t have to write about the academic subject at which you excel the most.

  • You can write about the subject you enjoy the most, one that interests and inspires you. (Of course, you should still have some accomplishments to describe, even if they’re personal accomplishments instead of major awards.)
  • If you have a definite career path and major in mind, this is a great opportunity to talk about how you developed that interest. You should also outline specific activities or tasks you do both in and out of school to further this interest.
  • Even if you don’t have a career path or major in mind, this essay can showcase that you’re a curious and passionate learner who enjoys the pursuit of knowledge. Is there a subject or topic you explore even in your downtime? Perhaps you read articles or books, watch videos, or design projects related to this topic?

To answer the last part of this PIQ, you’ll need to do your research.

  • What classes, clubs, internships, or research opportunities does UC offer in your area of interest?
  • What can you do at UC (that you can’t do everywhere else) to continue exploring your favorite subject?

Here, you can showcase both your interest in UC and how you would contribute as a student.

Keep in mind that all the UC campuses you’ve applied to will read your essays, so try to choose opportunities that apply to UC in general.

If you’re only applying to 2-3 schools, you may choose to briefly mention one or two opportunities you’d enjoy at each.

UC PIQ 6 Example

Machine learning: a buzzword that has permeated the fields of engineering and business in the last decade. Truth be told, I was initially hesitant about its practicality — considering my Chromebook would take almost 20 minutes to load one Google Doc, teaching a computer to think seemed like quite a drastic step. Finally, at my internship at the National Cancer Institute, I had a chance to build my first neural network and see what all the fuss was about. After hurriedly perusing through repositories, copying down the shortest code example I could find, and hitting run, I watched a succinct 60 lines of code classify handwritten digits with a stellar 90% accuracy rate. Since then, I’ve spent hours training networks, whether it be to detect carcinoma or sarcoma on a meager set of 400 images or to generate fake X-rays that could trick a radiologist.  Every time I hit run, I am in awe — not only because I’m watching lines of code become intelligent, but also because the concept of networks generating fake images appeared just five years ago. Maybe the ways in which we see this technology driving the world’s future are a bit too crazy; at the same time, maybe they’re not crazy enough. From the first “Hello World!” to recent work with artificial intelligence, I have developed an insatiable appetite for turning lines of code into computer programs with real-world applications. However, will machines eventually take the place of programmers and workers entirely? Can machine learning solve all of the world’s problems — technical and humanitarian? If not, what problems are impractical to expect machines to solve? As the field offers up as many questions as it does answers,  I am interested in studying both computer science and business, which would allow me to decipher both machine learning’s inner workings and its economic ramifications on the world at large.

UC PIQ 6 Example 2

My home is a marketplace of polyglots. You won’t hear much English, but you’ll regularly catch French, Arabic, Italian, and German volleyed across the dinner table. Thus, my love for my favorite subject was born out of necessity. When my brother and I needed to coordinate clandestine plans, we communicated in the one language my parents didn’t know: Spanish.  When I was first learning Spanish, I was overwhelmed by all the different tenses and endless lists of vocabulary. I grew to resent the language until I began studying different Spanish-speaking regions in AP Spanish. There, I came to the realization that mastering this language would help me uncover the world I wanted to travel. That summer, I went on a study tour to Guatemala as a member of Hillsdale Effect, which provides business education for women. When I visited Semillas de Esperanza y Amor (“Seeds of Love and Hope”), I asked a little girl about her ambitions. Since I had learned of the dire economic status of families in the country, I expected an answer along the lines of: “After I drop out of primary school, I will help my parents on their fruit plantations.” To my joyous surprise, she explained how she wanted to study at the country’s only public university to become a doctor and come back to help her community. She was breaking socioeconomic stereotypes while proving my assumptions wrong.    As I spoke with other kids, I felt like I had been speaking Spanish forever. All the hours staying up late and stressing about quizzes have helped me hear the spectacular dreams of students. Spanish not only showed me that determination pays off, but that language is a tool to unlock the vast diversity of the world. Consequently, it is now my goal to learn as many languages as I possibly can.  Growing up in a household with different languages has shaped my identity, so expanding my compendium of different languages with Spanish was a logical next step. By learning Spanish, I have developed greater international awareness and a compassion toward people of all origins. 
What have you done to make your school or your community a better place?

As you respond to this PIQ, UC wants you to consider:

  • Think of community as a term that can encompass a group, team or a place — like your high school, hometown or home. You can define community as you see fit, just make sure you talk about your role in that community. Was there a problem that you wanted to fix in your community?
  • Why were you inspired to act? What did you learn from your effort? How did your actions benefit others, the wider community or both? Did you work alone or with others to initiate change in your community?

Community and your ability to contribute are important in college, and here’s your chance to discuss both.

You may want to start by defining what community means to you.

  • What is your community and why?
  • What role do you play in this community? Use specific details to convey how meaningful this community is to your life.
  • Next, think of a problem you’ve solved within this community or an aspect of the community that you’ve improved upon. Provide some context on what the community was like before you affected some sort of change.
  • Then, describe the steps you took. How did you notice that something needed to be done? What was your thought process as you decided exactly how to act? What did you do, and what were the results?

This essay should convey the love you have for your “community” and what actions you’ve taken to improve it in a specific, meaningful way.

UC PIQ 7 Example

Park City is a utopia for outdoor enthusiasts who swarm our charming ski town every winter, drawn to the myriad of entertainment options and some of the best snow on earth. Behind the veil of the affluent lifestyle, however, the statistics tell a different story. Sexual assault and domestic violence rates in Utah are higher than the national average. One in three Utah women experience sexual assault within their lifetime, and Park City is not immune.  My eyes were drawn to the purple paper on the wall each time I walked into the bathroom at Park City High School. It was cut into tickets bearing the number of the Peace House, Summit County’s domestic violence shelter. I felt a large pit in my stomach as the number of tickets slowly disappeared over the course of several weeks.   I am fortunate to have never been a victim of sexual assault or domestic violence.  Surrounded by strong female role models throughout my life, I understand the importance and necessity of women supporting women. Hearing heartbreaking stories from my friends and witnessing silent cries for help in the high school bathroom reinforced my belief that as a community, we are only as strong as our most vulnerable members. I decided to join the Peace House team as an intern my junior year. My involvement at the Peace House has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my life. I take pride in promoting our mission to educate, empower, and shelter victims of domestic violence by marketing annual fundraising events like Walk a Mile in Her Shoes, creating content for Peace House’s social media accounts, blogging, and organizing prevention and awareness programs. Through the fundraising efforts of our Peace House team and the generosity of private philanthropic donors, we raised eleven million dollars to open a new facility with increased transitional housing and emergency shelters to help even more victims. Though the work I do is mostly behind the scenes, by bringing domestic violence out of the shadows and into the light, I have made my community a better place. 

UC PIQ 7 Example 2

During my sophomore year, I started to notice a common thread tying my school’s student body together. Whether I was eating in the school cafeteria or watching a football game, everyone seemed to be talking about how difficult it was to find opportunities that matched their personal needs. My friends who came from more financially secure backgrounds wanted internships that would allow them to dabble in new fields. Others needed jobs to ease the financial burdens of their families. I knew that there were numerous vacant positions in my area. During the late afternoon strolls my father and I took in Downtown Frederick, we often encountered “Help Wanted” signs plastered on the doors of businesses and nonprofits; however, with most job sites catering to professionals, it seemed as though the opportunities for connection between students and these organizations were far and few between. Since I knew that nearly all students had access to smartphones and Chromebooks, I set out to build Vita EDO (Equity, Diversity, and Opportunity), an app that would allow students to easily browse and apply to local opportunities by submitting an online resume and would allow employers to post jobs and hire students. Despite having minimal business expertise — most of which came from Techcrunch articles and NPR podcasts — I dove headfirst into the startup process: I invited two of my friends to help with research and digital design while I engineered the web and mobile platform from the ground up. I networked and built strong relationships with fellow entrepreneurs and navigated the social labyrinths of talking to students, business owners, and investors. I even battled in pitch competitions, raising seed money in the process. A year after becoming a limited liability corporation, Vita EDO has become an integral part of the Frederick community, helping connect hundreds of students to employers and jobs. Of course, I am always thinking up ways to improve our company for our current users and broaden our customer base. However, seeing how lines of code created new possibilities and democratized opportunity in my community is a feeling unlike any other. 

UC PIQ 7 Example 3

As I walked center-stage, I could sense 600 pairs of eyes glaring at me. My insurmountable fear of public speaking began to intensify and my legs started to tremble. I switched the microphone on and uttered, “Hello, everyone. Welcome to our annual Penny Wars Rally!”  Penny Wars is a two-week event that I have helped organize over the past four years. It is a school-wide competition whose proceeds fund microloans for women-owned businesses in Guatemala. When I was a sophomore on the then-nascent Penny Wars Rally Committee, I performed discrete tasks, such as creating powerpoints, building props for rally games, and holding silent roles in the skits. During my junior year, I was the key presenter.  As a senior, I led the presentation’s script writers, undertook a role as key speaker, and served on the steering committee, whose purpose is to plan and lead our events. Most recently, I volunteered to research, plan, and host an Oxfam hunger banquet, where our club members participated in a simulation that gave insight into the inequalities in access to resources for Guatemalan women.  Thanks to our team’s hard work, we broke our school fundraising record, earning over $8,000 in two weeks for the businesswomen of Guatemala. In addition to funding microloans, our proceeds went to fund education for business-minded Guatemalan women who lack the opportunities to learn about entrepreneurship in their communities.   Just as important as fundraising is spreading awareness to my peers. It was rewarding, and thrilling, to hear positive feedback from teachers and students, both of whom learned about the hardships of businesswomen in developing countries. Furthermore, this year’s Penny Wars Rally motivated nine students to join our club and educate their classmates on the issues we work on.  The success of our rallies has motivated me to work harder for the club and create new school-wide fundraisers, such as a supplies drive that would benefit Guatemalan schoolchildren. Penny Wars has inspired me to keep on pushing to help break the cycle of poverty in Guatemala, while continuing to involve my peers in this team effort. 
Beyond what has already been shared in your application, what do you believe makes you stand out as a strong candidate for admissions to the University of California?

For this prompt, UC expects you to consider:

  • If there’s anything you want us to know about you, but didn’t find a question or place in the application to tell us, now’s your chance. What have you not shared with us that will highlight a skill, talent, challenge or opportunity that you think will help us know you better?
  • From your point of view, what do you feel makes you an excellent choice for UC? Don’t be afraid to brag a little.

This prompt basically gives you the opportunity to write about an experience that you haven’t had the chance to share yet.

Most experiences could fit into the other seven PIQs.

But if there’s something extraordinary or unique you’ve experienced, something that makes you “stand out as a strong candidate,” then you can mention it here.

  • Explain what happened, why it happened, your role in what happened, and how you grew from or were impacted by this experience.
  • How has this experience affected the contribution you’ll make at UC or the viewpoint you’ll bring to campus? Remember to use specific details as you make your points.

UC PIQ 8 Example

The rich aromas of saffron and turmeric waft from the kitchen as my Gammy patiently stirs her famous khoresht. I can taste the crispiness of the tah-dig and the mouth-watering chicken stew simmering on the stove. The house buzzes with family and friends. Persian music fills the air; the melodic sounds of Farsi, Swiss-German, and English blend seamlessly as my family laughs and catches up. Uncle Behzad dances the “paparazzi dance”, and Ommi teaches me how to make buttery mille-feuille. As we sit down for our bi-monthly dinner, I am proud that my Swiss father and Iranian mother have created an environment where opposing cultures live in harmony. We embrace our differences: love is unconditional, and there are no arbitrary cultural or national boundaries. The door to our home is always open, and we’re happy to share food, stories, and love with all who visit.   While I have grown up in Western society, being immersed in my parents’ cultures has made me interested in and appreciative of people from all cultural backgrounds. I am proud to embody the core values of both my cultures. Though Iranians are often misinterpreted and misrepresented, the Iranians I know are hard-working, passionate, inviting and inclusive. Swiss culture is quieter and more reserved. My Swiss family has taught me to be rational, reflective, and fair-minded. Despite their differences, both cultures share the core values of authenticity, compassion, and love.  Having immigrant parents from diverse backgrounds has made me acutely aware of the strengths that diversity offers. I am drawn to the UC schools because they are a melting pot of cultures, and I am particularly intrigued by UCLA’s newly-launched Kindness Institute. I look forward to learning about how the Institute empowers people to build more humane societies, to bridge their differences, and to treat each other with empathy and respect. I believe I am a strong candidate for admission to UC schools, as I would use my cultural background and curiosity about others to promote diversity, dismantle stereotypes, and increase awareness around issues of social justice. 

What About “Additional Comments?”

After you complete your PIQs, you’ll see a section titled “Additional Comments.” This section is completely optional.

UC emphasizes that this section is not meant to be used as a continuation of your PIQ responses.

Instead, this section should only be used if you need to:

  • Clarify important details in your application (honors, awards, activities).
  • Share information about unusual circumstances or a nontraditional school environment.
  • Describe anything else that you have not had the opportunity to discuss anywhere else in the application. (UC capitalizes HAVE NOT, indicating that this should be something that absolutely hasn’t come up elsewhere.)

This section has a 550-word limit, but it really shouldn’t be utilized unless you have something vital to say that you couldn’t fit in anywhere else.

Conclusion: Writing the UC Personal Insight Questions

As you apply to UC, you’ll be asked to answer four Personal Insight Questions (PIQs), with a word limit of 350 words each.

You’re given eight questions to choose from, and all questions receive equal consideration.

Here’s a simple strategy to follow:

  • Read the PIQs, then carefully read them again.
  • Start brainstorming how you could respond to each question , possibly by creating bulleted lists. If there are some questions you know aren’t the right choice for you, you can feel free to leave those out.
  • Look over your brainstorms and decide which are the strongest. Make sure you choose four essay topics that don’t overlap, each offering a different piece of your personality “puzzle.”
  • Write your essays. Remember to tell a story (with specific details) and then reflect on it, particularly how your experiences have shaped or impacted you.
  • Proofread, edit, and receive feedback from friends and family members. As you revise, be sure to maintain your unique voice.
  • Finally, submit and relax.

Following these tips can help you write your way to a UC acceptance letter!

Learn how we can help you with college and career guidance! Check out our YouTube channel!

Click Here to Schedule a Free Consult!

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Stay on track and ease your anxiety with our second-to-none college application assistance.

mit supplemental essays how to write

  • Ethics & Honesty
  • Privacy Policy
  • Join Our Team

(732) 339-3835

[email protected]

ucla 2021 essay prompts

ucla 2021 essay prompts

University of California, Los Angeles | UCLA

  • Cost & scholarships
  • Essay prompt

Want to see your chances of admission at University of California, Los Angeles | UCLA?

We take every aspect of your personal profile into consideration when calculating your admissions chances.

University of California, Los Angeles | UCLA’s 2023-24 Essay Prompts

Select-a-prompt short responses.

Please respond to any 4 of the 8 questions below.We realize that not all questions apply to all applicants, so be sure to select the 4 questions that you believe give us the best information about you.All 8 questions are given equal consideration in the application review process. Responses to each question should be between 250-350 words.

Describe an example of your leadership experience in which you have positively influenced others, helped resolve disputes or contributed to group efforts over time.

Every person has a creative side, and it can be expressed in many ways: problem solving, original and innovative thinking, and artistically, to name a few. Describe how you express your creative side.

What would you say is your greatest talent or skill? How have you developed and demonstrated that talent over time?

Describe how you have taken advantage of a significant educational opportunity or worked to overcome an educational barrier you have faced.

Describe the most significant challenge you have faced and the steps you have taken to overcome this challenge. How has this challenge affected your academic achievement?

Think about an academic subject that inspires you. Describe how you have furthered this interest inside and/or outside of the classroom.

What have you done to make your school or your community a better place?

Beyond what has already been shared in your application, what do you believe makes you stand out as a strong candidate for admissions to the University of California?

What will first-time readers think of your college essay?

18 UCLA Essays That Worked (and Why) for 2024

UCLA Essay Examples

Do you want to write strong essays that'll help get you into UCLA?

In this article, you'll read and learn from 18 essays written by students who got recently accepted into UCLA and see how they did it.

If you're trying to get into the University of California, Los Angeles, these essays are a valuable resource and give you a peek into UCLA admissions.

Whether you're a student or parent of an applicant, you'll see what to do—and what not to do—when writing your UC essays.

How important are the UCLA essays?

And as of 2022, the UC system no longer uses your SAT and ACT scores to decide whether or not to admit students.

With no more test scores, that means your UC essays are even more important for your application. Besides your grades (GPA) and coursework, your essays are the most influential factor for your UC admissions.

Plus, UCLA is the most applied to school in the world, with well over 100,000 applicants each year. The University of California-Los Angeles acceptance rate is lower each year, which makes your essays even more important.

Since your UC essays matter so much, it's important to get them right.

What are the UC Personal Insight Question Prompts for 2022-23?

It's a mistake to think of the UC Personal Insight Questions (PIQs) as typical essays you'd write for a class.

Rather, the PIQs are a set of eight open-ended questions asked by the UC app. You must choose exactly four questions to respond to, and each response should be no more than 350 words.

Let's go over the UC Personal Insight Question prompts:

  • Describe an example of your leadership experience in which you have positively influenced others, helped resolve disputes or contributed to group efforts over time.
  • Every person has a creative side, and it can be expressed in many ways: problem solving, original and innovative thinking, and artistically, to name a few. Describe how you express your creative side.
  • What would you say is your greatest talent or skill? How have you developed and demonstrated that talent over time?
  • Describe how you have taken advantage of a significant educational opportunity or worked to overcome an educational barrier you have faced.
  • Describe the most significant challenge you have faced and the steps you have taken to overcome this challenge. How has this challenge affected your academic achievement?
  • Think about an academic subject that inspires you. Describe how you have furthered this interest inside and/or outside of the classroom.
  • What have you done to make your school or your community a better place?
  • Beyond what has already been shared in your application, what do you believe makes you stand out as a strong candidate for admissions to the University of California?

It can be helpful to see how other students responded to the UC Personal Insight Questions.

And since UCLA is one of the hardest UC's to get into, along with UC Berkeley , students that get accepted tend to write outstanding essay responses to the PIQs.

18 UCLA Personal Insight Question Examples

Here are the 18 best UCLA accepted essays that worked written by accepted students for each Personal Insight Question prompt #1-8.

  • UCLA Example Essay #1
  • UCLA Example Essay #2
  • UCLA Example Essay #3: Violin
  • UCLA Example Essay #4

UCLA Example Essay #5: Team Player

  • UCLA Example Essay #6: Flute
  • UCLA Example Essay #7: Optimism
  • UCLA Example Essay #8
  • UCLA Example Essay #9
  • UCLA Example Essay #10
  • UCLA Example Essay #11
  • UCLA Example Essay #12

UCLA Example Essay #13: Computer Science

Ucla example essay #14: korean big toes.

  • UCLA Example Essay #15

UCLA Example Essay #16: LGBT

  • UCLA Example Essay #17

UCLA Example Essay #18: Being Short

Ucla example essay #1: orchestra leadership.

UC PIQ #1: Describe an example of your leadership experience in which you have positively influenced others, helped resolve disputes or contributed to group efforts over time. (350 words max)

In my freshman year of high school, I had enrolled in the String Orchestra Advanced Class which was mixed in with the Beginning class. I was the only person with experience, seven years in the Violin at the time, while most of the students in the class were beginners. I got class elected, then re-elected as President my Freshman and Sophomore years, and was First Violin, then First Viola Chair.

My first year consisted of myself and the instructor teaching the basics of each instrument. Learning a new instrument is frustrating, and there were times where older students in the class would get frustrated and unhappy that a Freshman knew more than they did.

As a leader I had to make sure I did not keep a separation between myself and my classmates. Therefore, my Sophomore year, I changed my instrument to the Viola.

By showing my classmates that I too was a beginner, and that I too had to learn because I had a new instrument -inspired the class to learn as well. My classmates no longer saw me as someone who told people to practice and not give up, yet did not have to practice or struggle themselves, but instead, as someone who was there practicing, and struggling along with them.

The Orchestra program at my school started my Freshman year as an experimental class, but the school ended the class after my Sophomore year. Though unfortunate, in the two years of its existence, my classmates went from being novices, to performers, where in the last year of the program, we performed many times for school events and finally in an orchestra conference in my Sophomore year, where judges praised our Orchestra's technique and cohesiveness.

After the class got cut, many of my classmates continued to pursue music independently, or in the District Orchestra. It is a wonderful feeling for me to see my former classmates -to this day- performing, and even teaching others, knowing that I was there when their journeys in music first began, and I look forward to seeing their musical pursuits in the future.

Why This Essay Works:

  • Tells a Story: Gives context and explains how you got this leadership position. By explaining a backstory, it reveals your motivations and what drives you.
  • Shows Takeaways and Lessons Learned: It's not enough to just talk about your achievements. Admissions officers are more interested in why they matter to you, and how you had an impact on others.

What They Might Improve:

  • Fix Capitalization: It's not necessary to capitalize improper nouns like "violin", "viola", and "orchestra".
  • Sentence Flow: Make sure your sentences aren't too long and don't have unnecessary breaks, which can interrupt the flow.

UCLA Example Essay #2: Volunteer Leadership

My group and I spent a total of seven hours preparing five hundred bagged lunches for the extensive homeless community at Oakland. Out of all the obstacles that could have halted our progress, rain was the last thing on our minds. We were lucky enough to distribute three hundred lunches before the rain began to relentlessly pour down on us. There were a few hours left of daylight before we would be able to eat Iftar for Ramadan, so, an overwhelming majority of our group wanted to call it a day. However, there was still a large number of unsheltered and hungry homeless people throughout the city, and I could not bear to let all that food go to waste. So, I raced to one of our nearest vans, grabbed a bullhorn, and yelled to gather the attention of as many people as possible. I instructed them to form lines in front of our eleven vans in order to take everybody to the nearest homeless shelters with the promise of food and entertainment. We went to six other heavily concentrated areas to do the same thing, and within just five hours, nearly five hundred homeless individuals were transported.

This event is one of the dozens of community service projects I’ve performed in my role as vice-president of the youth faction of the Sudanese Association of Northern California (SANC). This Oakland food drive has left me with a sense of clarity of what it takes to get a project, event, or any other endeavor accomplished. The food drive was obviously a success, but what made this particularly memorable is the email the president of SANC sent me the following day: “You have a keen ability to synthesize and communicate anything quickly and effectively.” I realized the explicit connection between my forensics (speech and debate) career and my community service: the power that I carry in my voice can motivate others to do good. I have tried to apply this insight into each new endeavor since.

  • Specific with Numbers: Use exact numbers whenever you can to create authenticity and make it realistic. In this essay, saying "three hundred" lunches makes things concrete.
  • Connects to Academic Interests: Show how your past leadership achievements relate to what you want to do in college.
  • Stronger Conclusion: Make sure your conclusion isn't vague and has a concrete takeaway. Don't just use words like "this insight". Rather, rephrase that insight or draw a new idea from it.
  • Sentence Structure: Having too long of sentences is a common mistake students make. Instead, splitting up complex sentences can make it easier to read.

Learn the Secrets of Successful Top-20 Applications

Join 4,000+ students and parents that already receive our 5-minute free newsletter , packed with T-20 essay examples, writing tips & tricks, and step-by-step guides.

Students

UCLA Example Essay #3: Violin Creative Side

UC PIQ #2: Every person has a creative side, and it can be expressed in many ways: problem solving, original and innovative thinking, and artistically, to name a few. Describe how you express your creative side. (350 words max)

I express my creative side by playing the violin and other musical instruments. Ever since I was a younger child, music had always been a part of my life. The first instrument I remember playing is the piano when I was four years old. My school had a music program, so I went and learned how to read music and play the Recorder. Though it was a simple instrument, it was to prepare us students for the more complex instruments that we could choose to play after completing the Recorder lessons.

I took this class all of first grade, and in second grade I was ready to choose the instrument I wanted to specialize in. I chose the Violin, and now -ten years later- I am still playing it. Throughout the years I have learned to play other instruments as well, such as the Piano, Trumpet, Viola, and more. During that time I have also been able to play those instruments in different styles of music.

From second to seventh grade, I played the Violin and sung in my elementary school district's Mariachi and my middle school's Mariachi even when I did not know how to speak Spanish. I have been playing the Violin at my church's choir almost every Sunday since Seventh grade. I played the Violin and Viola in my high school's Orchestra class in Freshman and Sophomore year, and since my Junior year I have played the trumpet in my school's Jazz Band and Trumpet Choir.

My siblings have also been inspired to be creative musically, and together we perform at our church and other places, and music has become an important part in their lives as well.

Throughout my life I have been able to express my love for music in many different ways. Whether through playing with a group, doing a solo in front of an audience, composing my own music, or teaching my younger siblings how to read and play music the way I was taught many years ago, music has always been a large way that I could express my creative side.

  • Clearly Answers Prompt: For UC essays, being straightforward is not a bad thing. This essay starts off by clearly answering the prompt, before elaborating further.
  • Fix Capitalization: It's not necessary to capitalize improper nouns like "freshman" and "sophomore". An easy fix is to only capitalize proper nouns, like names of people and places.
  • Explain What's Meaningful: Admissions officers want to know more than just "what you did," but also why it was meaningful to you. Try to focus on the impact of your achievements more than just what you did.

UCLA Example Essay #4: Improvised Comedy Creative Side

I was brought into this world with an overactive imagination and an absence of siblings. My abundance of boredom and lack of playmates was solved by creating multiple characters, drawing them, and pretending to be them. When I joined theater my freshman year, I quickly fell in love because it brought me back to that childhood innocence of carelessly being someone else It was an opportunity to evaluate how I could incorporate my personality, experiences, and charisma into a character and to turn my visual concepts into a reality through doing makeup.

I was also introduced to improvised comedy. where I presented my witty and quirky side. On the other hand, working with a cast and crew was something I was unaccustomed to. but I soon saw myself becoming inspired by the surrounding creativity of others. Whether we were doing a dramatic or comedic play, we worked together to evoke an emotional response from the audience. It’s an honor to see people laugh and cry during our performances because I've connected with hundreds of people by putting my heart on a stage. In contrast, painting has been a private indulgence. Every feeling and thought trapped inside becomes free on that canvas into a beautiful visual creation. Like my mood, my paintings aren't uniform and consistent; they range from iridescent beaches to scattered splotches, yet every stroke, color. and mistake had a reason.

As my only patron, my mom couldn't always afford painting supplies, so occasionally I had to improvise with tools like spoons, paper towels, and erasers. Regardless of the tools I was using, my paintings were reflection of myself. The progression of my work is an exhibit of my struggles, success, and how I became who I am today. Painting is not about the finished product; it's about the journey and the lessons I've learned to get there. My creativity is not limited to the arts, but is embedded my appearance, mindset, and career path in solving mental health issues. Creativity, to me, is putting bits and pieces of myself into doing what I love.

  • Strong First Sentence: Starting off with interesting ideas is the best way to get the reader hooked. It doesn't need to be complicated, but find your most interesting idea and start there.
  • Connects Multiple Extracurriculars: Finding multiple examples in your life to explain your answer can make your essay stronger. Rather than focusing on just one activity, how do your activites relate with a common theme?
  • Great Conclusion: A strong conclusion is often one that expands on your ideas or connects to something more universal. Try restating your main idea and add a twist or expand on it.
  • Make Each Paragraph Distinct: Each paragraph should have one central idea or topic. It's better to split up your essay into many paragraphs because it makes it easier for the reader and better organized.

UC PIQ #3: What would you say is your greatest talent or skill? How have you developed and demonstrated that talent over time? (350 words max)

My greatest talent would be relating to and inspiring others. Throughout my time in school I have demonstrated that talent by becoming a leader where I was trusted by my teachers and peers. It began in 5th grade when I was voted to become Student Council for my class, where my peers knew that I related well with them and that I would do my best to use my position to fix their issues.

In middle school, I became the Knowledge Bowl team Captain. There was a new coach, so the program was small, about five students. There were many students who wanted to join the team but felt that they were not "smart enough" to join. I recognized this and encouraged those students to join and they succeeded. By the end of the year, our team was 3rd in the district overall statistically standing, our highest ranking in a while.

In high school I joined JROTC as a Freshman, and I became a Platoon Sergeant my Junior year. My job for the semester was to teach and motivate cadets in the program. Some cadets did not do well with authority, and felt attacked when other class leaders would be assertive. As a leader I took a different approach, and related to my cadets. My platoon was constantly noted as being a well-rounded platoon by our instructors, and I received the Non-Commisioned Officer Leadership Award.

In Academic League, motivation was key to our team's success. Sometimes personal problems would affect a member of the team, so I showed them I could relate to their struggles and still believe in their ability to help the team. In times when we would be losing in a match, I would inspire the team to keep pushing on, and to remain positive. That year our team placed 5th in the district -again a highest ranking in a while- and I was voted as "Most Inspirational" by the team.

Throughout the years, relating to and inspiring others has been a skill that has allowed me to make great connections with so many people.

  • Uses Multiple Examples: Backing up your answer with various examples from your life makes your case stronger.
  • Unique Take: Rather than thinking of a skill in the literal sense, this author uses a more abstract skill. Sharing your unique perspective is key to having interesting ideas.
  • Show Why It Matters: In addition to explaining your greatest skill or talent, you should tell why it is meaningful. What are the takeaways and how will you use this skill going forward in college?

UCLA Example Essay #6: Flute Greatest Talent

Just when we think we figured things out, the universe throws us a curveball. So, we have to improvise. The universe is funny like that. Sometimes it just has a way of making sure we wind up exactly where we belong.

When I first started playing flute, I probably looked like a pufferfish choking on a clump of wasabi, but that didn't matter. Blasting deep breaths into my flute, I blew voraciously as I tried to produce a B-flat; but all I could muster was a raspy whistle.

6 years later, I was filled with pride knowing that I had worked hard enough to be selected as the concert soloist for the Youth Orchestra of Bucks County. My moment had arrived; I stand center-stage and begin Chaminade's Concertino Op. 107. Recognizing the minor scales and arpeggios, my fingers glide through the measures with absolute certainty; and with each successive measure, my breathing, tone, and articulation seemed to increasingly synchronize. Before long, the piece came to an end. Holding the D-natural farmada as long I could, I let the note fade into submission and lowered my flute. Taking a bow, I reveled in the magnitude of my hard work.

As I grew older, it became evident that I would need orthodontics and jaw reduction surgeries. With my face full of rubber and metal, I couldn't form a tight enough valve to sustain notes. I was officially back to square one. The following months were brutal, I had to put away Tchaikovsky and go back to the basics; but my effort was genuine and I gradually regained my ability to play.

Today, I consider playing flute my greatest skill. Not because I can play complex scales or win competitions, but, instead, because through the horrors of braces, learning how to double-tongue, and impossibly fast measures, I never gave up. Playing flute had crafted in me the relentless determination which I've exhibited over the past 8 years. I may not know what curveballs life will pitch to me next, but I have confidence knowing I will persevere regardless of the circumstances.

  • Strong Hook: Use your best idea at the start to immediately make the reader interested. First impressions matter, and by having a compelling first paragraph, the tone of your essay is immediately better.
  • Specific in Naming Things: Say the names of groups, places, and other things whenever you can. Being specific whenever possible makes you seem more relatable and makes your essay more interesting.

UCLA Example Essay #7: Optimism Greatest Skill

Life can be an overwhelming obstacle course, but my ability to get over any bump with a smile on my face has been my greatest strength. Maintaining an optimistic outlook has introduced me to new opportunities, made me a better leader, and helped me get through everyday life. Although my determination to get back up was built by a couple scrapes and falls. I learned about the impact of a positive attitude on others through my experience on the tennis team.

The motivation and bond my team had because of the encouragement and support from our captains has influenced my approach to interacting with others. For instance, while working with my peers, I always praise them for the effort that they put in and patiently help them. When applying this to class projects and theater productions, I saw an improvement on our performance and our accomplishments felt more satisfying and meaningful. My positive attitude is also influential during my job at a convalescent home. As an activities assistant, my objective is to get residents to participate in activities and to make them fun.

At times, it’s difficult to convince residents that a macaroni necklace is worth getting out of bed for, but I am always that friendly face that cheers them on and picks them up. Knowing that my happiness is brightening someone else's day is extremely valuable and is the fuel to my enthusiasm.

Preserving my optimism is not always easy; however, my excitement for the future retains my drive to overcome any challenge. Every opportunity given to me is taken advantage of, and if something doesn't go as planned. I am confident another door will open. Even though I enjoy focusing on the bright side of life, I'm aware that some people feel like they cant overcome their challenges alone. I recognized that I can be a hand to help people up, someone to believe in them, and a friend to conquer obstacles with. Using this positive influence is the very reason why I am looking forward to a career in psychology.

  • Shows Impact of Your Skill: Whenever possible, try to show how your skill/talent has impacted others. Why is your skill important? And how will you use it going forward in life?
  • Uses Humor: Having small moments of natural humor, when appropriate, makes for a more enjoyable essay. Even a small remark like "it’s difficult to convince residents that a macaroni necklace is worth getting out of bed for" is powerful.
  • Recognizes Challenges: Nobody is perfect, and even with your greatest skill or talent there are likely still shortcomings. Recognizing your challenges is important to humanize yourself and shows self-awareness.

UCLA Example Essay #8: Significant Educational Opportunity

UC PIQ #4: Describe how you have taken advantage of a significant educational opportunity or worked to overcome an educational barrier you have faced. (350 words max)

I was going to University of Southern California for three weeks, and that was all I could think about as the school year came to a close. After finding out that I had been accepted into the Bovard Scholars program, along with one of my best friends, I could not wait for the upcoming summer. As July 16th neared, I became more and more anxious,as I did not know what to expect, but I was looking forward to this new opportunity.

The program had just been launched this year and 49 of around 500 applicants were accepted. Over the course of three weeks, the 48 other people from all over the country would be my new friends. During my time there, I would be assigned a coach who would help with the college process, whether it be working on the college application as a group or having one-on-one sessions to work on personal statements. Outside of working on college applications and essays, we had guest speakers from admissions offices, student panels where we could ask questions, career panels, and workplace visits. We also had many presentations on financial aid, fields of major, jobs, and interviews which, most of it, I did not know beforehand.

Along with all this help, we also dormed at one of the residence halls, which allowed us to experience what college life might be like. I was amazed by the diversity of people that were attending the program, and I was shocked to find out that my roommate from New York was Egyptian. We even had Resident Assistants who planned evening activities for us to further stimulate college life. However, they were not just our Resident Assistants; as we grew closer we were able to gather information from them about college.

As the program came to its end, I did not want it to stop. I had such an incredible experience and learned so much about college. I knew that the program will never truly end, though, as our coaches will continue to work with us until Spring when we are accepted into colleges.

  • Specific in Achievements: Being specific and saying "49 of around 500 applicants were accepted" creates credibility. It also helps admissions officers have context about your achievements and be able to infer how significant they really were.
  • Stronger First Sentence: Try starting your essay with ideas, rather than retelling events. Starting off with interesting ideas helps hook your reader, and you can later support those ideas with your experiences and achievements.
  • Focus on Meaning: Emphasize what your takeaways were from this educational opportunity or barrier. Admissions officers are looking for what you learned, how it affected others, and how you'll use those lessons moving forward.

UCLA Example Essay #9: Working at Health Clinic

I worked in a health clinic in the impoverished village of Amara in Sudan this summer, expecting to be assigned general administrative duties during my internship. However, those expectations were tossed out the window within the first week. I consider myself a pretty squeamish person, so the thought of blood oozing from any injury disgusts me in ways that I cannot describe in words. So naturally, I was shocked when I didn’t flinch or faint as I held the retractors of a ravaged knee during surgery. I can’t say that I confronted the daunting tasks I was given with complete confidence, but I learned from the experiences nonetheless. At times, I would question the challenging orders given to me by the faculty, but I later realized that it was due to the lack of qualified doctors and nurses at the village.

I observed eleven surgeries, ranging from liver disease to a gruesome foot infection. The clinic worked under severe pressure, as basic resources and equipment were scarce, which ended badly for some patients. There was one particular patient who did not survive a disastrous bus crash due to the unavailability of ambulances. He was laying on the floor in agonizing pain for a lingering six hours. As the viscous blood stained the white cloth that covered him when he was brought to the clinic, I felt a surge of sorrow, anger, and helplessness. It was difficult for me to come to grips with the reality that some things cannot be undone. The emotions I felt that day slowly faded, but never completely receded. I left this internship satisfied with the invaluable knowledge I obtained, but I still feel like I needed to do more. I live a relatively privileged life, and don’t have to spend each day worrying about a measly injury that could end my life. At the time, even though I thought I was worked too hard for a high school student, I now know I didn't do enough. I’m eager to return to the clinic soon, and have hopes of gaining more experience and knowledge.

  • Emphasizes the Impact: After talking about what opportunity you had or what barrier you overcame, focusing on the impact of that experience is what matters. Describing your emotions and lessons learned makes the significance of those events more clear.
  • Strong Hook: Focus on finding your best idea and using that as your first sentence. Often, starting off with a story or retelling what you did can come later and isn't as important.

UCLA Example Essay #10: Most Significant Challenge

UC PIQ #5: Describe the most significant challenge you have faced and the steps you have taken to overcome this challenge. How has this challenge affected your academic achievement? (350 words max)

Education has always been important in my household, but never paramount. We were always taught to put familial needs first—even before our own. My parents always emphasized the lesson that selfishness leads to bitterness and loneliness. That value is why six new members were added to my family when my father’s brother died two years ago. I did what was expected and shifted my focus from school to helping my kin.

I remember feeling a mosaic of emotions—apprehension, prudence, and displacement—as I greeted them at the airport. The five-hour-long ride back home was awkward and somber, and the complete silence said so much more than words could. We were all just afraid of what the future had in store for us. My step aunt, my two older cousins and the three younger ones were all compassionate, loving people. Yet, I couldn't seem to shed this foreboding feeling the first time we all entered our house. Every passing week made our financial situation more tenuous. So, my brother and I volunteered to help our dad at his small pharmaceutical wholesale business after he laid off two employees. We worked after school three days a week and would return home around 8:30.

That year of juggling school with my new obligations at home and my father’s business was emotionally and physically wrenching. However, I don't pity myself and I wouldn't go back to change anything because I learned so much about my character in that year. I realized that my parent’s belief in selflessness had shaped me into a more capable person because I was able to sacrifice time from socializing and classes to contribute, in some way, to my family. And even though I was concerned that I would hurt my academic performance, I stuck to my promises. That inexplicable sense of uneasiness I felt at the airport was caused by anxiety in anticipating the new demands that could potentially exhaust me. Thankfully, the challenges prepared me for the academic rigor for my junior year, my senior year, and hopefully, for university.

  • Vulnerable and Authentic: Talking about personal stories can be difficult, but often your vulnerable experiences have a lot of meaning. Being vulnerable also makes you more personable and relatable.
  • Explains Realizations: Rather than focusing on what happened, focus on the impact of it and why it's meaningful. How will these past experiences and academic challenges affect you going forward?
  • Stronger Conclusion: Try to connect your ending back to the beginning while expanding on it or connecting it to a universal idea. Alternatively, leave your conclusion more open ended.

UCLA Example Essay #11: Educational Challenge

Growing up, I tackled the challenge of school without much guidance from anyone other than my older sister, who is one grade higher. When I was at the young age of just five, my parents divorced and my sister and I were left with our dad, who we did not see often. Because our time with him was limited to driving us to school and home and dinner, we could not ask him for much help with homework or projects. Most of the time, we did the work ourselves or asked our uncle and aunt for help when they came on Saturdays. By the time we reached middle school, I was in more advanced classes, and although my dad had received an Associate’s Degree, he did not take advanced classes like I did, so he was unable to provide much help. My dad only took math up to geometry, and his English was not as fluent as mine, preventing him from providing much help.

Once I enrolled in high school, I was able to get help from teachers, programs, and even my sister. With this newfound help, I overcame the struggle of not knowing what to do in school and life, and I learned that help is always there, but I just needed to ask. Throughout my time in high school, I became more motivated than I was before to do the best I can and overcome anything that comes my way. I was able to do this with help from others, and I will continue to strive for greatness, overcoming any obstacles. Without the help of others, I would not have had the success that I have had in school. My good grades are a testament to the help that I have received in order for me to be where I am now. Although I can say that I have overcome this challenge, there is still one last hurdle, which is to graduate from high school, attend college, and apply everything I have learned to the real world.

  • Honesty: Authenticity is most important for your essays. By revealing personal details such as your family life and struggles, you can bring admissions officers into your world.
  • Sense of Gratitude: Showing a sense of appreciation and self-awareness makes you immediately more likeable. Nobody succeeds alone, so how did others in your life help you overcome difficulties?
  • Provide Clarification: Some parts could be given more context, such as "why is your dad not as fluent in English?". You could use this as an opportunity to talk about your cultural background and create a more clear picture of yourself for the reader.

UCLA Example Essay #12: Self-Improvement Challenge

The saying "you can be your own worst enemy" was the embodiment of the time I hit lowest point. Finishing my 22-hour days, I expected to lay down in bed close my eyes, and smile: thinking about all my accomplishments. Instead, I was sleep deprived, rapidly losing and gaining weight, and unhappy.

As a result, I stopped being able to focus and my grades began to fall. I lost motivation and the only reason I did anything was because of my obsession with completion. In this vulnerable state, I would tell myself I was useless and shy away from taking opportunities. I started to question if could get out of the hole I dug. Ironically, I have always been an optimist. I thought about the many things I wanted to do and I wouldn't be able to do any of them from a hospital bed.

Seeing the bright light ahead of me, I moved forward to a journey of self-improvement. First, I isolated myself from things that were affecting my happiness through finding a place where I could peacefully think about why I was enduring so much pain, regularly eat, and get some sleep. When I came back from my retreat, I continued my routine which improved my health and performance in school. The greatest outcome was my realization that I was compensating for my lack of self-esteem, I've been trying to get validation from my parents and peers by trying to be perfect, but when my friends left me and my parents didn't notice my efforts I overworked myself.

It was hard to stop searching for approval, yet the support of close friends and acknowledging that I'm doing everything I'm capable of, revealed to me what its like to love yourself. From then on, I determined my self worth, no one else. Now that I found my own drive and am confident, I don't have to beg for friends. struggle to maintain grades, skip meals, or lose sleep. Presently, I can say I am no longer my worst enemy: we're like friends that get closer every day.

  • Vulnerability: Showing your shortcomings and difficulties is important to reveal how you've grown and changed. Revealing your perspective and emotions also shows that you have self-awareness.
  • Provide More Explanation: Don't assume that the reader will remember everything about you. For essays like this, give more context. Answer questions that will come up in the reader's mind, like "Why did you have 22-hour days?".

UC PIQ #6: Think about an academic subject that inspires you. Describe how you have furthered this interest inside and/or outside of the classroom. (350 words max)

An academic subject that inspires me is Computer Science. Computers have fascinated me ever since a young age. I used my first computer when I was 4 years old- the Apple Macintosh Performa. I began learning about how computers worked in first grade, where I had my own Windows XP computer. I did not know what I was doing when I clicked through the thousands of files that made the computer run, but it was fascinating, and almost seemed like magic. I knew that a career with computers had to be in my future.

My fascination with computers took a new meaning in freshman year, when I decided to learn how to program. I did not know where to start, so I just typed in the search browser, "how to start programming". That day, I started with the Processing Language. It was a simple language to learn, but it built the foundation for my furthered interest in the computer programming aspect of Computer Science. After a couple months of using Processing, I learned HTML/CSS and JavaScript. These languages would allow me to program a wider range of applications. Soon enough, I became bilingual in the languages of computers. As time went on throughout my freshman and sophomore years I exposed myself to more languages like SQL, Batch Scripting, and in junior year, Java.

In my junior year I took AP Computer Science A, and finally after all the years of loving computers, I was able to take Computer Science as a class where I learned the Java language. I also furthered my interest in Computer Science by integrating it with the Engineering club on campus, using the Arduino and Raspberry Pi.

This year I am in Computer Integrated Manufacturing, where I can implement my knowledge of Computer Programming into Engineering, through the use of Corel Draw with the Laser Cutter Printer and AutoDesk Inventor and OpenGL C++ Code with the CAD 3-D Printing machine.

Computer Science has always been a part of my life inside and outside of the classroom, and I seek to continue pursuing it as my major.

  • Connects Interests to Extracurriculars: Showing how your activities relate to your passions reveals your motivations and what drives you. By connecting to extracurriculars, it also creates a more complete picture of your application.
  • Specific In Naming Things: Whenever you are able to, being specific is better than being vague. By naming programming languages and classes, the story becomes more compelling.
  • Explain Why These Things Interest You: What is the root aspect of your interests that intrigue you? Try explaining how you feel when doing these activities and what motivates you. Admissions officers want to know how these interests developed, and more importantly, why they developed.

UC PIQ #7: What have you done to make your school or your community a better place? (350 words max)

I am "Korean big toes", "a water panda in disguise", and "Mr. Sweatface" - these are the nicknames I happily accepted over the years. My life was a buoyant bubble, full of gratification, funny nicknames, and simple pleasures; but that changed when I was confronted with the inhumane conditions of the LGBT centers around my town.

Stepping into the stone-house building, a few things immediately caught my attention. The rooms were small, full of broken furniture, smelled of mold, and had poor lighting; moreover, there was no privacy and extremely limited resources. It was obvious that the facility didn't have the funds to sustain itself, let alone help anyone trying to assimilate back into society. My heart ached as I realized the advantages I had been taking for granted; the idealistic mirage of reality I previously held, was now replaced by an overwhelming truth: Life isn't fair. Everyone in that facility had been criminalized for their sexuality, and I was going to do something about it!

Over the next few weeks, I brainstormed ideas and eventually decided on creating a blog where I would share the stories of anyone who was willing to speak up for change. The clickety-clack of my keyboard filled the common rooms of LGBT centers around my city. I slowly-but-surely interviewed the residents of these homes, recording stories of inequality and discrimination. As I uploaded each story to my blog, I felt a sense of accomplishment knowing that I was breaking down barriers and fulfilling my passions. Furthermore, reading the comments flooding my inbox, I realized that although the LGBT centers in my area still remain underfunded, I had made an impact on individuals through my blog and did something for a community I genuinely cared about. It was more than I could have ever hoped for.

In my quest to create change, I forged a new nickname for myself -- "advocate"; except, unlike the titles I was bestowed as a kid, this nickname represented my creativity, ingenuity, and passion, and for those reasons, it is more precious than anyone will ever know.

  • Vivid Descriptions: Painting a picture can make your stories immediately more interesting. By using descriptive language and word choice, your stories have more life to them.
  • Conclusion That Connects to Beginning: Try connecting your ending back to the beginning, but with a new perspective or take. By bringing your essay full circle, it creates a sense of cohesiveness.
  • Name Things Specifically: Rather than being general and saying "LGBT centers", the author could name one specifically. Since not everyone may be faimilar with the concept of "LGBT centers", it helps make your essay more concrete and easier to interpret.

UCLA Example Essay #15: Empowering Others Through Peer Tutoring

I never thought that I would tutor other people after school, but that was what I did my junior year and now in my senior year. During my freshman and sophomore years, I was the one being tutored by upperclassmen who had taken my classes before. Receiving help from others inspired me to become a tutor my junior year so I could give back and share the opportunity that I had. At first, I was not sure if I would be up to the task, as I did not feel confident in my teaching abilities in various subjects. As time went on, however, I became at ease and comfortable tutoring anyone the more I tutored along with my peers.

Every day from Monday through Thursday, I went to library as much as I could to help tutor with others from 3 to 4 o’clock, and it slowly became a part of my daily schedule. To begin with, I was not the greatest teacher, but as I helped more and more, I gradually became better at it due to teaching the same concepts repeatedly. Not only was I helping the person I was tutoring understand the subject, but I also was becoming better at the subject by teaching it. Teaching a subject allowed me to relearn concepts and ideas that I had forgotten, as well as studying for a subject if I was tutoring a classmate.

Motivated by wanting to help other students, I was able to be at tutoring most days, and this led to me receiving a tutoring award at my school’s California Scholarship Federation banquet at the end of the year. It was a surprise to me as I was not expecting to be honored. To me, the best award was the satisfaction of helping others understand how to do homework questions and them being grateful for the help. Although this year tutoring is not being held in the library yet, I joined another club that tutors after school for the time being so I can continue helping others and spread my knowledge.

  • Shows Their Realizations: Realizations and new understanding are how people change. That's why its important to look for what lessons you learned, and what you took away from your activities.
  • Explain Why: Try to predict what questions will arise in the reader's mind, and answer those questions. For this essay, one question that is unanswered is "Why did you never think you would tutor other people?".

UC PIQ #8: Beyond what has already been shared in your application, what do you believe makes you stand out as a strong candidate for admissions to the University of California? (350 words max)

This was the night. Clenching my fists, I called my dad over. Maybe it was the adrenaline coursing through my veins or maybe just suspense, but time seemed to freeze as anxiety washed over my consciousness. A million doubts flooded my mind as I dreaded what would come next. The pitter-patter of his feet hitting the tile floor brought me back to reality. My dad had always loved and supported me, I just had to trust that things would be alright.

In a quivering voice, my hands shaking, I explained to my dad that I was gay. After a brief moment of silence, my dad said ten words that completely changed my life: "I raised you completely wrong, get out of my house". I was devastated, but I wasn't surprised. This was the same person physically forced pork down my throat when I told him I wanted to become a vegetarian; who would hit me and my mom if either of us voiced dissenting opinions; and the same person who would come home drunk and threaten to kill us. With tears running down my cheeks, I packed my belongings and drove my 98' Nissan Pathfinder away from my home. From that night on I learned to be brave, to follow my dreams, and to fight for what I believe in.

The next few years were tough. In my community, being gay was unacceptable and embracing my identity meant enduring the consequences. I will never forget being dragged into a storage room and choked or hiding the bruises I got from being pelted by textbooks. But looking back, I realize that the lessons I learned drove me towards success. They inspired me to be relentless and graduate early, to surpass expectations by doing college-credit classes, and remain strong in the face of oppression and adversity. Moving forward, as I look to broaden my education horizons, I know that I have the emotional vitality to success wherever I go. So I want to dedicate this essay to my dad and to everyone who made me strong, thank you.

  • Honest and Vulnerable: Talking about personal stories can be impactful. Often the most difficult stories are the ones that need to be shared.
  • Explains Your Perspective and Emotions: Sharing how you felt in a certain moment can allow the reader to "be in your shoes." By telling your perspective, you allow admissions officers to better understand your experience.
  • Focus On Takeaways: Although stories are important, what matters more is the lessons and takeaways from those stories. The majority of your essay should be focused on those ideas, with a smaller portion where you talk about what actually happened.

UCLA Example Essay #17: Fostering Inclusive Leadership

All around us, the world is dominated by big voices, people who can present themselves positively and effectively elaborate on their opinions. Many of our most successful politicians carve their paths to the top through their charisma and articulate language. Unfortunately, while many of them possess a strong voice, many of them don’t possess that same strength in listening. While their job is to represent the people, there is a large disconnect between their perspective and the perspectives of their citizens. Even in Congress, civilized debate has transformed into a shouting battle, where both parties attempt to push their ideas, but neither side is willing to listen.

In contrast, a leader with an open ear, an open mind, and an open heart is exactly what I bring to the table. I believe that everyone has a unique story to share. From the most flamboyant billionaires to the people living on the streets, every single person possesses their own unique set of skills, perspective, and knowledge that can be useful to learn from. Because of this, I make it my priority to listen to and understand the human behind each team member I work with. In recognizing each person’s strengths and weaknesses, I’m able to build a positive environment in which every person is able to reach their maximum potential.

For example, when it comes to group projects, I always make sure to know the personalities of those I’m working with and create a transparent and inclusive environment that is conducive to productivity. Rather than dishing out assignments and deadlines, I make sure everyone is able to contribute in a way that matches their strengths and skills. Furthermore, by creating such a transparent atmosphere, group members are able to understand each other’s situations and help each other out like an actual team, allowing everyone to be both productive and pleased.

With all the divisiveness that is taking place in the country today, it is more necessary than ever to have open-minded leaders such as myself to help bring this campus and this nation together.

  • Strong Hook Sentence: Using a thought-provoking idea to start your sentence immediately draws the reader in. By having a unique take on the world, people want to read more and are interested by your thoughts.
  • Using Examples to Explain: For abstract ideas and concepts, try using a real life example to make things more clear. Capture the essence of your ideas and find what is at the core of them.

Stepping foot in public has been like opening a floodgate to questions and comments about the one thing that I've been looked down upon my entire life for - my height. Standing out because I was 4'9" wasn't something I was proud of; I was picked last for sports, not taken seriously, and often used as a human arm rest. My mom warned me life was going to be hard if I didn't drink my milk. However, people aren't aware that my appearance is a deception and what makes me extraordinary is that I've outgrown myself. People should be asking me how a person so "big" can fit into a girl so tiny. I have a huge personality, dreams, goals, and a plethora of talent. My achievements earned me such a high standing that I do know what the weather is like up there, yet, my head is never in the clouds because my distance from the ground makes me down to earth.

My only oddity is that my anatomy has grown out of proportion. It's hard to believe that with such short arms, I can extend them long enough to touch hearts with my art and performances. I have been devoted to helping people and educating myself ever since I was young, but who knew that my brain and heart would become so gigantic? Despite my how big my brain is, I keep my head as small as my body because I value letting others know that I'll never overlook them.

Although I haven't hit as many significant growth spurts as the average person. I grow with ambition every day, considering every moment a step closer to success. Being able to pursue my passions at a university will allow me to continue maturing into a person who will one day be looked up to by many. The reader of my response cannot see the facade that has been the subject of many peoples first impressions of me. instead, they will observe that even though I can't reach the top shelf, I can still reach my goals in life.

  • Using Metaphors: Explaining something ordinary (like being short) in an unusual or not-so-common way can show your unique take on it. By using metaphors, you can connect seemingly unrelated ideas together.

What can you learn from these UCLA essays?

These UC essays are not perfect—nor should they be—but each has interesting ideas and a unique perspective.

Compared to some private university essays , UC essays are relatively straightforward.

So focus on making each UC essay express one interesting idea as your answer.

Here's my top 4 lessons for UCLA essays:

  • Avoid too much storytelling and descriptions. You only have 350 words, so focus on ideas.
  • Answer every part of the prompt, clearly. Avoid implying your answer. Make sure your idea is crystal clear and relevant.
  • Showcase a different aspect of yourself with each essay. Avoid re-using topics, unless you're taking a very different angle.
  • Show your thinking. As with all successful essays, your thinking is most important.

Also applying to UC Berkeley?

I've collected additional essays from admitted Cal students that are completely unique from these UCLA essays.

If you're interested, check out these our essays that worked for UC Berkeley .

Which UCLA essay that worked was your favorite? Let me know!

Ryan Chiang , Founder of EssaysThatWorked.com

Want to read more amazing essays that worked for top schools?

Hey! 👋 I'm Ryan Chiang, the founder of Essays That Worked.

Get our 5-minute free newsletter packed with essay tips and college admissions resources, backed by real-life examples from admitted students at top-20 schools.

Meet the Author

Ryan Chiang

I'm Ryan Chiang and I created EssaysThatWorked.com - a website dedicated to helping students and their families apply to college with confident. We publish the best college admissions essays from successful applicants every year to inspire and teach future students.

You might also like:

18 UC Berkeley Essay Examples that Worked (2024)

18 UC Berkeley Essay Examples that Worked (2024)

18 UC San Diego EssaysThatWorked

18 UC San Diego EssaysThatWorked

18 UC Santa Barbara EssaysThatWorked

18 UC Santa Barbara EssaysThatWorked

12 Best Stanford Supplemental Essays That Worked 2024

12 Best Stanford Supplemental Essays That Worked 2024

23 College Essay Tips to Stand Out

What do outstanding essays have in common? Here are our 23 most effective strategies based on lessons from admitted students.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

By signing up you agree to Terms and Privacy Policy

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Now available for August 2024 ...

The College Essay Workshop

Join my on-demand step-by-step course for crafting outstanding college admissions essays, plus 1-on-1 help.

Here's everything needed to write essays worthy of Top-20 colleges.

Google Rating

Join our students who have earned acceptances to schools like...

See exactly how students wrote admitted essays for top schools.

Our 231 essay examples show you how ordinary students wrote outstanding essays that helped their applications - all in their own words.

These aren’t just essay examples - but real acceptance stories, from real students who share their most intimate details with you - down to their real essays and exact profiel stats.

How do I find a unique topic? How do I write a great essay? And how do I stand out?

Our 231 essay examples break down these exact questions. Every type of essay prompt, student, and school.

You’ll realize these students are just like you - and that, deep down, you can do it too.

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Princeton Admitted Essay

People love to ask why. Why do you wear a turban? Why do you have long hair? Why are you playing a guitar with only 3 strings and watching TV at 3 A.M.—where did you get that cat? Why won’t you go back to your country, you terrorist? My answer is... uncomfortable. Many truths of the world are uncomfortable...

ucla 2021 essay prompts

MIT Admitted Essay

Her baking is not confined to an amalgamation of sugar, butter, and flour. It's an outstretched hand, an open invitation, a makeshift bridge thrown across the divides of age and culture. Thanks to Buni, the reason I bake has evolved. What started as stress relief is now a lifeline to my heritage, a language that allows me to communicate with my family in ways my tongue cannot. By rolling dough for saratele and crushing walnuts for cornulete, my baking speaks more fluently to my Romanian heritage than my broken Romanian ever could....

ucla 2021 essay prompts

UPenn Admitted Essay

A cow gave birth and I watched. Staring from the window of our stopped car, I experienced two beginnings that day: the small bovine life and my future. Both emerged when I was only 10 years old and cruising along the twisting roads of rural Maryland...

Over 200 more admitted essays like these...

Learn the secrets behind outstanding application essays.

College essays are confusing. And it's not your fault. You're not taught how to write them in school.

How should I structure my essay? Can I use humor? What makes a truly great essay?

There's so much conflicting advice out there.

And with people selling "magic formulas" and "structures" to follow... it's easy to be led astray.

You’ll get access to courses, live events, a dedicated essay coach, and countless resources to help you write your best essays.

You finally have a place where you can ask these questions, get advice, and see exactly how admitted students before you did it.

You’re no longer figuring out everything on your own. You're no longer stuck wondering.

Everything you get

231 essays analyzed

Explore our database of 200+ admitted essays from top-20 colleges. Filter by prompt, school, topic, word count, and more. Get expert insights into why they worked and what you can learn from them.

Exclusive access to essay editing

You'll get access to our essay editing services, which is only offered for members. You can get your essays reviewed personally by me (Ryan). I'll give you detailed feedback on how to improve your essays and make them stand out.

Dedicated essay coach & support

You'll get access to our private community, where you can ask questions and get help from me directly. I'll be there to answer your questions and provide unlimited personalized advice.

44 in-depth video lessons

Learn the secrets behind outstanding essays. We break down the entire process, from brainstorming to writing and editing. You'll learn how to write amazing college essays for any prompt, with step-by-step guides and actionable tips.

26 downloadable guides

Get our best tips and tricks in easy-to-read guides. Learn what makes great essays, how to brainstorm your best topics, and how to write specific parts like a powerful hook and memorable ending.

Tons of bonuses

Get the Ultimate College Application Planner, my 154-Point Essay Checklist, and more. You'll also get a free copy of my eBooks, including 23 College Essay Tips to Stand Out and more.

Don't take our word for it

Some names have been changed to protect the privacy of our students and parents.

" Ryan, I want to express our great appreciation to you for your help on George's application essays. You have provided invaluable resources! P.S. I will certainly recommend you to our friends. "

ucla 2021 essay prompts

" Ryan—David got into The University of Michigan!!! Only 4 kids got in out of 200 that applied at his school!!! Thank you so so much for everything "

ucla 2021 essay prompts

" Thank you for the incredible help Ryan - both Hannah and I have said repeatedly that we could not have done it without you! "

ucla 2021 essay prompts

" Thank you for your help with my essays back in November, including my Yale supplements. Just wanted to let you know I ended up getting into and committing to Yale! "

ucla 2021 essay prompts

" I feel so much more reassured to press the submit button now. I wish I knew about your site sooner! "

ucla 2021 essay prompts

" ... Invaluable to me during the college admissions process! It gave me a different perspective to look at my essays. "

ucla 2021 essay prompts

" Initially I was skeptical about my essay's idea and whether it was properly reflected in my writing. This gave me a clear direction! "

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Don't miss out on writing your best college essays.

© 2018- 2024 Essays That Worked . All rights reserved.

Registration on or use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy .

We have no affiliation with any university or colleges on this site. All product names, logos, and brands are the property of their respective owners.

  • [email protected]
  • (650) 338-8226

Cupertino, CA

AdmissionSight Logo

  • Our Philosophy
  • Our Results
  • News, Media, and Press
  • Common Application
  • College Application Essay Editing
  • Extracurricular Planning
  • Academic Guidance
  • Summer Programs
  • Interview Preparation

Middle School

  • Pre-High School Consultation
  • Boarding School Admissions

College Admissions

  • Academic and Extracurricular Profile Evaluation
  • Senior Editor College Application Program
  • Summer Program Applications
  • Private Consulting Program
  • Transfer Admissions
  • UC Transfer Admissions
  • Ivy League Transfer Admissions

Graduate Admissions

  • Graduate School Admissions
  • MBA Admissions

Private Tutoring

  • SAT/ACT Tutoring
  • AP Exam Tutoring
  • Olympiad Training

Research Programs

  • Science Research Program
  • Humanities Competitions
  • Passion Project Program
  • Ad Hoc Consulting
  • Athletic Recruitment
  • National Universities Rankings
  • Liberal Arts Colleges Rankings
  • Public Schools Rankings

Acceptance Rates

  • University Acceptance Rates
  • Transfer Acceptance Rates
  • Supplemental Essays
  • College Admissions Data
  • Chances Calculator
  • GPA Calculator

National Universities

  • College Acceptance Rates
  • College Overall Acceptance Rates
  • College Regular Acceptance Rates
  • College Early Acceptance Rates
  • Ivy League Acceptance Rates
  • Ivy League Overall Acceptance Rates
  • Ivy League Regular Acceptance Rates
  • Ivy League Early Acceptance Rates

Public Schools

  • Public Schools Acceptance Rates
  • Public Schools Overall Acceptance Rates
  • Public Schools Regular Acceptance Rates
  • Public Schools Early Acceptance Rates

Liberal Arts

  • Liberal Arts Colleges Acceptance Rates
  • Liberal Arts Colleges Overall Acceptance Rates
  • Liberal Arts Colleges Regular Acceptance Rates
  • Liberal Arts Colleges Early Acceptance Rates

AdmissionSight Logo

UCLA Essay Prompts 2023-2024

ucla 2021 essay prompts

By Eric Eng

View of UCLA signage

Welcome to UCLA, one of the world’s top universities. As you start your college application journey, pay attention to a crucial part that can make you stand out: the essays for the 2023-2024 admissions cycle at UCLA. These essays go beyond being a formality; they’re a platform for telling your personal story and showcasing what makes you special in UCLA’s lively community.

This guide is all about UCLA essays 2023-2024. We’ll walk you through everything from understanding how important these essays are in your application to sharing the best strategies to approach them. We want to give you all the tools you need.

Whether you’re great at writing or just getting started, we’re here to help you write essays that connect with the admissions committee and get you closer to joining UCLA . Let’s start this chapter of your academic journey with confidence and excitement.

Does UCLA Accept the Common App?

To apply to UCLA, you need to use the UC Apply system. UCLA doesn’t use the Common App . Instead, they have their own system. You have to fill out your application on the UC Admissions website .

All the University of California (UC) schools use this same system. Make sure you finish your application by the deadline. You can start applying on UC Admissions from August 1st and you have until November 30th to submit everything.

UCLA at night

How Many Essays Does UCLA Have?

For the 2023-2024 admission cycles, UCLA, like other universities in the University of California (UC) system, requires applicants to respond to Personal Insight Questions (PIQs) . These are not traditional essays in the sense that many other universities require, but they are critical components of the application process. Here’s a detailed breakdown:

Number of Personal Insight Questions (PIQs): UCLA asks applicants to answer four out of eight available PIQs. Each response is limited to a maximum of 350 words. These questions are designed to provide the admissions committee with a more holistic view of the applicant beyond academic metrics. The topics range from asking about leadership experience, creativity, overcoming challenges, to educational opportunities or barriers faced.

Nature of the PIQs: Unlike traditional essays that might ask for a comprehensive narrative, UCLA’s PIQs are more focused and specific. Each question targets a particular aspect of the applicant’s personality, experiences, or ambitions. This format allows applicants to showcase different facets of their character and life experiences, providing a rounded picture of who they are.

Flexibility and Choice: The choice of which four questions to answer gives applicants the flexibility to highlight the areas where they feel strongest or most passionate. This choice is strategic for applicants, as it allows them to tailor their application to showcase their strengths, experiences, and qualities that align with UCLA’s values and the program they are applying to.

Overall, for the UCLA Essays 2023-2024 admissions cycles, applicants are required to answer four PIQs from a set of eight. These questions are designed to elicit responses that reveal the applicant’s character, experiences, and potential fit with UCLA. The format and nature of these PIQs differ from traditional essays, providing a unique opportunity for applicants to present a multifaceted view of themselves to the admissions committee.

What are the UCLA Essay Prompts 2023-2024?

If you’re applying to UCLA or any University of California school, you’ll have to write answers to four personal insight questions. Each one should be 350 words long, and you can pick which ones you want to answer from a list of eight options.

Describe an example of your leadership experience in which you have positively influenced others, helped resolve disputes, or contributed to group efforts over time.

Every person has a creative side, and it can be expressed in many ways: problem-solving, original and innovative thinking, and artistically, to name a few. Describe how you express your creative side.

What would you say is your greatest talent or skill? How have you developed and demonstrated that talent over time?

Describe how you have taken advantage of a significant educational opportunity or worked to overcome an educational barrier you have faced.

Describe the most significant challenge you have faced and the steps you have taken to overcome this challenge. How has this challenge affected your academic achievement?

Think about an academic subject that inspires you. Describe how you have furthered this interest inside and/or outside of the classroom.

What have you done to make your school or your community a better place?

Beyond what has already been shared in your application, what do you believe makes you stand out as a strong candidate for admission to the University of California?

Student writing college or university application.

How to Write the UCLA Essays 2023-2024

Ucla essay prompt #1.

When tackling the first prompt about leadership, your essay should be a narrative that not only describes a specific instance where you were a leader but also delves into the nuances of what leadership means to you. Begin by setting the scene: Where and when did this leadership experience occur? Who was involved? What was at stake? Then, move into the heart of the story: your actions, decisions, and leadership style. Did you lead by example, or by motivating others? How did you navigate any conflicts or challenges? It’s essential to provide specific examples and details to paint a vivid picture.

Reflect on the outcomes. How were others influenced or impacted by your leadership? What was the end result of your involvement? Leadership often involves learning from both successes and failures, so don’t shy away from discussing what you might have done differently. Finally, connect this experience to your personal growth. How has it shaped you as a person and a leader? How will these skills and insights be applied in your future endeavors, particularly at a university like UCLA?

1. Identify a Specific Leadership Experience: Encourage students to think of a specific instance where they showcased leadership. This could be a formal role like a team captain or student body president, or an informal situation where they stepped up to lead in a group project, community service, or a challenging family circumstance. The focus should be on a situation that demonstrates their ability to lead and make a positive impact. It’s important to describe the setting, the challenges faced, and the roles they and others played.

2. Highlight Positive Influence and Conflict Resolution: The prompt specifically asks how the student has influenced others positively and resolved disputes. They should reflect on how their actions and decisions led to positive outcomes. Did they mentor someone, foster teamwork, or encourage collaboration? How did they handle disagreements or differing opinions within the group? They should provide examples of specific actions they took to resolve conflicts and the outcomes of those actions.

3. Emphasize Personal Growth and Learning: UCLA is interested in how these experiences have shaped the student. They should discuss what they learned about themselves as a leader and a team player. How did the experience enhance their communication, problem-solving, or decision-making skills? What insights did they gain about working with diverse groups or handling responsibility? This reflection demonstrates maturity and self-awareness, qualities that are highly valued in a university setting.

4. Illustrate Contribution Over Time: The prompt mentions “over time,” indicating an interest in sustained effort and commitment. Students should illustrate how their leadership wasn’t a one-off event but a continuous journey. How did they grow and evolve in their role? Did they initiate any long-term changes or leave a lasting impact? This could include ongoing mentorship, lasting improvements to a club or organization, or a significant project that continued even after their direct involvement ended.

UCLA Essay Prompt #2

This prompt seeks to explore the breadth and depth of your creativity. Your response should offer a window into how you see and interact with the world creatively. Begin by defining what creativity means to you. Is it finding innovative solutions to problems, expressing yourself artistically, or thinking outside the box? Provide specific examples of how you’ve demonstrated your creativity. This could be through artwork, a unique approach to a school project, a hobby, or even day-to-day problem-solving.

Delve into the impact of your creative endeavors. How have they affected you and others around you? Perhaps your creativity has led to a community project, a personal achievement, or has simply been a means for self-expression and stress relief. Reflect on the role creativity plays in your life. How does it shape your perspective on the world? How do you envision applying your creativity in a university setting?

1. Identifying Personal Expressions of Creativity: Students should start by reflecting on moments where they felt most creative. This could involve instances of problem-solving, innovative thinking, or artistic endeavors. They should think broadly – creativity isn’t limited to traditional arts. It could be an innovative solution in a science project, a unique approach in a debate, or even creativity in everyday life, like cooking or organizing events. The idea is to pinpoint experiences that genuinely reflect their creative thinking and actions.

2. Contextualizing Creative Moments: Once a creative instance is identified, students should delve into the context. What was the situation or challenge? What motivated them to think or act creatively? This context is crucial as it demonstrates the student’s ability to recognize opportunities for creativity and their willingness to engage with them. This background story helps to paint a picture of the student’s creative mindset in action.

3. Reflecting on the Impact and Learning: The next step is to reflect on the outcome. How did their creative approach make a difference? What was the impact, whether on themselves, others, or a broader context? Students should also explore what they learned from this experience. Did it change how they approach problems or think about the world? This reflection shows self-awareness and the ability to grow from experiences.

4. Connecting Creativity to Future Goals and UCLA: Finally, students should connect their creative side to their future aspirations and how it aligns with what UCLA offers. How does their creativity play into their academic interests or career goals? How do they see themselves continuing to develop this creativity at UCLA? This connection demonstrates forward-thinking and an understanding of how their unique traits would fit into and benefit from the UCLA community.

applying in schools

UCLA Essay Prompt #3

In responding to this prompt, select a talent or skill that you feel genuinely passionate about and that has played a significant role in your personal development. Begin by explaining what this talent or skill is, and why it is important to you. Is it something you’ve always had a natural affinity for, or did you develop it over time? Describe the journey of developing this talent or skill. This could include formal training, self-teaching, challenges you’ve faced, and milestones you’ve achieved.

Share specific instances where you have demonstrated this talent or skill, particularly those that had significant outcomes or impacts. How have you used this talent or skill in a way that’s meaningful to you or to others? Reflect on how this talent or skill has shaped your character, your outlook on life, and your future aspirations. How do you see this talent or skill playing a role in your life at UCLA and beyond?

1. Identifying the Talent or Skill: Encourage students to reflect deeply on what they genuinely feel is their greatest talent or skill. This doesn’t necessarily have to be an academic or conventional skill like mathematics or playing a musical instrument. It could be something unique to them, such as resilience, empathy, leadership, or creative problem-solving. The key is authenticity—choosing a talent that resonates personally and is a significant part of their identity.

2. Narrative of Development: Once the talent or skill is identified, students should recount how they discovered and developed it. This narrative can include early signs of the talent, key moments of realization, and the journey of honing it. For example, if a student identifies empathy as their greatest skill, they could describe instances in their life that helped them realize and cultivate this quality, such as volunteering experiences, personal relationships, or challenges they’ve overcome.

3. Demonstrating the Talent or Skill: The next step is to illustrate how this talent or skill has been put into practice. This demonstration can be through specific examples, like leadership roles, projects, competitions, community service, or personal initiatives. It’s important to show not just participation in activities, but how their unique skill made a tangible difference or contributed to their growth or the growth of others.

4. Reflection and Impact: Finally, students should reflect on the impact of this talent or skill on their life and potentially on the lives of others. They should consider how it has shaped their perspective, contributed to their goals, and how it aligns with their future aspirations, including their potential contribution to the UCLA community. This reflection should also include how they plan to further develop this talent in college and beyond.

UCLA Essay Prompt #4

This prompt is about showcasing your ability to handle challenges in your educational journey or how you’ve leveraged opportunities. Start by clearly identifying the opportunity or barrier. Was it an advanced course, a unique educational program, or a personal or financial obstacle that impacted your education? Describe your initial reactions and how you approached the situation. What steps did you take to make the most of the opportunity or to overcome the barrier? This could include seeking help, self-study, perseverance, or creative problem-solving.

Discuss the outcome of your efforts. What did you achieve or learn from the experience? How did it change your perspective on education and your own abilities? Reflect on the skills you developed, such as resilience, time management, or a deeper understanding of a subject. Finally, connect this experience to your future at UCLA. How has it prepared you for college-level work and the challenges of higher education?

1. Identify the Opportunity or Barrier: Begin by specifically identifying either the educational opportunity you took advantage of or the barrier you faced. This could be a special program, a challenging course, lack of resources, personal circumstances, etc. Elaborate on the context and significance of this situation in your life. For example, if you took a challenging AP course, explain why it was important for you, perhaps it was your first exposure to a subject you’re now passionate about, or it was a subject you initially struggled with but wanted to conquer.

2. Personal Growth and Development: Discuss how engaging with this opportunity or barrier contributed to your personal growth. Did it change your perspective on learning, influence your academic interests, or develop specific skills like resilience, problem-solving, or time management? Illustrate this with specific examples, such as how mastering a difficult concept in a course led you to a deeper understanding and appreciation of the subject or how overcoming limited access to resources taught you resourcefulness and creativity.

3. Action and Initiative: Highlight the actions you took in relation to this opportunity or barrier. If it’s an opportunity, explain how you went above and beyond to maximize it. Did you seek additional resources, collaborate with peers, or take on extra projects? If it’s a barrier, describe the steps you took to overcome it. This might include seeking help, developing a strategic study plan, or balancing schoolwork with other responsibilities. The focus should be on demonstrating your proactive approach and determination.

4. Impact and Reflection: Reflect on the impact of this experience on your academic journey and future goals. How has this experience shaped your outlook toward education or influenced your career aspirations? Perhaps it led to a newfound interest in a field of study, a desire to help others facing similar barriers, or a commitment to lifelong learning. This part of the essay should tie your experiences back to your aspirations and the kind of student you will be at UCLA.

Apply college.

UCLA Essay Prompt #5

In addressing this prompt, choose a challenge that had a profound impact on your life, particularly on your academic journey. Start by describing the challenge in detail. Was it a personal, social, financial, or academic challenge? Explain how this challenge affected you, especially in your academic pursuits. It’s important to be open and honest, as this adds authenticity to your narrative.

Detail the steps you took to overcome this challenge. This can include seeking support, developing new strategies, or pushing yourself beyond your comfort zone. Discuss the results of your efforts. Did you overcome the challenge entirely, or did you learn to manage it effectively? Reflect on what this challenge taught you about yourself and your approach to obstacles. How has it influenced your academic performance and perspective on learning? Conclude by explaining how this experience has prepared you for future challenges, particularly in a university setting like UCLA.

1. Identify a Meaningful Challenge: The student should choose a challenge that has genuinely impacted their life. This could be a personal hurdle (like a family issue or health challenge), an academic obstacle (such as struggling with a specific subject or project), or a social difficulty (like dealing with bullying or cultural adaptation). It’s important that the challenge is significant enough to have a real impact on their life and learning experience. The key here is authenticity; the challenge should be real and personal, not something chosen just because it sounds impressive.

2. Describe the Steps to Overcome the Challenge: This part requires detailing the specific actions taken to address the challenge. Did the student seek help from teachers, counselors, or mentors? Did they develop new study habits, engage in self-reflection, or take practical steps to improve their situation? This section should demonstrate problem-solving skills, resilience, and the ability to seek and utilize resources effectively. It’s crucial to show a proactive approach rather than a passive one.

3. Reflect on Personal Growth: The student should explain how overcoming the challenge contributed to their personal development. This could include gaining new perspectives, developing empathy, improving time management, or becoming more resilient. The focus should be on how the experience shaped them rather than just the achievement of overcoming the challenge. It’s about the journey and the lessons learned, not just the destination.

4. Link to Academic Achievement: Finally, the student needs to connect this experience to their academic life. How has overcoming this challenge affected their approach to learning? Did it lead to better study habits, a greater appreciation for education, or a specific academic interest? This part should tie the personal experience back to the academic context, showing how personal growth has translated into academic success or motivation.

UCLA Essay Prompt #6

Prompt #6 asks you to delve into an academic subject that excites you and how you have engaged with it. Begin by identifying the subject and explaining why it inspires you. Is it the complexity of the subject, its relevance to real-world issues, or the way it challenges you intellectually? Describe how you have pursued this interest both in and out of the classroom. This can include classes you’ve taken, books you’ve read, projects you’ve undertaken, or extracurricular activities related to the subject.

Provide specific examples of your engagement with the subject. Perhaps you conducted a research project, participated in a related competition, or started a club at school. Reflect on what these experiences have taught you and how they have deepened your understanding of the subject. Finally, discuss how this passion for the subject aligns with your future academic and career goals. How do you plan to continue exploring this interest at UCLA and beyond?

1. Identify Your Passionate Subject and Explain Why It Inspires You: Begin by pinpointing the specific academic subject that truly excites you. This could be anything from Mathematics to Literature, from Environmental Science to Political Science. Once identified, delve deeply into why this subject inspires you. Is it the challenges it presents, the real-world applications, or the way it shapes your thinking? Explain how this subject aligns with your personal values, interests, or long-term goals. This part of the essay should establish a personal connection between you and the subject, making it clear why it stands out among others.

2. Detail Your Academic Endeavors in This Subject: After establishing your passion for the subject, focus on how you have pursued this interest academically. This could include specific courses you’ve excelled in, projects or research you’ve undertaken, or exceptional achievements in this field. Highlight any unique learning experiences or challenges you’ve overcome. It’s essential to show not just your involvement but also your growth and development in this area. This demonstrates your commitment and ability to thrive in academic settings.

3. Explain Extracurricular Pursuits Related to the Subject: Expanding beyond the classroom, discuss how you have furthered this interest through extracurricular activities. This might include clubs, competitions, volunteering, internships, or personal projects related to the subject. For instance, if you’re inspired by Environmental Science, you might talk about your participation in a local environmental cleanup initiative or a sustainable gardening project you started. These activities should highlight your proactive approach and dedication to exploring your subject in diverse contexts.

4. Reflect on the Impact and Future Implications: Lastly, reflect on the impact this subject has had on your personal and intellectual growth. How has it shaped your worldview or influenced your future aspirations? Discuss how you plan to continue pursuing this interest at UCLA and beyond. This could involve specific programs at UCLA you wish to join, career paths you aim to explore, or societal contributions you hope to make through your chosen field. This reflection not only demonstrates self-awareness but also aligns your personal journey with the opportunities available at UCLA, showing a clear vision for your future.

male college student with a backpack and headphones ready for school

UCLA Essay Prompt #7

This prompt is an opportunity to demonstrate your sense of social responsibility and community involvement. Start by describing what you did to improve your school or community. Was it a specific project, a long-term commitment, or a leadership role? Explain your motivation behind this effort. What inspired you to take action, and what were your goals?

Detail the steps you took and any challenges you faced. How did you plan and execute your ideas? What obstacles did you encounter, and how did you overcome them? Discuss the impact of your contribution. How did it benefit your school or community? Reflect on what this experience taught you about community, leadership, and collaboration. Conclude by discussing how this experience has shaped your perspective on community involvement and how you plan to continue contributing at UCLA.

1. Identify a Specific Initiative or Contribution: Encourage students to think about a specific project, activity, or effort where they played a significant role in making a positive change in their school or community. This could be anything from organizing a community clean-up, leading a fundraising event, starting a new club at school, to tutoring underprivileged students. The key is to focus on an activity where their direct involvement brought about a noticeable change or improvement.

2. Demonstrate Leadership and Initiative: Admissions officers are often impressed by students who show leadership qualities and the ability to take initiative. Students should detail how they identified a need or opportunity, took the lead in addressing it, and motivated others to join in. This might involve planning, organizing, decision-making, and problem-solving skills. For instance, if they started a recycling program at their school, they should describe how they developed the idea, organized a team, and implemented the program.

3. Reflect on Personal Growth: A compelling response to this prompt will also include a reflection on how this experience contributed to the student’s personal development. Did they learn new skills, overcome challenges, or gain a deeper understanding of themselves and their community? For example, a student who tutored others might discuss how this experience improved their communication skills and deepened their empathy and understanding of diverse learning needs.

4. Assess the Impact: Finally, students should assess and articulate the impact of their actions. This doesn’t necessarily have to be a large-scale impact; even small, meaningful changes can be significant. They should consider how their actions affected their school or community, what was different because of their efforts, and any feedback or results they observed. For example, if they organized a charity event, they could mention the amount of funds raised and how these funds were used to benefit a cause.

UCLA Essay Prompt #8

Prompt #8 is your chance to showcase aspects of your personality or experiences that make you stand out. Think about what unique qualities you possess that haven’t been highlighted in other parts of your application. Start by identifying these qualities. Are they related to your background, experiences, perspectives, or achievements?

Provide examples or anecdotes that illustrate these qualities in action. Perhaps you have a unique hobby, have overcome unusual challenges, or have a distinctive perspective on the world. Reflect on why these qualities are important to you and how they have shaped your identity. Discuss how these qualities will contribute to the UCLA community. How will they enable you to engage with and enrich the university environment? Conclude by tying these unique aspects of your identity to your potential as a UCLA student.

1. Unique Personal Qualities or Experiences: Students should reflect on what unique qualities or experiences they possess that haven’t been covered elsewhere in their application. This could be a unique perspective shaped by their background, a distinctive hobby or talent, or an unusual life experience. It’s crucial to explain how these qualities or experiences contribute to who they are. For instance, if a student grew up in a multicultural environment, they could discuss how this has given them a more inclusive worldview and an ability to adapt to diverse settings, which is valuable in a university environment.

2. Overcoming Challenges: This part should focus on any significant challenges or obstacles the student has overcome. The emphasis should be on resilience and personal growth. Students should illustrate how facing these challenges has prepared them for the rigors of college life and how it has shaped their character. For example, overcoming a learning disability, dealing with a family crisis, or succeeding in spite of financial hardships can be powerful narratives that demonstrate determination and strength.

3. Contributions to the University Community: Here, students should consider how they can contribute to the UCLA community. This could be through leadership roles, community service, cultural engagement, or other extracurricular activities. They should describe specific ways they plan to be involved on campus and how their past experiences have prepared them for these roles. For instance, if a student has been actively involved in environmental initiatives in high school, they could talk about how they plan to bring this passion to UCLA and contribute to sustainability efforts on campus.

4. Alignment with UCLA’s Values and Goals: Finally, students should research and understand UCLA’s mission and values and reflect on how these align with their own goals and aspirations. This is where they can demonstrate their knowledge about UCLA and show why they are a good fit for the university. For example, if a student is passionate about research and innovation, they could discuss how UCLA’s cutting-edge research opportunities align with their career aspirations.

UCLA bear statue

How to Structure Your UCLA Essays

The importance of structure in essays, particularly for UCLA Essays 2023-2024, cannot be overstated. A well-structured essay serves as a roadmap for the reader, guiding them through your ideas and arguments in a coherent and logical manner. It ensures that your essay is not just a collection of random thoughts, but a cohesive narrative that effectively communicates your message. Structure helps to maintain the reader’s interest and makes your essay more persuasive and impactful. Now, let’s delve into three key points on how applicants can structure their UCLA essays:

Introduction: Setting the Stage

1. Contextual Opening: Begin your essay by setting the context. This could be a brief overview of the topic or a compelling anecdote that relates to the prompt. For UCLA Essays 2023-2024, the introduction should not only hook the reader but also provide a glimpse into what the essay will cover. For instance, if the prompt is about a leadership experience, start with a moment that epitomizes your leadership or the challenge you faced.

2. The Statement: Conclude the introduction with a clear statement. This is your opportunity to succinctly state what the essay will demonstrate or argue. For UCLA applicants, the thesis should reflect how their experiences or perspectives align with the values and expectations of the university.

3. Connection to UCLA Values: In the introduction, subtly weave in how your story or perspective aligns with UCLA’s ethos. This could be through demonstrating commitment to diversity, excellence, or innovation.

Body: Developing Your Story

1. Structured Paragraphs: Each paragraph in the body should focus on a single idea or aspect of your story. Begin with a topic sentence that clearly states the paragraph’s focus. This is particularly important in UCLA Essays 2023-2024, where clarity and depth of thought are valued.

2. Evidence and Examples: Use specific examples and experiences to support your points. In UCLA essays, these examples should not only illustrate your experiences but also reflect your self-awareness and growth. For example, when discussing a challenge, detail not just the situation, but also your response and learning from it.

3. Reflective Insights: Each body paragraph should include reflective insights. For UCLA applicants, this means going beyond describing what happened, to analyzing why it was significant. Reflect on how your experiences have shaped your worldview, values, and aspirations.

Conclusion: Tying It All Together

1. Future Orientation: Conclude with a forward-looking statement. How do your experiences and learnings prepare you for your future at UCLA? How do they align with your academic and career aspirations? This is your chance to show UCLA how your past experiences make you an ideal candidate for their future community.

2. Personal and Engaging Closing: End on a personal and engaging note. This could be a reflective statement or a rhetorical question that leaves the reader with something to ponder. It should resonate with the core theme of your essay and subtly reiterate your suitability for UCLA.

In essence, the structure of your UCLA Essays 2023-2024 should not just narrate a story but also convey a journey of personal development, aligning your experiences and aspirations with the values and opportunities at UCLA. A well-structured essay will ensure that your application stands out, showcasing not just your achievements, but also your potential as a future member of the UCLA community.

How Can Applicants Effectively Revise and Proofread Their Essays?

Effectively revising and proofreading essays is a critical step in the writing process, especially for UCLA Essays 2023-2024. This phase ensures that your essay not only meets the prompt’s requirements but also communicates your message clearly and effectively. Here are four key points to guide applicants in this process:

Layered Approach to Revision

1. Structural Review: Start with a high-level review of your essay’s structure. Does the essay flow logically from the introduction through the body to the conclusion? For UCLA Essays 2023-2024, it’s crucial to ensure that each paragraph contributes to the overall narrative and aligns with your thesis statement. Consider whether each section effectively supports your main argument or narrative.

2. Content Depth: Next, scrutinize the depth and relevance of your content. Are your arguments or narratives well-supported with concrete examples and personal reflections? In the context of UCLA applications, this means ensuring your essay not only recounts experiences but also delves into how these experiences have shaped you and prepared you for the challenges and opportunities at UCLA.

3. Voice and Tone Consistency: Ensure that your essay maintains a consistent voice and tone that reflects your personality. UCLA essays should sound authentic and personal, not overly formal or detached. The tone should match the message – a serious topic demands a serious tone, while a more light-hearted narrative can be more casual.

Detailed Proofreading

1. Grammar and Syntax: Check for grammatical errors, awkward sentence structures, and punctuation mistakes. For the essays destined for UCLA, the expectation is high regarding language proficiency. Use tools like grammar checkers, but also trust your judgment and understanding of the language.

2. Word Choice and Clarity: Ensure your word choice is precise and clear. Avoid jargon, unless it is relevant to your topic and you can explain it effectively. In UCLA Essays 2023-2024, the clarity of your expression can make a significant difference in how well your message is received.

3. Consistency in Formatting: Check for formatting consistency – this includes font size, style, and paragraph spacing. Although it might seem minor, consistent formatting contributes to the professionalism of your application.

Feedback Integration

1. Seeking External Opinions: After self-revision, it’s beneficial to get feedback from others. Teachers, mentors, or peers can provide valuable insights. For applicants to UCLA, this step is crucial as it offers a fresh perspective and can help identify areas that might need clarification or further development.

2. Balancing Feedback: While it’s important to consider external feedback, also balance it with your own voice and intentions for the essay. The final submission should still reflect your own thoughts and style, not just what others think you should write.

Final Review and Mindset

1. Rest and Revisit: After making substantial revisions, take a break from your essay. Approaching it with fresh eyes after some time can help you catch errors or inconsistencies you might have previously overlooked.

2. Read Aloud: Reading your essay aloud is a powerful technique to catch awkward phrasing and errors that your eyes might skip over. For UCLA essays, where the flow and coherence of the narrative are important, this can be particularly beneficial.

3. Mental Preparation: Recognize that revision is part of the journey towards crafting a compelling and effective essay. Approach it with a positive mindset, understanding that each revision brings you closer to presenting your best self to UCLA.

In summary, revising and proofreading UCLA Essays 2023-2024 is not just about fixing errors but refining and enhancing your message. It’s about ensuring that your essay accurately and compellingly represents your experiences, achievements, and aspirations, aligning them with what UCLA seeks in its prospective students.

Writing an essay on a notebook.

The Importance of Supplemental Essays

Essays play a pivotal role in the college admissions process, particularly for prestigious institutions like UCLA. Here are some key points highlighting their importance:

1. Showcasing Personal Attributes: UCLA essays offer a unique platform for students to showcase their personal attributes, beyond academic achievements and extracurricular activities. This is crucial because UCLA, like many top universities, seeks well-rounded individuals. Essays allow students to demonstrate qualities like resilience, leadership, creativity, or a commitment to service. By effectively communicating these traits, students can distinguish themselves from other applicants with similar academic profiles.

2. Illustrating Fit with UCLA’s Values: Through essays, applicants can align themselves with UCLA’s core values and mission. This is particularly important as UCLA looks for students who not only excel academically but also resonate with the university’s ethos, such as a commitment to diversity, innovation, and public service. By articulating how their personal goals and experiences align with these values, students can make a compelling case for why they are a perfect fit for UCLA.

3. Demonstrating Writing Skills and Intellectual Maturity: The ability to express thoughts clearly, coherently, and persuasively is a skill that UCLA highly values. Essays provide a window into a student’s writing ability and intellectual maturity. A well-crafted essay that demonstrates critical thinking, analytical skills, and an ability to reflect on personal experiences can significantly boost a student’s chances of admission .

4. Providing Context to the Application: Essays allow students to provide context to their application, particularly in areas that grades and test scores cannot cover. For instance, students can explain unique circumstances that affected their academic performance, or discuss personal challenges they’ve overcome. This context can be vital for admissions officers when making decisions, especially in a highly competitive pool of applicants.

In summary, for students aiming to get admitted to UCLA during the 2023-2024 period, crafting compelling, thoughtful, and well-written essays is as important as their academic achievements. These essays are a critical tool for communicating their unique story, alignment with UCLA’s values, and readiness for the academic and social environment at UCLA.

ucla 2021 essay prompts

How Do the UCLA Essays Compare to Other Top Universities?

UCLA’s Supplemental Essays for 2023-2024 present a unique set of challenges and opportunities for applicants, distinct in several ways from the essays required by other top universities. A notable feature of UCLA’s prompts is their focus on personal growth, community involvement, and the demonstration of practical skills and talents.

Unlike some other top schools, such as Harvard or Stanford , which often ask for essays reflecting intellectual vitality or deep academic interests, UCLA places significant emphasis on understanding applicants’ personal journeys and real-world experiences. For instance, UCLA’s prompts about overcoming challenges or contributing to the community mirror its commitment to social awareness and diversity, inviting students to share stories of personal resilience or community engagement.

Another distinguishing aspect of UCLA’s Supplemental Essays is the breadth of topics they cover. While schools like Yale or Princeton might offer a range of prompts that allow students to delve deeply into a particular intellectual interest or creative endeavor, UCLA’s prompts are more comprehensive, touching on various aspects of a student’s life and experiences.

This comprehensive approach seeks a holistic understanding of the applicant, from leadership and creativity to academic passions and personal challenges. It allows students more flexibility to showcase different facets of their personality and experiences, making their application stand out in a diverse applicant pool. This approach reflects UCLA’s desire to understand applicants as multifaceted individuals with a range of interests and experiences.

In comparison with other top universities like MIT or Columbia, which may have prompts geared more towards academic and intellectual prowess, UCLA’s essays seem to prioritize real-world applications of knowledge and skills. They encourage students to reflect on how their experiences, whether in a classroom, in a community, or through personal challenges, have prepared them for the future. This emphasis aligns with UCLA’s ethos as an institution committed to practical impact and societal contribution.

UCLA’s prompts also allow for a more narrative and storytelling approach, which can be particularly advantageous for students who have strong personal stories and experiences that don’t necessarily fit into the traditional academic excellence mold. This makes UCLA’s essays not just a test of writing ability, but a platform for students to truly express who they are and what they value.

Why Choose UCLA?

Choosing the right university is a decision that sets the stage for your future, and UCLA is a choice that offers endless possibilities. This prestigious institution is not just a place to earn a degree; it’s a diverse community where innovation, inclusion, and opportunity converge to provide a dynamic learning environment.

At UCLA, you’ll find yourself in the company of some of the most talented students and educators in the world. The university prides itself on a tradition of academic excellence. With a wide range of programs and resources, UCLA ensures that every student has the tools they need to succeed in their field. Whether you’re drawn to the arts, sciences, or humanities, you’ll be supported by cutting-edge research and a culture that encourages intellectual curiosity.

Beyond academics, UCLA is known for its vibrant campus life. With over 1,000 student organizations, you can connect with peers who share your interests and passions. The university’s location in Los Angeles, a global hub for culture, technology, and business, provides countless internships and job opportunities that can give you a head start in your career.

Choosing UCLA means joining a legacy of leaders, thinkers, and change-makers who have left their mark on the world. It’s a place where you can not only dream about the future but also take the first steps toward making those dreams a reality.

Final Thoughts

essays are not just a formality; they are a critical element of your UCLA application. They offer a unique opportunity to present yourself as a three-dimensional individual, not just an applicant on paper.

These essays can bridge the gap between your academic achievements and the person you are outside the classroom. They provide context, showcase your writing skills, and, most importantly, share your story. In the admissions process, where every detail counts, well-crafted essays can be the deciding factor that helps you stand out in a pool of highly qualified candidates.

AdmissionSight , a college consulting firm, offers personalized assistance to students in their college admissions journey. We help you create a strategic plan for your application process, identify suitable schools aligned with your academic and personal goals, and prioritize your application strategy.

Our experts review your application, providing constructive feedback to enhance its quality and uniqueness. We also assist in crafting compelling essays that reflect your personality and achievements, guide you through the writing process, and offer feedback on drafts. In addition, we provide interview coaching to boost your confidence and readiness for college interviews, offering tips on professional presentation and answering common questions.

We aid in optimizing your extracurricular activities to align with your interests and goals, emphasizing leadership and initiative. Overall, AdmissionSight offers valuable guidance and support to increase your chances of college acceptance. With a strong network and a success rate exceeding 75% in the past decade, book a free initial consultation today!

AdmissionSight

Want to assess your chances of admission? Take our FREE chances calculator today!

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Why College Admissions Isn’t Perfect

ucla 2021 essay prompts

US News Rankings

A person's hand writing in spiral notebook placed on a wooden desk.

The Personal Statement: The Holy Grail of College Admissions

students studying

The Modern Day 4.0 and 1600 SAT Score Student Is No Longer Impressive

A woman writing a letter on a paper.

The Competitive Nature of College Admissions for Asian Americans

A professor talking to a student while they walk outside the classroom

The College Application

a woman sing laptop while "admission" word appears on screen

Our Comprehensive Approach

old school building

Ivy League Schools

a student daydreaming while sitting at the corner in library

How Early Should You Prepare for College?

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Featured in US News & World Report Best Colleges Publication

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Congratulations to AdmissionSight Students and their Acceptances!

A female student listening to the class lecture while holding a pen.

College Rejection

Group of students writing on their desks.

College Rankings

a fountain in front outside the building

College Consultants Could Make A Difference

A person holding a pen with a laptop in front.

College Admissions Scandal and Higher Education

aspiring students at UCLA submit supplemental essays

Learn the Top UCLA Supplemental Essay Tips for 2024

top east coast law schools

Discover the Top East Coast Schools for Studying Law

PhD programs for working professionals

The Best PhD Programs for Working Professionals Worldwide

national society of high school scholars

The National Society of High School Scholars: Is It Worth It?

Harvard University, where most US Presidents went to

The Eight US Presidents Who Went to Harvard

athletes that were recruited through college athletic recruitment

Athletic Recruitment for the Ivy League

easiest master's programs to get into

The Easiest Master’s Programs for Working Professionals in the US

Exploring Safety Schools in California

Exploring Safety Schools in California: A Guide for Students in 2024

popular fraternities

The Top 10 Most Popular Fraternities in the US

What is a Valedictorian and How to Become One?

What Is A Valedictorian and How Can You Become One?

Mitchell Tower at the University of Chicago

UChicago Early Decision Acceptance Rate

UCLA at night

UCLA Undergraduate Tuition

advice for students

Top Advice for Students: Tips and Strategies for Success

a student from best ivy league school for engineering

The Best Ivy League Schools for Engineering

Walmart store

Everything You Need To Know About Walmart’s Live Better U Program

writing a personal essay

A Comprehensive Guide to Nailing Your College Application Essay

Leave a comment cancel reply.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

Recent Articles

Learn the Top UCLA Supplemental Essay Tips for 2024

Learn the Top UCLA Supplemental...

Discover the Top East Coast Schools for Studying Law

Discover the Top East Coast...

The Best PhD Programs for Working Professionals Worldwide

The Best PhD Programs for...

The National Society of High School Scholars: Is It Worth It?

The National Society of High...

The Eight US Presidents Who Went to Harvard

The Eight US Presidents Who...

The Modern Day 4.0 and 1600 SAT Score Student Is No Longer Impressive

The Modern Day 4.0 and...

Athletic Recruitment for the Ivy League

Athletic Recruitment for the Ivy...

The Easiest Master’s Programs for Working Professionals in the US

The Easiest Master’s Programs for...

Exploring Safety Schools in California: A Guide for Students in 2024

Exploring Safety Schools in California:...

The Top 10 Most Popular Fraternities in the US

The Top 10 Most Popular...

What Is A Valedictorian and How Can You Become One?

What Is A Valedictorian and...

UChicago Early Decision Acceptance Rate

Sign up now to receive insights on how to navigate the college admissions process.

admissionsight

Admissions Counseling

  • Academic & Extracurricular Profile Evaluation

Copyright © AdmissionSight 2024

Privacy Policy - Terms and Conditions

The Ivy Coach Daily

  • College Admissions
  • College Essays
  • Early Decision / Early Action
  • Extracurricular Activities
  • Standardized Testing
  • The Rankings

September 12, 2023

2023-2024 University of California Essay Prompts: Berkeley, UCLA, and UCSD

A tower is featured, standing above a red-roofed building at the University of California, Berkeley.

The University of California schools have released their 2023-2024 essay prompts for applicants to the Class of 2024. Unlike most highly selective universities, the UC schools are not members of The Common Application — the school has its own application .

Just like in previous years, applicants to the University of California, Berkeley , the University of California, Los Angeles , the University of California, San Diego , and the seven other UC institutions must answer four essay prompts out of a batch of eight options. So, what are this year’s essay prompts? Let’s dive in!

2023-2024 UC Essay Topics and Questions: Personal Insights

Below are the UC essay prompts for applicants to the Class of 2028, along with the guidance issued by the UC admissions committee. These essays apply to all UC schools — including the University of California, Berkeley, the University of California, Los Angeles, the University of California, San Diego, the University of California, Santa Barbara , the University of California, Davis , the University of California, Santa Cruz , the University of California, Irvine , the University of California, Merced , and the the University of California, Riverside .

Applicants have up to 350 words to respond to  four  of the  eight  prompts. And, yes, applicants should go to the maximum word count to make their case!

1. Describe an example of your leadership experience in which you have positively influenced others, helped resolve disputes or contributed to group efforts over time.

Things to consider:  A leadership role can mean more than just a title. It can mean being a mentor to others, acting as the person in charge of a specific task, or taking the lead role in organizing an event or project. Think about what you accomplished and what you learned from the experience. What were your responsibilities?

Did you lead a team? How did your experience change your perspective on leading others? Did you help to resolve an important dispute at your school, church, in your community or an organization? And your leadership role doesn’t necessarily have to be limited to school activities. For example, do you help out or take care of your family?

Applicants should share one small story here to demonstrate their leadership. Rather than tell the UC admissions committee about what great leaders they are, they can show it through one specific example. And it doesn’t even need to be a successful example of leadership. Instead, students can highlight what they learned from the scenario to be even better leaders.

2. Every person has a creative side, and it can be expressed in many ways: problem solving, original and innovative thinking, and artistically, to name a few. Describe how you express your creative side.

Things to consider:  What does creativity mean to you? Do you have a creative skill that is important to you? What have you been able to do with that skill? If you used creativity to solve a problem, what was your solution? What are the steps you took to solve the problem?

How does your creativity influence your decisions inside or outside the classroom? Does your creativity relate to your major or a future career?

Even in an essay that could lend itself to silliness, applicants must showcase intellectual curiosity. So, suppose a student expresses their creative side by tie-dying t-shirts and their singular hook in their activities section that they’ll be contributing to schools like UC Berkeley, UCLA, and UCSD is math. In that case, they can write about the mathematics behind the patterns they love to create on clothing.

3. What would you say is your greatest talent or skill? How have you developed and demonstrated that talent over time?

Things to consider:  If there is a talent or skill that you’re proud of, this is the time to share it. You don’t necessarily have to be recognized or have received awards for your talent (although if you did and you want to talk about it, feel free to do so). Why is this talent or skill meaningful to you?

Does the talent come naturally or have you worked hard to develop this skill or talent? Does your talent or skill allow you opportunities in or outside the classroom? If so, what are they and how do they fit into your schedule?

Too many students choose to write about awards and honors they’ve received in this prompt. Some sneak it into the essay, thinking it’s a subtle way of reinforcing their success. What a mistake! Doing so will only render them unlikable, which should be the precise opposite of their objective.

Ideally, an applicant will share a skill related to their singular hook. If their hook is poetry, let’s hear all about how they became passionate about performing spoken word at open mic nights at a local establishment.

4. Describe how you have taken advantage of a significant educational opportunity or worked to overcome an educational barrier you have faced.

Things to consider:  An educational opportunity can be anything that has added value to your educational experience and better prepared you for college. For example, participation in an honors or academic enrichment program, or enrollment in an academy that’s geared toward an occupation or a major, or taking advanced courses that interest you; just to name a few.

If you choose to write about educational barriers you’ve faced, how did you overcome or strive to overcome them? What personal characteristics or skills did you call on to overcome this challenge? How did overcoming this barrier help shape who you are today?

If students have yet to face a genuine academic barrier, such as the ones many students in low-income communities face, it would behoove them to focus on the significant educational  opportunity  they’ve encountered. Was it the chance to perform research on Russian literature with a local professor? Was it a chance to do an archaeological dig in a student’s hometown? The opportunity will ideally fit with the student’s singular hook.

5. Describe the most significant challenge you have faced and the steps you have taken to overcome this challenge. How has this challenge affected your academic achievement?

Things to consider:  A challenge could be personal, or something you have faced in your community or school. Why was the challenge significant to you? This is a good opportunity to talk about any obstacles you’ve faced and what you’ve learned from the experience. Did you have support from someone else or did you handle it alone?

If you’re currently working your way through a challenge, what are you doing now, and does that affect different aspects of your life? For example, ask yourself, How has my life changed at home, at my school, with my friends or with my family?

Unless a student comes from an underprivileged background, we at Ivy Coach would encourage them to avoid choosing this essay prompt since there  are  going to be students who have faced significant obstacles and writing about how a school ran out of math courses while another student writes about the evictions their family has endured isn’t going to sit well with UC Berkeley, UCLA, UCSD, and other UC admissions officers.

6. Think about an academic subject that inspires you. Describe how you have furthered this interest inside and/or outside of the classroom.

Things to consider:  Many students have a passion for one specific academic subject area, something that they just can’t get enough of. If that applies to you, what have you done to further that interest? Discuss how your interest in the subject developed and describe any experience you have had inside and outside the classroom such as volunteer work, internships, employment, summer programs, participation in student organizations and/or clubs and what you have gained from your involvement.

Has your interest in the subject influenced you in choosing a major and/or future career? Have you been able to pursue coursework at a higher level in this subject (honors, AP, IB, college or university work)? Are you inspired to pursue this subject further at UC, and how might you do that?

Ideally, a student will choose an academic subject that aligns perfectly with their hook. If their activities reflect a passion for physics, they should share the origin story of their interest in the discipline — as a high schooler rather than a child. What made them fall in love with matter and energy? What made them want to better understand our universe?

7. What have you done to make your school or your community a better place?

Things to consider:  Think of community as a term that can encompass a group, team or a place like your high school, hometown or home. You can define community as you see fit, just make sure you talk about your role in that community. Was there a problem that you wanted to fix in your community?

Why were you inspired to act? What did you learn from your effort? How did your actions benefit others, the wider community or both? Did you work alone or with others to initiate change in your community?

An applicant’s answer should align with their hook as articulated in their activities section. Suppose a student’s hook is political science. In that case, they should write an essay that shares one small story about how their political activism created the change they wished to see — or failed to create the change they hoped to see, only further motivating them to agitate for further change.

Maybe they wanted to stop developers from razing affordable housing communities. Perhaps they tried to fix un-level sidewalks. Whatever it is, applicants should share an anecdote here about their activism — whether successful or not.

8. Beyond what has already been shared in your application, what do you believe makes you a strong candidate for admissions to the University of California?

Things to consider:  If there’s anything you want us to know about you but didn’t find a question or place in the application to tell us, now’s your chance. What have you not shared with us that will highlight a skill, talent, challenge or opportunity that you think will help us know you better?

From your point of view, what do you feel makes you an excellent choice for UC? Don’t be afraid to brag a little.

Since the University of California has a unique application and is not a member of The Common Application, this essay prompt presents a perfect opportunity for applicants to include an abbreviated version of their 650-word Personal Statements from their Common Applications.

Ivy Coach’s Assistance with the University of California Essays

If you’re interested in optimizing your chances of admission to UC Berkeley, UCLA, UCSD, and other UC institutions by submitting the most compelling essays possible, fill out Ivy Coach ’s free consultation form , and we’ll be in touch to delineate our college counseling services for applicants to the Class of 2028.

You are permitted to use www.ivycoach.com (including the content of the Blog) for your personal, non-commercial use only. You must not copy, download, print, or otherwise distribute the content on our site without the prior written consent of Ivy Coach, Inc.

Related Articles

The crest of Washington University in St. Louis is featured on the school's iron gates.

2024-2025 Washington University in St. Louis Supplemental Essay Prompts

August 3, 2024

A view of Columbia University's library lit up at night.

2024-2025 Columbia University Supplemental Essay Prompts

An exterior view of Duke Chapel from beyond trees.

Does Your College Essay Suck? Probably!

A panoramic of Stanford University's Californian red roofed buildings beyond a green lawn.

2024-2025 Stanford Supplemental Essay Prompts

August 2, 2024

The round, columned Rotunda building is featured at the University of Virginia.

2024-2025 University of Virginia Supplemental Essay Prompts

White buildings with red roofs are featured beyond a lawn at Emory University.

2024-2025 Emory University Supplemental Essay Prompts

Toward the conquest of admission.

If you’re interested in Ivy Coach’s college counseling,
fill out our complimentary consultation form and we’ll be in touch.

Fill out our short form for a 20-minute consultation to learn about Ivy Coach’s services.

ucla 2021 essay prompts

  • Campus Culture
  • High School
  • Top Schools

UCLA Successful Essay Examples

  • uc school system
  • college application essays
  • essay intros

UCLA is one of the most popular universities in California. In recent years, it has received a record number of applications. If the West Coast  calls to you and you like the idea of finding your niche in a large top tier university, UCLA may be the school for you. If you’re still working on your responses to the UC essay prompts, these examples may help. 

ucla 2021 essay prompts

One of the most sought-after UC schools, UCLA is a dream school for many Californians. More than 100,000 students applied to UCLA last fall, and the numbers are expected to remain the same for this upcoming application season. For those of you applying this Fall, the regular application filing period is November 1-30. If you’re still working on your UC essays, here are 5 successful examples that might inspire you to write yours: 

UC Los Angeles ‘20

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Prompt: Describe the world you come from - for example, your family, community, or school - and tell us how your world has shaped your dreams and aspirations.

It was my fault. I had chosen this topic for my math exploration, armed with only the feeblest grasp of actual concept. Music, math, and the harmonic series…I sighed. In the time-honored tradition of all students, I had turned to Google for succor. The words on the screen blurred together hazily. “Pythagoras discovered that a string exactly 1/nth its length produces a frequency n times the original frequency…” It just didn’t make sense: what did a bunch of numbers have to do with musical consonance? Read her full UCLA application essay.

ucla 2021 essay prompts

A bright orange glow reflecting on the water, I love watching the sunrise at the beach. I grew up less than ten minutes away from the Atlantic and my early childhood memories include frequent trips to the beach. Although the beach is a stunning sight, the beach is not always pristine. My family and I regularly remove trash from the beach, including commercial fishing and industrial debris, particularly after storms, sometimes in quantities almost too heavy to carry. Unlock his full UCLA profile read his application!

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Prompt: Tell us about a personal quality, talent, accomplishment, contribution or experience that is important to you. What about this quality or accomplishment makes you proud and how does it relate to the person you are?

Starting in 6th grade, I spent every summer at Jon Lee’s East Beach volleyball camp. Most kids came and went on a weekly basis, but I just stayed. There was nowhere else I would rather have been, than at East Beach playing volleyball with my friends. I loved it so much that I sought out faster improvement, committing to more formal training with an AVP professional player. View his full successful UCLA profile.

ucla 2021 essay prompts

T-shirt. I had never heard of DECA before. Curious, I asked him more about it, and learned that it was “a club for, like marketing and business”, as he called it. Her persuaded me to join and we planned to compete together in the Sports and Entertainment Marketing Team even. Unlock his full UCLA profile read his application!

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Prompt: What would you say is your greatest talent or skill? How have you developed and demonstrated that talent over time?  

I can read koalas with turtles and I can eat ice cream with friends in North Korea. This is all possible due to the power of Photoshop. Photoshop is like a straw that allows people’s eyes to drink from my imagination. I can make anything and put it anywhere; from sea monsters in the ocean to winged toasters at my birth. For nearly four years, I have used Photoshop to express myself in an adventurous way, one that offers me wider avenues than music or writing do. I am constantly improving my photoshopping abilities and therefore expanding the limits of my expression. Unlock his full UCLA profile read his application!

Are you looking to apply to UC Schools? or just starting to build out  your college list ? Make sure to search through profiles of students accepted to see essays, stats, and advice. See how they got in, and how you can too!

About The Author

Frances Wong

Frances was born in Hong Kong and received her bachelor’s degree from Georgetown University. She loves super sad drama television, cooking, and reading. Her favorite person on Earth isn’t actually a member of the AdmitSee team - it’s her dog Cooper.

Browse Successful Application Files

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Last week, Prompt's CEO shared what mistakes to avoid in your college essay. In Part 2 of this two-part blog series, learn how to pick an essay topic. The key: focus on an admissions officer’s...

How to Write College Essays to Boost your Chances Part 1: Biggest Essay Mistakes

With an otherwise great college application, how important can college essays really be? When only 1 in 5 students applying to selective colleges have compelling essays, make sure you avoid this essay mistake....

College Application Lessons from 2020-2021: Strategizing through Covid Changes (Part 2)

In this second part of his two-part series, college admissions coach Justin Taylor explains key admissions lessons from 2020, an unprecedented year of firsts, that can help you strategize as we enter into this next application...

College Admissions Lessons from 2020-2021: Strategizing through Covid Changes (Part 1)

In Part one of this two-part series, college admissions coach Justin Taylor explains key lessons about 2020, “a year like no other,” that could seriously boost your chances in 2021, including smarter list building and transcript GPA...

Winners of the AdmitSee 2020 College Scholarship

We are so excited to announce that for this year’s scholarship, we selected five scholarship winners to maximize the impact of our $5,000 college scholarship prize money....

ucla 2021 essay prompts

  • 1. Webinar Series: College Application Prep for High School Juniors
  • 2. College Application Lessons from 2020-2021: Strategizing through Covid Changes (Part 2)
  • 3. College Admissions Lessons from 2020-2021: Strategizing through Covid Changes (Part 1)

Download our FREE 4-Year College Application Guide & Checklist

  • 5. COVID-19 and Your College Essay: Should You Write About It?
  • 6. College Search: How to Find Your Best College Fit
  • 7. College Tours 101: Everything You Need to Know
  • 8. Waitlisted? 5 Ways to Move from the College Waitlist to Acceptance
  • 9. When (and why) should you send additional materials to colleges you’re interested in?
  • 10. How to Make Your College Essay Stand Out
  • 1. How to Write College Essays to Boost your Chances Part 2: Focusing the Priority
  • 2. How to Write College Essays to Boost your Chances Part 1: Biggest Essay Mistakes
  • 3. College Application Lessons from 2020-2021: Strategizing through Covid Changes (Part 2)
  • 5. Winners of the AdmitSee 2020 College Scholarship
  • 6. COVID-19 and Your College Essay: Should You Write About It?
  • 7. Education, Access and Systemic Racism
  • 8. Applying to BS/MD Direct Medical Programs: Why Early Med School Admission Might be Right for You
  • 9. How to Get Off the College Waitlist (5 Go-To Strategies)
  • 10. College admissions prep during the Coronavirus

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Med School Insiders

UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Secondary Essay Prompts

These are the secondary application essay prompts for University of California Los Angeles David Geffen School of Medicine. To put your best foot forward and maximize your chance of an interview invitation, visit our secondary application editing page .

about University of California Los Angeles David Geffen School of Medicine

Secondary Deadline:  Secondary Fee:  FAP Waiver:  CASPer Required:   Screens Applications : Accepts Application Updates : 

To improve health and healthcare, UCLA will: Create world leaders in health and science Discover the basis for health and cures for disease Optimize health through community partnerships Heal humankind one patient at a time
Excellence and Integrity Discovery and Innovation Service and Respect Teamwork and Compassion
  • A. Describe your most unique leadership, entrepreneurial, or creative activity.
  • B. Describe your most important volunteer work and why it was meaningful.
  • C. Describe your most scholarly project (thesis, research or field of study in basic or clinical science or in the humanities) and provide the total number of hours, dates and advisor.

1. At the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, students are provided with curriculum and experiences enabling them to become an “Outstanding Physician, AND…,” dedicating themselves to important societal missions. What missions do you want to embrace? What have you done toward your missions? (800 characters)

2. Respond to the following and indicate how these areas of experience have impacted your progress toward your future career goals in relation to becoming an “Outstanding Physician, AND…” A-Describe your most unique leadership, entrepreneurial, or creative activity. (800 characters) B-Describe your most important volunteer work and why it was meaningful. (800 characters) C-Describe your most scholarly project (thesis, research or field of study in basic or clinical science or in the humanities) and provide the total number of hours, dates and advisor. (800 characters)

3. Describe how the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted your pathway to medical school. Include any academic, personal, financial or professional barriers, as well as other relevant information. (800 characters)

4. Do you identify as being part of a group that has been marginalized (examples include, but are not limited to, LGBTQIA, disabilities, federally recognized tribe) in terms of access to education or healthcare?

-Describe how this inequity has impacted you or your community and how educational disparity, health disparity and/or marginalization has impacted you and your community. (800 characters)

1. Describe your involvement in the one most important non-academic activity in your life. (800 char)

2. What has been the one most unique leadership, entrepreneurial or creative activity in which you participated? (800 char)

3. What has been the one most important volunteer work you have done and why was it meaningful? (800 char)

4. Has there been or will there be a gap between achieving your last degree (baccalaureate or other degrees post baccalaureate) and the expected time of medical school matriculation? (300 char to explain if yes)

5. What is the one most important honor you have received? Why do you view this as important? (300 char)

6. What has been your most scholarly project (thesis, research or field of study in basic or clinical science or in the humanities)? Describe one and give number of hours, dates and advisor. (300 char)

7. Describe a problem in your life. Include how you dealt with it and how it influenced your growth. (500 char)

8. Section to enter major work experiences, with 4000 char. to explain each experience.

9. Is there any hardship to which you would like the committee to give special attention in evaluating your application? If yes: Please explain. Include any geographic, language, economic, academic, physical, or mental factors: (500 char)

10. Where do you see yourself in 10 years? What experiences have led you to this goal? (500 char)

Each prompt has a 2,000 character limit

11. What is the most important social issue confronting the health of disadvantaged communities and what would be your first steps to address this issue?

12. In what way will graduating from UCLA PRIME and obtaining a master’s degree enhance your career in health care or health services for disadvantaged communities? (If you are considering a specific master’s degree (e.g. MPP, MPH, MBA, etc.), please incorporate your graduate degree plans or aspirations into your answer)

13. Describe the manner in which your experiences demonstrate your understanding of, and commitment to, underserved communities.

14. What are your greatest strengths and your greatest challenges as you approach medical school?

15. What is your most memorable experience as it relates to working with vulnerable populations?

1. Describe involvement in the ONE most important non-academic activity that has been important in your life? (800 char)

Think of an experience which taught you a lesson and helped you grow as a person outside of academics. This may be your biggest hobby or pastime outside of work such as sports or music. Paint a picture, perhaps by describing a memorable or poignant experience with one of these pursuits. This will make it more unique and let it stand out from the crowd.

2. What has been the ONE most unique leadership, entrepreneurial or creative activity in which you participated? (800 char)

This can be a difficult question to answer as the question asks for a unique leadership experience. First, brainstorm to see if you can think of an unconventional experience to answer this question. For example, one applicant wrote about a summer in his youth when he lead a group of his friends in building a full-length 18 hole golf-course on an enormous dirt lot by his home. The team designed the layout of the course, cleared areas to create “greens” on the dirt, dug holes for the cup, etc. This was very unique was to show ingenuity and leadership. If unable to think of such an experience, make sure you think of a unique angle as to how your more conventional experience helped you grow. Honesty is always the best policy.

3. What has been the ONE most important volunteer work you have done and why was it meaningful? (800 char)

Consider past experiences which are non-medical in nature, such as volunteer work with children or homeless populations. Using a non-medical experience may allow you to focus on humanism and compassion which is a universal virtue, not specific to medicine. Focus on how this has made you a more empathetic and compassionate person, which will help you help your future patients.

4. Has there been or will there be a gap between achieving your last degree (baccalaureate or other degrees post baccalaureate) and the expected time of medical school matriculation? (yes or no). If yes, please explain. (300 char)

If you had a gap year before medical school, describe the experiences you had during that time. Either an essay or a list is a reasonable approach to this questions, but essays tend to be more elegant and allow you to show off your writing skills more. Lists read more like a CV. For each experience, explain how this helped you grow and become a better medical school candidate, which should be the goal of the gap year in the admission committee’s eyes.

5. What is the ONE most important honor you have received? Why do you view this as important? (300 char)

Brainstorm your personal accomplishments/honors which were most formative. Ideally you do not want to just describe a simple victory or triumph, but something which helped you grow and taught you a lesson. Think of a scenario in which you overcame particular adversity to achieve something. Succeeding over a personal challenge will be more poignant than beating a foe, for example. Tie the experience to what lesson it taught you and what skill or trait you gained that makes you a stronger person. Be humble; do not emphasize our tout your personal excellence.

Choose the scholarly project which was most substantial. Describe in detail your role, level or involvement, and outcomes of your work (publication, presentation, etc). Also talk about what the experience taught you and what skills you gained.

Choose this experience wisely. Avoid choosing something which makes you sound like a victim, as this can reflect poorly. If talking about personal or family hardship, describe how it was a challenge but focus on what it taught you and how you overcame it. The lesson learned is key.

8. Section to enter major work experiences. (4000 char to explain each experience)

Similar to the scholarly project question above, describe your role in detail. Choose and describe one lesson or strength you gained from the experience.

9. If there is any hardship to which you would like the committee to give special attention in evaluating your application, then check the box labeled ‘Hardship’ and briefly explain why you are indicating a hardship. Include any geographic, language, economic, academic, physical, or mental factors. (500 char)

Do not feel compelled to answer this question if you cannot think of a good reason to. Do not let this overlap with the “describe a problem” question above. Again avoid sounding like a victim and focus on the personal strengths gained and lessons learned.

10. Where do you see yourself post-graduate education? What experiences have led you to this goal? (800 char)

This is a common question which also may be asked on interviews. You will need to introspect and be prepared for this one. Consider your career goals. Do you plan to be a full-time clinician or do some research as well? Are you interested in global health and medical work abroad? Do you see yourself performing community outreach here in the US? Be realistic but optimistic. You are not bound to your answer so it is ok to have reasonable but lofty goals. Make sure to focus mainly on your career in medicine. Detailing your goals in other professional spheres (if you have them) does not necessarily show your strength as a potential doctor.

The secondary application essay prompts from this medical school application cycle are the same as above.

Disclaimer: The information on this page was shared by students and/or can be found on the medical school’s website. Med School Insiders does not guarantee the accuracy of the information on this page.

ucla 2021 essay prompts

We're here to help

The secondary application is just as important as the primary. We'll make sure you get it right.

Join the Insider Newsletter

Join the Insider Newsletter

Receive regular exclusive MSI content, news, and updates! No spam. One-click unsubscribe.

Customer Note Premed Preclinical Med Student Clinical Med Student

You have Successfully Subscribed!

University of California (UC) Personal Insight Questions Guide: 2021-2022

Not sure how to approach the UC Personal Insight Questions? With tips from an Ivy League graduate, CollegeAdvisor.com’s guide to the UC essay prompts will show you how to write engaging UC essay prompts.  Using both the UC essays guide and our UC PIQ examples, you can stand out from the crowd and maximize your admissions odds.

Want help crafting your UC personal insight questions? Create your free  account  or schedule a no-cost advising consultation by calling (844) 343-6272.

There are nine University of California campuses that offer undergraduate programs. The tenth campus, UC San Francisco, only offers graduate programs in the health sciences. Each campus requires essay responses for the UC Personal Insight Questions (PIQs). In this guide, we’ll walk through each of the UC Personal Insight Questions. We’ll also break down what each UC school looks for in its applicants.

UC  Personal Insight Questions Essay Guide Quick Facts:

  • UC Berkeley  has an acceptance rate of 14.5%— U.S. News  ranks UC Berkeley as a  highly competitive  school.
  • UC Davis  has an acceptance rate of 49%— U.S. News  ranks UC Davis as a  competitive  school.
  • UC Irvine  has an acceptance rate of 29%— U.S. News  ranks UC Irvine as a  competitive  school.
  • UC Los Angeles  has an acceptance rate of 10.8%— U.S. News  ranks UCLA as a  highly competitive  school.
  • UC San Diego  has an acceptance rate of 34.3%— U.S. News  ranks UC San Diego as a  highly competitive  school.
  • UC Santa Barbara  has an acceptance rate of 29.2%— U.S. News  ranks UC Santa Barbara as a  highly competitive  school.
  • We recommend answering the UC Personal Insight Questions comprehensively and thoughtfully.

UC Merced ,  UC Riverside , and  UC Santa Cruz  are not ranked in the top 100 schools on U.S. News.

What are the UC Personal Insight Questions?

The UC Personal Insight Questions are UC essay  prompts  specific to the University of California campuses . The UC system does not accept the Common or Coalition Application —instead, they use their own application system called UC Apply. You can find the main UC application  here .

Looking for more information on how to navigate UC Apply? Check out our webinar hosted by a UC alumnus.

Read on for tips on the UC Personal Insight Questions as well as information about successful UC essay examples. Need tips on writing your Common App essay for other schools? Check out our  blog article .

How Many UC Essays are Required?

There are a total of eight UC Personal Insight Questions. You will only choose and complete four UC essay prompts, however. All eight UC PIQs are accepted at all of the University of California schools. This means you’ll have a bit of flexibility when writing your UC essays.

Below, we will walk you through all of the UC essay prompts. We’re also proud to feature our UC PIQ examples  here . Our UC PIQ examples include information from admissions officers about why each of the UC essay examples worked. Struggling to respond to the UC essay prompts? These UC Personal Insight Questions examples are a great place to start! Reading the UC essay examples will give you added insight on how to approach the UC essay prompts.

Remember that you will only need to respond to four UC essay prompts. Use this guide to determine which of the UC essay prompts is best for you!

How Long is Each UC Essay?

Each of the UC essay prompts has a maximum of 350 words. This is equal to about one double-spaced page for each of the UC essay prompts.

When reviewing our UC PIQ examples, you might notice that the UC essays feel long compared to other supplemental essays. However, once you read these UC Personal Insight Questions examples and start writing your responses to the UC essay prompts, you may find 350 words feels like relatively little space to answer the UC essay prompts!

Which UC Essay Should I Write?

Narrowing down which four UC essay prompts to respond to may be challenging—but don’t stress. No single UC PIQ will make or break your application. Read over the UC essay prompts and remind yourself—there is no wrong choice.

Struggling to select a prompt? Return to the UC Personal Insight Questions examples. From a Science Olympiad to a bullied student with a vocal coach, and finally, the teen hotline volunteer—notice how each of the UC PIQ examples offers a different perspective. Take your cue from the UC essay examples. A successful UC essay is not about prompt selection—it’s about how you write it.

You should select each UC essay based on what you think best reflects your identity, experiences, and personal circumstances. The most effective UC essay will be honest and well-written while allowing your personality to shine through. Read on for details about each of the UC essay prompts and more information on successful UC essay examples.

How to write UC Application Essays:

Uc personal insight questions — essay 1.

Describe an example of your leadership experience in which you have positively influenced others, helped resolve disputes or contributed to group efforts over time. (350 words maximum)

This guide will walk you through responding to all of the UC PIQs. Looking at the first UC essay, this UC PIQ asks you to discuss a leadership role you’ve held. It also asks you to reflect on the impact you had on others during this experience. Remember, leadership can mean more than just being president of a club at school. Leadership can also come from mentoring others, taking care of family members, or taking initiative in a volunteer position.

However you define leadership, make sure you write about an activity that is important to you. Have you resolved a dispute between members of an extracurricular organization that you belong to? Perhaps you took over for someone at church when they had to step down last minute from planning an event.

Additionally, leadership does not necessarily have to mean that you’re the one person “in charge.” You can discuss how you have contributed to group efforts in a collaborative way, working closely with a team of others to make a positive impact and lead by example. Let’s take a look at how they accomplished this in the UC Personal Insight Questions examples.

UC essay example

In the UC essay examples, one writer discusses her experience as a Science Olympiad in high school:

“ Three thousand, four hundred and seventy-one dollars. That was the bill for the hotel room expenses alone for our thirty-member excursion. And those were the least of my worries for the weekend. Between drilling wood pieces into a working frame for Air Trajectory and tying a knot in floss to build a pendulum, I was running down the halls, talking to worried parents on the phone, anatomy textbook in hand. The other captains study while I ensure everyone eats dinner and sleeps by 2 am, responsible as the school’s sole legal representative for ensuring typical high school shenanigans of music blasting didn’t manifest into real danger. ”

All of the UC essay examples begin with great anecdotes that pull the reader into the story, and the first of the UC essay examples is no different. Let’s tease out some of the information that this writer provides in the first few sentences of their UC PIQ. From reading, we know that they are a captain, which establishes their leadership role in the organization. We also know that they carry many responsibilities. From keeping track of trip expenses to overseeing team members’ welfare and acting as an informal representative with the hotel. Successful UC essay examples, like this, will show and not tell.

Be detailed

Like in the UC personal insight questions examples, and specifically, in the UC PIQ example above, you should provide context for your answer. In other words, describe the leadership position and organization and pay specific attention to your role. Another great way to discuss leadership is by demonstrating how you noticed something was missing and stepped in to fulfill the need. Admissions officers will want to hear about how and why you ended up in the position you were in. They’ll also want to know what you did in that position and what you learned from it.

Next, talk about your own actions and impact. Once you give context, then you can get into specifics. Did you elect to be in the leadership position? Did you offer to help a friend with their project and find you wanted to take on a more serious role?  Were you unsure of your capabilities as a leader and then proved your doubts wrong?

You will also want to reflect on the leadership experience itself. Was something about the situation particularly challenging? Did it make you realize you were a born leader? Did you gain a quality or notice an attribute about yourself that you’re proud of? Reflection is an important part of all the UC Personal Insight Questions.

UC essay example feedback

Finally, let’s review some of the feedback from the UC essay examples article for this UC PIC response. According to a former admission officer, “This essay works because the author not only demonstrates their leadership skills but also highlights the qualities and characteristics that make her a successful leader.” Finally, in the UC personal insight questions examples article, the admissions officer comments that “Beyond demonstrating her leadership, she effectively shows the admissions committee the type of student she will be on campus and how she will possibly contribute to the community.”

When crafting your own essay response, think about how your leadership experience works on broader terms. Does your chosen experience for this UC essay communicate a positive influence you had within a community? If not, you may want to consider if this is the strongest experience you can write on.

While we reviewed portions of the first UC Personal Insight Questions examples, you can read the rest of the UC PIQ response and the admission officer’s feedback in  CollegeAdvisor’s UC essay examples article. As with all of the provided UC essay examples, remember that you don’t need to model your UC PIQ response after them. What made the UC personal insight questions most effective is their authenticity. The University of California also publishes a UC Personal Insight Questions  guide  for applying freshmen.

UC PIQ Draft Key Questions:

  • Do you define what leadership means to you?
  • Does your UC PIQ essay directly describe how you made a positive impact, resolved a dispute, or worked with others?
  • Like the first of the UC essay examples, does your draft  reflect  on your role in the community?

UC Personal Insight Questions — Essay 2

Every person has a creative side, and it can be expressed in many ways: problem solving, original and innovative thinking, and artistically, to name a few. Describe how you express your creative side. (350 words maximum)

This UC PIQ might push you to think further outside the box than some of the other UC essay prompts. Creativity can take many different shapes and forms; every industry has some sort of creative aspect. When this UC essay says “creative,” they’re asking what kinds of things or experiences do you  create  in your daily life. How do you innovate?

Your answer to this UC essay could discuss a more conventional creative outlet, such as poetry or visual art. You could also write about a less conventional activity. This could look like making your own crossword puzzles or talking about an entrepreneurial project or a nonprofit startup you are working on.

In this UC essay, you will first want to describe  what  it is that you do. Paint a picture of your creative outlet. What is your creative process? Once you have used active storytelling to talk about the  what , you can turn to the  why . Is this something you started doing for others, as a performance-based activity, or is it something that you use as a calming and centering activity in private?

Let’s look at the UC personal insight questions examples article again. In the second of the provided UC essay examples, the author wrote the following:

“ 440 Hz exactly. The flames flare to life, forming the perfect wavelength as I transitioned from note to note, the curves transitioning along. My classmates crowded around as I sang (shouted?) into the Ruben’s tube, a simple PVC pipe with holes cut at even intervals so that high notes translated to beautiful waves of flames.

The fight to get a vocal teacher in the first place was an uphill run. Singing, unlike playing the piano or learning to draw, wasn’t deemed worthy of spending money on – wasn’t even seen as a skill. After multiple pitches, I finally got my way, just a foot in the door: one month. ”

Each of the UC personal insight questions examples begins with a really strong story, and this UC essay is no different. The author doesn’t hop right in and tell us she sings and has a vocal coach. Instead, she draws readers in with a story that at first glance seems unrelated.

UC essay examples like the one above are most successful because they offer a brief history of how the student became involved with their creative activity. Other things to consider when you draft a response to this UC PIQ: end with a few thoughts on how this activity has shaped you and discuss what you’ve learned from it. Will you continue to pursue this creative activity while at school? How will this creativity inform your academic and personal development?

Whatever creative activity you choose to describe, make sure it is something that you  enjoy  doing. Your passion will shine through in your writing and make your UC essay engaging and dynamic. These UC Personal Insight Questions aim to reveal who you are on a deeper level than just the academic and extracurricular information you have already listed on your application. Admissions officers want to read your responses to the UC essay prompts and feel like they know you.

In fact, in the UC personal insight questions article, the former admissions officer notes how well the student who wrote the UC PIQ above highlighted her creativity by “weaving in examples of finding and using her voice in various situations.” Like in the second of the UC essay examples, your response to this prompt should just be a discussion of something creative you like to do, but how that creative pursuit has shaped your life.

  • Does your essay give an example of a creative endeavor you enjoy?
  • Like in the second of the UC personal insight questions examples, do you connect what you do with why you do it?
  • Does your essay gesture towards how this creative activity connects to your future goals or your success at UC?

UC Personal Insight Questions — Essay 3

What would you say is your greatest talent or skill? How have you developed and demonstrated that talent over time? (350 words maximum)

This UC essay asks you to do something a little different from other UC PIQ, and that might not come naturally to you—brag about yourself. Of course, you will want to keep a humble tone. However, this UC essay prompt is asking what you do best. In this UC PIQ, you should write about a time when you stood out or a time when you were the best at something. Do you have an interesting hidden talent? If so, this might be the essay for you!

Talent vs. skill

If you are having a hard time thinking of particular talents you have, you might turn to the second option in this prompt: a skill. A skill can be anything from an accomplishment to a trait you like about yourself. Perhaps you never fail to make your friends laugh, even in the most stressful of situations. Maybe your biggest strength is that you’re an incredibly empathetic person. You could provide anecdotes of times when empathy has helped you, perhaps to understand a friend when they needed help that they couldn’t articulate.

You will want to include a narrative arc in this UC essay. Here, Admissions Officers will be looking to read a story of what your talent is, how you have developed it, and why it means so much to you. You could describe an obstacle you have faced while performing this skill or talent and then demonstrate growth in how you overcame that obstacle.

As you respond to this UC PIQ, you want to show that you value creative pursuits and that you will bring your creative skills to the UC campuses. How has this activity offered you a new perspective on other aspects of your experiences? How does this creative activity interact with other areas of your life?

Let’s look at how one student approached this prompt in the third of our UC personal insight questions examples. The second paragraph in our provided UC essay examples is the heart of why this author’s response was successful.

“ The best swimmers are 5’10” with broad shoulders and huge feet. These characteristics are advantages during competitions because the athletes are able to move faster in the pool without being pushed back by the waves. I am not a typical swimmer. I am half-Black and half-Mexican, topping out at a whopping 5’0″. My skills are not Olympic-bound, but I am passionate about the sport despite the fact that I initially felt like an outlier. ”

Let your self-awareness shine through

As you can see, the author isn’t necessarily bragging, which you may see in many UC PIQ examples. Instead, she readily admits that she may not be the best swimmer, but it is her greatest  skill , one that she’s passionate about and has developed since the age of eight. UC PIQ examples like this demonstrate that there are many ways to answer this prompt, especially if you don’t feel that you have any talents/skills. Like the author, think of the things that you’re passionate about and have been practicing for years. While you may not be a prodigy, you have most likely become skilled. Let the passion and dedication that you feel for this talent/skill shine through in your response. Additionally, UC PIQ examples like this are effective because the author doesn’t just establish her skill but talks about what the skill/talent has brought her.

“ Even though I used to get lonely when swimming, I found a huge amount of joy in being a part of the sport at my high school. Our team started off with only six members, most of whom had never even been to a swim meet before. Eventually, we gained enough participants and experience to compete against other schools. We were neither the largest nor the fastest team, but I did not care. I had finally found a group of people I connected with. ”

Of the three UC personal insight questions examples, this draws the reader into the author’s vulnerabilities. Not only does she “confess” to not being the greatest swimmer, but she talks of how lonely she found her skill until she was able to find community in her high school swim team. The former admissions officer in the UC PIQ examples article, says that this is the author’s strength.

This essay works because it’s touching and speaks to the admissions officers’ emotional side. This applicant scores high on the likability factor. As a reader, you are able to quickly connect with the author and find yourself cheering for them. The student comes across as dedicated, determined, humble, appreciative, caring, and sincere – which is a lot to accomplish in just 350 words.

In other words, don’t be afraid to be vulnerable in your UC essay prompts, this can be an effective way to connect with your readers.

As you can see from the third of our UC personal insight questions examples, there are different ways to answer this UC PIQ! Check out the remainder of this author’s essay in our UC essay examples article.

  • Does your essay define what your skill or talent is?
  • Have you discussed how you’ve worked at this talent over time?
  • Do you sound proud of yourself?
  • Do you fit this accomplishment into who you are as a person and who you hope to be on a UC campus?

UC Personal Insight Questions — Essay 4

Describe how you have taken advantage of a significant educational opportunity or worked to overcome an educational barrier you have faced. (350 words maximum)

This UC essay asks about your journey in overcoming a specific hardship. You will want to take readers through the narrative arc you followed while you were living through your chosen experience. You will then want to discuss the resonance of this event for the rest of your life, with specific regard to your academic career. This emphasis on academics sets this UC PIQ apart from other UC essay prompts.

How to discuss an educational opportunity

There are two directions you can take when writing this UC PIQ. If you discuss an educational opportunity, you should first describe what the opportunity was and how you came to do it. You should then focus on describing how you made the most of this opportunity. It’s one thing to go to the best summer intensive research program in your field, and it’s another thing to follow up with one of the professors you meet there and pursue a personal project with them as a mentor.

You’ll want to talk about how you utilized the resources that this opportunity provided in order to squeeze the most out of it. This UC essay prompt examines how much of a go-getter you are, so show that to the Admissions Officers!

How to discuss an educational barrier

You might also choose to follow the second avenue this UC PIQ offers and discuss a setback or barrier you encountered. If you go this route, you will first want to define and contextualize the challenge you faced. Because this UC essay specifically asks about an  educational  barrier, you want to make sure that the experience you discuss impacted your academic life specifically. If you have a non-academic-related challenge that deeply impacted your life, save that for UC PIQ 5. You’ll want to pay careful attention to what each of the UC essay prompts asks of you and be sure to respond directly to the  question  in each of the UC Personal Insight Questions.

After you define the challenge, explain how you overcame it. Focus on your strategies, ideas, and actions specifically. This is the work that you did to defeat the barrier and come out stronger on the other side. You’ll want to demonstrate how you learned or matured from your experience. If you need inspiration, check out our UC Personal Insight Questions examples; you’ll notice that growth and maturity are common themes.

You will also want to reflect a bit on how this experience affected you long term. How did this barrier influence other aspects of your life? What did you gain from the opportunity you had? You could mention any professional skills or qualities that you might have developed from your chosen experience and how you will carry those with you in your future endeavors. In all of these UC essay prompts, you will want to gesture toward your future intentions; Admissions Officers would like to see that you’re forward-thinking in your responses to the UC Personal Insight Questions.

  • Do you address a topic specifically related to your academic experience?
  • Does your essay show that you learned something from the experience?
  • Does your essay demonstrate a thoughtful approach to your academic career and opportunities?

UC Personal Insight Questions — Essay 5

Describe the most significant challenge you have faced and the steps you have taken to overcome this challenge. How has this challenge affected your academic achievement? (350 words maximum)

Overcoming a challenge is a classic college supplemental essay topic, and the UC essay prompts are no exception. Admissions Officers want to see how you handle a crisis and how you move forward in the face of adversity when they read your UC PIQ responses.

Make sure it’s a “real” challenge

This UC essay asks for  the most  significant challenge you’ve ever faced—so try to pick something bigger than your first C on a test. This UC PIQ should discuss a time when you faced a setback but did not let that setback beat you. As you can see from reading successful UC PIQ examples, Admissions Officers will be looking for your resourcefulness, creativity, and problem-solving skills when they are reading this UC essay. Make sure you focus on describing the  how  and not just the  what  in this UC PIQ.

In a college environment, you will likely face unexpected academic and personal challenges. UC wants to know that you can struggle, or even fail, and come back stronger than before. This UC PIQ asks you to prove that you will face any challenges head-on and not be overwhelmed when things take a turn for the worse.

Be sure to demonstrate growth

In this UC essay, be sure to clearly address both what the problem was and how you fixed it. Focus on your storytelling abilities to connect point A (the setback) to point B (your solution). Admissions Officers are looking for your creativity and problem-solving methodology: what is the process you use when addressing a challenge? Why was this challenge such a meaningful one to you? What was at stake for you? You will want to indicate that you perform well under pressure in this UC essay.

Once you have described both the challenge and your process in overcoming it, you should turn to the final part of this UC PIQ; that is, you’ll want to discuss the relationship between this challenge and your academics. Be sure to address how the challenge you faced impacted your academic achievement in particular, though the challenge itself does not have to be an academic one. You should describe how overcoming this challenge resonated throughout your life and perhaps changed your perspective, provided you a new way of thinking, or altered your academic path in some way. These UC Personal Insight Questions want you to showcase what kind of student you are and how you will succeed on the UC campuses.

  • Do you explain why this challenge was so important to you?
  • Does your UC PIQ response demonstrate how you solved or addressed the challenge?
  • Do you reflect on the impact of overcoming this challenge?

UC Personal Insight Questions — Essay 6

Think about an academic subject that inspires you. Describe how you have furthered this interest inside and/or outside of the classroom. (350 words maximum)

You might read this UC PIQ and know exactly what subject you want to write about. It might be clear that you have a passion for English because you took AP Language and AP Literature, you’re in the journalism club, you write for the school literary magazine, and tutor ESL students after school. Even if you have all of these great examples, you will still want to address  why  this subject inspires you. What is it about literature or the English language that excites you? Maybe you’re obsessed with grammar, or maybe you read translations in their original language and then in English to discover any discrepancies. This UC PIQ gives you a valuable opportunity to discuss your academic inspirations and where they come from!

However, you might not have such an easy response to this UC PIQ. Maybe you’re passionate about multiple subjects, or maybe you only discovered your true passion a few months ago and don’t have that many specific experiences to discuss. If no subject immediately jumps to mind when you look at this UC essay, you can still answer this UC PIQ! Once again, refer to the UC Personal Insight Questions examples for more guidance.

In this UC PIQ, you don’t have to write about your favorite subject or the subject where you got the very best grades. Instead, you can write about an academic subject that really challenged you, for example, and discuss how that inspired you to go above and beyond what was required in the classroom in order to grasp the material better.

Make connections between your chosen academic subject and your other interests

You could also connect an extracurricular to an academic subject in a more abstract way. Maybe you love physics, and you use your understanding of the body in motion to aid you in dance competitions outside of school. Maybe a love of math translates into a love of baking because you devise your own recipes and perfect the ratios of ingredients.

Whatever you choose to write about in this UC PIQ, make sure you tie everything back together to the subject which sparks your interest. You should also give anecdotal details about things you have done either inside the classroom, outside the classroom, or, or if you can, both.

In this UC essay, you should aim to show how you are goal-oriented and directed in your studies and extracurriculars. You’ll want to synthesize your academic and non-academic activities to reinforce an interest in your chosen subject. Show that you’re passionate, use specific anecdotal examples, and illustrate what you have learned from your chosen subject.

  • Does your UC essay clearly communicate the topic which excites you?
  • Do you articulate why your chosen subject matters to you, and how it has influenced your growth and identity?
  • Does your UC PIQ supplement and/or complicate the other aspects of your application, with special regard to academic preferences?

UC Personal Insight Questions — Essay 7

What have you done to make your school or your community a better place? (350 words maximum)

This UC PIQ asks how you interact with those around you. There are many ways to understand “community,” so you should begin your UC essay by defining what community means to you. Are you talking about a club or organization, a certain place where you feel at home, or a group of people? You might also mention what makes you feel connected to this community— why  it is so meaningful to you. If you decide to write about your school, make sure you clarify that as your chosen definition of community for this UC essay.

In order to reflect on your impact on your community, you should first define the particular areas for growth you noticed in this community. You might want to describe how your connection with your community helped you to see what they needed or what you could give to them.

Here, you will show your capacity for empathy and your ability to think big-picture, especially with regard to an organization or group of people that might be close to your heart. This will show Admissions Officers that you can think critically, which is what the UC Personal Insight Questions are all about.

Be specific

Once you explain how you identified a problem or a challenge facing your community, you will want to discuss the concrete steps you took towards fixing this problem.  How  did you improve your chosen community? This UC essay wants to understand how you interact with those around you in meaningful and effective ways.

Be as specific as possible in your UC PIQ response. Walk your reader through your journey of joining this community, discovering a need within the community, and filing that need with your problem-solving skills. You should also frontload your decision-making process as you write this UC essay. In your UC PIQ response, Admissions Officers want to see how you will contribute to the community on the UC campuses.

UC example essay

Let’s look at the creative way that one student approached this in the fourth example in our UC PIQ examples article. The final essay in our UC Personal Insight Questions examples broaches a heavy subject and begins with a vivid anecdote.

“Hi, this is Teen Line, what’s bothering you tonight?” That simple phrase rings through the tiny room, merely enough space for a few desks and chairs. On one end of the line is a teenager, sharing stories of anything from the dark dread of depression and anxiety to a plea for a savior from the downward spiral of suicide. A tearful voice, desperate for help – a girl barely in high school, suffering at the hands of her “friends” and on the brink of suicide, complete with a plan to choke herself with a dog leash.

UC example essay feedback

UC personal insight questions examples like this one show the power of a strong beginning to draw in your readers. The author goes on to discuss her participation in Teen Line, a non-profit nationwide teen helpline. She defines community not only as of the teens that she talks to in her immediate area but also as of the national and international callers as well. The best UC PIQ examples show you how you can take your reader on a journey in 350 words or less. This is reflected in the former admissions officer’s strong feedback.

Sometimes admissions officers have to present candidates before a larger committee. This is an example where, if it came down to it, an officer would probably fight to ensure this student is admitted to the college or university if the rest of their application materials were strong overall, but perhaps slightly weaker in some areas. Simply put, this is a student an admissions officer would want as part of their campus community.

Among the UC personal insight questions examples that we cover in our UC PIQ examples article, this is a great example of how to discuss sensitive topics like depression and suicide.

  • Do you define what community means to you?
  • Does your essay describe both the problem you found within the community and the solution you crafted to address this problem?
  • Does your essay reflect on the journey of your experience and the problem-solving skills you employed?

UC Personal Insight Questions — Essay 8

Beyond what has already been shared in your application, what do you believe makes you stand out as a strong candidate for admissions to the University of California? (350 words maximum)

This UC essay seems misleadingly simple; you may think this UC PIQ asks you to respond with  anything  that you feel makes you a strong applicant, but that is not entirely true. You will want to think very hard about whether the information you share in this UC essay could easily be a response to any of the other UC essay prompts. If so, choose that prompt instead. The previous 7 UC PIQ prompts cover a lot of ground, so read through those UC Personal Insight Questions and review the UC PIQ examples before choosing this prompt.

When you should answer this prompt

You should only select this UC PIQ if you have something extraordinary to write about that genuinely has  no other place  anywhere on the application for you to discuss it. Though the prompt asks for what makes you stand out, you have lots of other places to demonstrate what makes you stand out from other applicants in the other UC essay prompts. Notably, this UC PIQ does not appear in our UC Personal Insight Questions examples, as it’s much more open-ended.

For example, if you’re considering answering this question by talking about the time you overcame a chronic illness that kept you out of school for months at a time, you could also respond to UC essay 5 with this answer. Did you grow up in a suburban town with same-sex parents and face homophobia towards your family because your peers all had a mom and a dad? That’s a unique experience you could definitely write about for this UC essay.

How you should answer this prompt

If you’re having trouble, return to the UC Personal Insight Questions examples. Notice how each of the UC essay examples is unique. Just because this UC PIQ is more open-ended doesn’t mean it’s the only one that will let you be creative. If there’s one thing to learn from the UC Personal Insight Questions examples, it’s that any prompt will let you be creative.

Your response to this UC essay should describe your unique situation or experience. It should also turn outwards to demonstrate how this experience, skill, or activity sets you apart from other UC applicants. This UC essay can help readers understand how you will help diversify campus through your lived experience. It can also help explain any gaps or dips in your grades or the rest of your application.

You will want to be direct and specific in this UC essay. Honesty is important here; try not to exaggerate too much with your tone or over-dramatize your story. Since you’re writing about an experience that is specific and unique to you, you don’t need to do the work of performatively explaining just  how  unique your activity, talent, or experience is. The topic you discuss should speak for itself.

  • Does your essay respond to a different prompt in the UC PIQ examples?
  • Do you use straightforward language to discuss your chosen topic?
  • Does your essay describe what happened to you, how it affected you, and how this will impact the perspective you bring to the UC campuses?

What Should I Put in the Additional Comments Section of the UC application?

There are two additional comments sections of the UC application. These are separate from the UC Personal Insight Questions and are not covered by our UC Personal Insight Questions examples. One is listed under the Academic History section, and the second is listed under the Personal Insight section.

For additional comments under Academic History, you should address only your academic record. This includes your transcript and grades, course choices, and anything you did not have the opportunity to discuss previously in the academic section or anywhere in your UC essay prompts.

For additional comments under Personal Insight, you should  not  discuss anything to do with your academic record. Instead, use this space to elaborate on the extracurricular section of the application. This is the space for more detail on an experience that was very meaningful to you. However, be careful about how you use this space. Ask yourself if what you’re sharing is really necessary to your application. Try to use the UC PIQ prompts to say anything you would want to say here.

Both of these sections are optional. You should not feel obligated to fill these sections with additional information if everything you want to share with your readers has been discussed in your UC essay prompts. UC Berkeley offers some advice on how to utilize this section of the application  here .

UC Personal Insight Questions—Final Thoughts

Completing the UC essay prompts can seem daunting, but don’t let that discourage you from applying. The UC essay prompts are a great opportunity to demonstrate who you are beyond your grades and test scores.

We hope that this UC personal insight questions guide as well as our UC essay examples will help jumpstart your thinking! Your UC essays can boost your application if you have a lower than average GPA or  SAT score . Use this UC personal insight questions guide as a step-by-step aid when approaching the UC essay prompts. And if you want more support, don’t forget to read our UC personal insight questions examples for feedback from Admissions Officers on various UC essay examples.

UC video resources

You can also view these videos on UC PIQ prompts from the University of California:

Additionally, start earlier than you think you should when responding to the UC essay examples. It’s always important to leave yourself time to draft, and this is especially true with the UC PIQ prompts. As you can likely tell from our UC PIQ examples, strong UC essays don’t appear overnight.

Remember, the UC essay prompts are for four essays of equal length, and each of the UC PIQ prompts holds equal importance. Be considerate when selecting which of the UC PIQs to write about. Select four UC essay prompts that cater best to your lived experiences. If you find yourself struggling to come up with a compelling answer to one of your chosen UC essay prompts, go back to our UC PIQ examples or try another PIQ!

You can also read additional UC personal insight questions examples in this 2019  Insider  article. The two UC PIQ examples in the piece showcase unique backgrounds and the creative ways each author approached their essay.  Also, don’t be afraid to ask for revisions on your UC personal insight questions from a trusted adult; it’s helpful to have another set of eyes checking your UC PIQ responses for grammatical errors, tone, and clarity. Good luck!

This 2021-2022 essay guide on the University of California was written by  Laura Frustaci , Harvard ‘21. For more CollegeAdvisor.com resources on the University of California, click  here . Want help crafting your UC Personal Insight Questions? Create your free  account  or  schedule a no-cost  advising consultation by calling (844) 343-6272.

Personalized and effective college advising for high school students.

  • Advisor Application
  • Popular Colleges
  • Privacy Policy and Cookie Notice
  • Student Login
  • California Privacy Notice
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Your Privacy Choices

By using the College Advisor site and/or working with College Advisor, you agree to our updated Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy , including an arbitration clause that covers any disputes relating to our policies and your use of our products and services.

logo-cracking-med-school-admissions

University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) Secondary Application Tips and Essay Prompts

  • Cracking Med School Admissions Team

Getting accepted to UCLA is hard. Very hard. Submitting an OUTSTANDING UCLA medical school secondary application is vital to receiving an interview invite, which ultimately can lead to an acceptance. We LOVE the UCLA secondary essay prompts and we LOVE helping medical school applicants edit them so that they stand out! It’s exciting to help students craft a vision of how they want to change medicine 🙂 

The UCLA Geffen Admissions Committee is looking for students who have a vision to improve healthcare and medicine – whether it’s through public service, advocacy, innovative patient care approaches, medical technology, or research. That is why its first question starts with, “ At the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, students are provided with curriculum and experiences enabling them to become an “Outstanding Physician, AND…,” dedicating themselves to important societal missions. “

Dr. Rishi Mediratta and Dr. Rachel Rizal have a track record of helping our mentees receive acceptances to the Geffen UCLA School of Medicine year after year. We can help you edit your UCLA secondaries . 

Although residing or having lived in California gives you an advantage for receiving an interview invitation and acceptance at UCLA Geffen School of Medicine, we have had more of our out-of-state premedical student mentees receive interview invites and acceptances the past few years. 

Cracking Med School Admissions - 1 School Secondary Essay Edits

  • Personally Tailored Essays
  • Edits by Stanford & Harvard-trained Doctors
  • We study your application strengths to see what unique attributes we’ll bring to the medical school

UCLA Secondary Application Essay Prompts: 2023 – 2024

Ucla secondary essays – all md applicants.

  • At the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, students are provided with curriculum and experiences enabling them to become an “Outstanding Physician, AND…,” dedicating themselves to important societal missions. What missions do you want to embrace? What have you done toward your missions? (800 characters max)
  • A. Describe your most unique leadership, entrepreneurial, or creative activity. (800 characters max)
  • B. Describe your most important volunteer work and why it was meaningful. (800 characters max)
  • C. Describe your most scholarly project (thesis, research or field of study in basic or clinical science or in the humanities) and provide the total number of hours, dates and advisor. (800 characters max)
  • Describe how the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted your pathway to medical school. Include any academic, personal, financial or professional barriers, as well as other relevant information. (800 characters max)
  • Did you experience or are you anticipating time between graduating from college and matriculating into medical school? If yes, describe the activities in which you participated or are planning to participate. Examples include additional schooling, employment, or caring for a loved one.
  • Do you identify as being part of a group that has been marginalized (examples include, but are not limited to, LGBTQIA, disabilities, federally recognized tribe) in terms of access to education or healthcare? If so, describe how this inequity has impacted you or your community and how educational disparity, health disparity and/or marginalization has impacted you and your community. (800 characters max)

UCLA Secondary Essays – PRIME-LA Applicants

  • What is the most important social issue confronting the health of marginalized and under-resourced communities? Describe the first steps you would take to address this issue.  (2,000 characters max)
  • In what way will graduating from PRIME-LA and obtaining a master’s degree enhance your career in health care or health services for marginalized and under-resourced communities? (If you are considering a specific master’s degree (e.g., MPP, MPH, MBA, etc.), please incorporate your graduate degree plans or aspirations into your answer)  (2,000 characters max)
  • Describe how your experiences demonstrate your understanding of, and commitment to, marginalized and under-resourced communities. (2,000 characters max)
  • What are your greatest strengths and your greatest challenges as you approach medical school? (2,000 characters max)
  • Describe your most memorable experience as it relates to working with marginalized and under-resourced populations. (2,000 characters max)

Tips to Answer UCLA Secondaries

UCLA Secondaries Pre-Writing Guidance: UCLA has not changed its secondary in the past few years. We would not pre-write your UCLA secondaries unless you are a decently strong in-state California applicant because not all student receive a UCLA secondary application. However, once you receive the application, there is usually a two-week turnaround time. Keep reading our tips below in order to get insights on how to STAND OUT on your UCLA secondaries. We have noticed that more of our out-of-state premed advisees have received UCLA secondaries and UCLA interviews.

  • Download our  Cracking Med Secondary Essay Workbook and Examples  to get all our secondary essay tips!

UCLA Secondary Essays Tip #1: UCLA medical school has become increasingly prestigious, and it has been recruiting more visionaries in healthcare. In fact, many of  our students who receive interview invites also receive interview invites at schools like Stanford. So how do you get into UCLA medical school? You have to have a vision to improve healthcare and medicine! Simply wanting to be a great clinician will not be enough for UCLA. 

For the UCLA secondary question, “At the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, students are provided with curriculum and experiences enabling them to become an “Outstanding Physician, AND…,” dedicating themselves to important societal missions. What missions do you want to embrace? What have you done toward your missions? ” make sure you give your vision to change healthcare. Many applicants do not have a chance to articulate their vision to change healthcare on their primary application. So, on your UCLA secondary – Be Bold. Highlight your leadership, passion to change healthcare, and impact on society. 

Here are examples for the UCLA outstanding physician and ______ question:

  • Create a new, integrated liver transplant center
  • Use artificial intelligence to improve cancer genomic diagnoses
  • Improve disability access both online and throughout Los Angeles
  • Increase healthcare access among immigrant populations and underserved communities

Contact Drs. Rizal and Mediratt a if you have questions or want to share your “outstanding physician and ____” ideas.

UCLA Secondary Essays Tip #2: For the second UCLA secondary question, “ indicate how these areas of experience have impacted your progress toward your future career goals in relation to becoming an “Outstanding Physician, AND… ” you have to be strategic about what activity, research, entrepreneurial endeavor, or clinical experience you write about. Think about it like this: what activity best highlights your strengths and supports your vision to change medicine? What activity has had the most impact and can you explain the impact clearly to the Admissions Committee?

UCLA Secondary Essays Tip #3: For the UCLA secondary prompt, “ Did you experience or are you anticipating time between graduating from college and matriculating into medical school ” there is only 800 characters! So, you have to priroitize and be strategic about what to write. The activities to prioritize are: patient care experiences, activities that highlight your impact, activities that highlight your vision to change medicine, as you described in essay #1. We can help you edit your UCLA secondaries!

UCLA Secondary Essays Tip #4: For the COVID-19 question, incorporate your personal experiences as well as healthcare current issues you noticed throughout the COVID pandemic. We have an entire healthcare current events blog post here , where you can read more about healthcare disparities and COVID-19.

UCLA Secondary Essays Tip #5: It is tricky, but doable. If you can incorporate “Why UCLA” and what you will do as a medical student at UCLA somewhere in this secondary, that would be ideal!

UCLA Secondary Essays Tip #6: Have questions about how you can stand out? Contact us below. Need editing help on your secondary? We can help you through our secondary essay packages . 

[Read More Secondary Essay Tips: Stanford ; University of Southern California ( USC ); University of California – San Diego ( UCSD ); University of California – San Francisco ( UCSF ) ]

Your medical school application Coaches, Mentors, & Cheerleaders

We Personally Advise Every Student We Work With.

Dr. Rachel Rizal

Rachel Rizal, M.D.

Changing the trajectory of people’s lives.

Undergraduate Princeton University, cum laude

Medical School Stanford School of Medicine

Residency Harvard, Emergency Medicine

Awards & Scholarships Fulbright Scholar USA Today Academic First Team Tylenol Scholarship

Dr. Rishi Mediratta

Rishi Mediratta, M.D., M.Sc., M.A.

Advising students to attend their dream schools.

Undergraduate Johns Hopkins University, Phi Beta Kappa

Residency Stanford, Pediatrics

Awards & Scholarships Marshall Scholar Tylenol Scholarship Global Health Scholar

stand out from other applicants with our secondary essay edit packages

Download your secondary essay guide.

Use this essay guide and workbook to write standout secondaries.

Secondary Essay Guide

  • First Name *
  • Best Email *
  • Year Applying to Medical School *
  • Name This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

UCLA Secondary Application Essay Prompts: 2022 – 2023

Our students successfully receive interviews at their reach schools.

Stand Out From Other Applicants

ucla 2021 essay prompts

School Secondary Editing Packages

Why choose us.

Your acceptance can be just one essay away…

UCLA Secondary Application Essay Prompts: 2021 – 2022

  • In what way will graduating from PRIME-LA and obtaining a master’s degree enhance your career in health care or health services for marginalized and under-resourced communities? (If you are considering a specific master’s degree (e.g., MPP, MPH, MBA, etc.), please incorporate your graduate degree plans [additional schooling] or aspirations into your answer)  (2,000 characters max)

UCLA Secondary Application Essay Prompts: 2020 – 2021

  • Describe your involvement in the one most important non-academic activity in your life. (800 characters max)
  • What has been the one most unique leadership, entrepreneurial or creative activity in which you participated? (800 characters max)
  • What has been the one most important volunteer work you have done and why was it meaningful? (800 characters max)
  • Has there been or will there be a gap between achieving your last degree (baccalaureate or other degrees post baccalaureate) and the expected time of medical school matriculation? (If yes, 300 characters max)
  • What is the one most important honor you have received? Why do you view this as important? (300 characters max)
  • What has been your most scholarly project (thesis, research or field of study in basic or clinical science or in the humanities)? Describe one and give number of hours, dates and advisor. (300 characters max)
  • Describe a problem in your life. Include how you dealt with it and how it influenced your growth. (500 characters max)
  • Please list any major paid work experience during or since college to the Admissions Committee. (4,000 characters max per work experience)
  • Is there any hardship to which you would like the committee to give special attention in evaluating your application? (500 characters max)
  • Where do you see yourself post-graduate education? What experiences have led you to this goal? (500 characters max)
  • Describe how the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted your pathway to medical school. Include any academic, personal, financial or professional barriers, as well as any other relevant information.

UCLA Secondary Application Essay Prompts: 2019 – 2020

  • Describe your involvement in the one most important non-academic activity in your life.  (800 characters max)
  • What has been the one most unique leadership, entrepreneurial or creative activity in which you participated?  (800 characters max)
  • What has been the one most important volunteer work you have done and why was it meaningful?  (800 characters max)
  • Has there been or will there be a gap between achieving your last degree (baccalaureate or other degrees post baccalaureate) and the expected time of medical school matriculation?  (If yes, 300 characters max)
  • What is the one most important honor you have received? Why do you view this as important?  (300 characters max)
  • What has been your most scholarly project (thesis, research or field of study in basic or clinical science or in the humanities)? Describe one and give number of hours, dates and advisor.  (300 characters max)
  • Describe a problem in your life. Include how you dealt with it and how it influenced your growth.  (500 characters max)
  • Please list any major paid work experience during or since college.  (4,000 characters max per work experience)
  • Is there any hardship to which you would like the committee to give special attention in evaluating your application? If yes,  please explain. Include any geographic, language, economic, academic, physical, or mental factors. (500 characters max)
  • Where do you see yourself post-graduate education? What experiences have led you to this goal?  (500 characters max)

UCLA Secondary Application Essay Prompts: 2018 – 2019

Ucla secondary application essay prompts: 2017 – 2018.

  • Where do you see yourself in 10 years? What experiences have led you to this goal? (800 characters max)

UCLA Secondary Application Essay Prompts: 2016 – 2017

Ucla secondary application essay prompts: 2015 – 2016, ucla secondary application essay prompts: 2014 – 2015, contact us with questions, we'll answer any and all your questions about medical school we typically respond within 1 business day..

  • Your Name *
  • Your Email *
  • Phone (optional)
  • Leave us a Message or Question! We will email and call you back. *
  • Email This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Start typing and press enter to search

First-year requirements

  • Subject requirement (A-G)
  • GPA requirement
  • Admission by exception
  • English language proficiency
  • UC graduation requirements

Additional information for

  • California residents
  • Out-of-state students
  • Home-schooled students

Transfer requirements

  • Understanding UC transfer
  • Preparing to transfer
  • UC transfer programs
  • Transfer planning tools

International applicants

  • Applying for admission
  • English language proficiency (TOEFL/IELTS)
  • Passports & visas
  • Living accommodations
  • Health care & insurance

AP & Exam credits

Applying as a first year

  • Filling out the application
  • Dates & deadlines

Personal insight questions

  • How applications are reviewed
  • After you apply

Applying as a transfer

Types of aid

  • Grants & scholarships
  • Jobs & work-study
  • California DREAM Loan Program
  • Middle Class Scholarship Program
  • Blue and Gold Opportunity Plan
  • Native American Opportunity Plan  
  • Who can get financial aid
  • How aid works
  • Estimate your aid

Apply for financial aid

  • Tuition & cost of attendance
  • Glossary & resources
  • Santa Barbara
  • Campus program & support services
  • Check majors
  • Freshman admit data
  • Transfer admit data
  • Native American Opportunity Plan
  • Apply for aid
  • There is one required question you must answer.
  • You must also answer 3 out of 7 additional questions.
  • Each response is limited to a maximum of 350 words.
  • Which three questions you choose to answer are up to you. However, you should select questions that are most relevant to your experience and that best reflect your individual circumstances.

Keep in mind

  • All questions are equal: All questions are given equal consideration in the application review process, which means there is no advantage or disadvantage to choosing certain questions over others.
  • There is no right or wrong way to answer these questions: It's about getting to know your personality, background, interests and achievements in your own unique voice.

Questions & guidance

Remember, the personal insight questions are just that; personal. Which means you should use our guidance for each question just as a suggestion in case you need help The important thing is expressing who you are, what matters to you and what you want to share with UC.

Required question

Please describe how you have prepared for your intended major, including your readiness to succeed in your upper-division courses once you enroll at the university. Things to consider: How did your interest in your major develop? Do you have any experience related to your major outside the classroom;such as volunteer work, internships and employment, or participation in student organizations and activities? If you haven't had experience in the field, consider including experience in the classroom. This may include working with faculty or doing research projects.

If you're applying to multiple campuses with a different major at each campus, think about approaching the topic from a broader perspective, or find a common thread among the majors you've chosen.

Choose to answer any three of the following seven questions:

1. Describe an example of your leadership experience in which you have positively influenced others, helped resolve disputes, or contributed to group efforts over time. Things to consider: A leadership role can mean more than just a title. It can mean being a mentor to others, acting as the person in charge of a specific task, or taking lead role in organizing an event or project. Think about your accomplishments and what you learned from the experience. What were your responsibilities? 

Did you lead a team? How did your experience change your perspective on leading others? Did you help to resolve an important dispute at your school, church in your community or an organization? And your leadership role doesn't necessarily have to be limited to school activities. For example, do you help out or take care of your family? 2. Every person has a creative side, and it can be expressed in many ways: problem solving, original and innovative thinking, and artistically, to name a few. Describe how you express your creative side.   Things to consider: What does creativity mean to you? Do you have a creative skill that is important to you? What have you been able to do with that skill? If you used creativity to solve a problem, what was your solution? What are the steps you took to solve the problem?

How does your creativity influence your decisions inside or outside the classroom? Does your creativity relate to your major or a future career? 3. What would you say is your greatest talent or skill? How have you developed and demonstrated that talent over time? Things to consider: If there's a talent or skill that you're proud of, this is the time to share it. You don't necessarily have to be recognized or have received awards for your talent (although if you did and you want to talk about, feel free to do so). Why is this talent or skill meaningful to you?

Does the talent come naturally or have you worked hard to develop this skill or talent? Does your talent or skill allow you opportunities in or outside the classroom? If so, what are they and how do they fit into your schedule? 4. Describe how you have taken advantage of a significant educational opportunity or worked to overcome an educational barrier you have faced. Things to consider: An educational opportunity can be anything that has added value to your educational experience and better prepared you for college. For example, participation in an honors or academic enrichment program, or enrollment in an academy that's geared toward an occupation or a major, or taking advanced courses that interest you, just to name a few.

If you choose to write about educational barriers you've faced, how did you overcome or strive to overcome them? What personal characteristics or skills did you call on to overcome this challenge? How did overcoming this barrier help shape who you are today? 5. Describe the most significant challenge you have faced and the steps you have taken to overcome this challenge. How has this challenge affected your academic achievement? Things to consider: A challenge could be personal, or something you have faced in your community or school. Why was the challenge significant to you? This is a good opportunity to talk about any obstacles you've faced and what you've learned from the experience. Did you have support from someone else or did you handle it alone?

If you're currently working your way through a challenge, what are you doing now, and does that affect different aspects of your life? For example, ask yourself, How has my life changed at home, at my school, with my friends, or with my family? 6. What have you done to make your school or your community a better place? Things to consider: Think of community as a term that can encompass a group, team or a place like your high school, hometown, or home. You can define community as you see fit, just make sure you talk about your role in that community. Was there a problem that you wanted to fix in your community?

Why were you inspired to act? What did you learn from your effort? How did your actions benefit others, the wider community or both? Did you work alone or with others to initiate change in your community? 7. Beyond what has already been shared in your application, what do you believe makes you a strong candidate for admissions to the University of California? Things to consider: If there's anything you want us to know about you, but didn't find a question or place in the application to tell us, now's your chance. What have you not shared with us that will highlight a skill, talent, challenge or opportunity that you think will help us know you better?

From your point of view, what do you feel makes you an excellent choice for UC? Don't be afraid to brag a little.

Writing tips

Start early..

Give yourself plenty of time for preparation, careful composition and revisions.

Write persuasively.

Making a list of accomplishments, activities, awards or work will lessen the impact of your words. Expand on a topic by using specific, concrete examples to support the points you want to make.

Use “I” statements.

Talk about yourself so that we can get to know your personality, talents, accomplishments and potential for success on a UC campus. Use “I” and “my” statements in your responses.

Proofread and edit.

Although you will not be evaluated on grammar, spelling or sentence structure, you should proofread your work and make sure your writing is clear. Grammatical and spelling errors can be distracting to the reader and get in the way of what you’re trying to communicate.

Solicit feedback.

Your answers should reflect your own ideas and be written by you alone, but others — family, teachers and friends—can offer valuable suggestions. Ask advice of whomever you like, but do not plagiarize from sources in print or online and do not use anyone's words, published or unpublished, but your own.

Copy and paste.

Once you are satisfied with your answers, save them in plain text (ASCII) and paste them into the space provided in the application. Proofread once more to make sure no odd characters or line breaks have appeared.

This is one of many pieces of information we consider in reviewing your application. Your responses can only add value to the application. An admission decision will not be based on this section alone.

Need more help?

Download our worksheets:

  • English [PDF]
  • Spanish [PDF]
  • Communities Pre-Med Medical Resident Audiology Dental Optometry Pharmacy Physical Therapy Podiatry Psychology Rehab Sci Veterinary
  • What's new Trending New posts Latest activity
  • Support Account Help Confidential Advising
  • Vision, Values and Policies

ucla 2021 essay prompts

  • PreMed Communities
  • Pre-Medical (MD)
  • MD Medical School-Specific Discussions Prior Years

2021-2022 UCLA (Geffen)

  • Thread starter wysdoc
  • Start date Mar 28, 2021

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Plain-spoken Texan

  • Mar 28, 2021
  • A-Describe your most unique leadership, entrepreneurial, or creative activity. (800 characters)
  • B-Describe your most important volunteer work and why it was meaningful. (800 characters)
  • C-Describe your most scholarly project (thesis, research or field of study in basic or clinical science or in the humanities) and provide the total number of hours, dates and advisor. (800 characters)

www.studentdoctor.net

University of California Los Angeles David Geffen School of Medicine Interview Feedback

www.studentdoctor.net

futurebraindoc123

Full member.

  • Jun 18, 2021

btw UCLA has office hours for admissions every wednesday that are SUPER helpful!!  

Throwawayaccount777

Throwawayaccount777

  • Jun 30, 2021
premonist said: Sorry, no one else has posted the rest. Respond to the following and indicate how these areas of experience have impacted your progress toward your future career goals in relation to becoming an "Outstanding Physician, AND..." . A-Describe your most unique leadership, entrepreneurial, or creative activity. (800 characters) B-Describe your most important volunteer work and why it was meaningful. (800 characters) C-Describe your most scholarly project (thesis, research or field of study in basic or clinical science or in the humanities) and provide the total number of hours, dates and advisor. (800 characters) Describe how the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted your pathway to medical school. Include any academic, personal, financial or professional barriers, as well as other relevant information. (800 characters) Click to expand...

no secondary yet btw, that holistic screen is taking its sweet time  

babybluee

  • Jul 1, 2021
premonist said: Secondary received. here is the first prompt: At the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, students are provided with curriculum and experiences enabling them to become an "Outstanding Physician, AND...," dedicating themselves to important societal missions. What missions do you want to embrace? What have you done toward your missions? What do you think they mean by "missions" I'm probably overthinking it, any help? Click to expand...

livereset

If anyone who has an IA gets a secondary, can you please post here? I've heard several people online share their experiences with getting screened out due to having an IA, and I want to see if that's still happening this year.  

WhatsUpDoc824

  • Jul 2, 2021
premonist said: all prompts are 800 characters born2bewilder said: In this case it is probably like a calling. Ie your societal mission could be global health equity or sexual assault awareness. Also I saw you posted their other secondaries, which if that is it, then they have changed a lot since last year. Did they not ask: Where do you see yourself post-graduate education? What experiences have led you to this goal? ( 500 Char ) Please list any major paid work experience during or since college. (4000 characters per work experience) Describe a problem in your life. Include how you dealt with it and how it influenced your growth. (500 Char) What is the one most important honor you have received? Why do you view this as important? ( 300 Char) Describe your involvement in the one most important non-academic activity in your life. ( 800 Char ) Has there been, or will there be a gap between achieving your last degree (baccalaureate or other degrees post baccalaureate) and the expected time of medical school matriculation? (300 characters to explain if yes) Click to expand...

Determinedderm

  • Jul 4, 2021

Hi! I’m sorry would someone mind posting all of the prompts together in one post? I’m a little confused on what the prompts are for this year.  

MD-PhD-NonTrad

MD-PhD-NonTrad

M3 md/phd, in clerkships, pre-phd.

star-lily said: If anyone who has an IA gets a secondary, can you please post here? I've heard several people online share their experiences with getting screened out due to having an IA, and I want to see if that's still happening this year. Click to expand...
2021-2022-NonTrad said: I have heard if you e-mail and call them for a trivial IA, you can force a manual review of your application and get the secondary. Blanket IA screening is almost 100% an electronic screen. Click to expand...
star-lily said: Oh, hmm. Do you have any more details? Should I both email and call? Click to expand...

proteinfolder

proteinfolder

Seconding what a responder above said – what are the actual prompts for this year??  

threepwood

  • Jul 5, 2021
Determinedderm said: Hi! I’m sorry would someone mind posting all of the prompts together in one post? I’m a little confused on what the prompts are for this year. Click to expand...

Throwaway123890

  • Jul 7, 2021

Today i got an email that my primary was received. I've been verified since 6/25.  

sesteretina

sesteretina

OOS MSTP secondary received!  

Throwaway123890 said: Today i got an email that my primary was received. I've been verified since 6/25. Click to expand...

NormalUsername42

NormalUsername42

OOS regular MD secondary received and submitted!  

deleted1080469

glutaredoxin said: +1 Click to expand...

yokiguz

NormalUsername42 said: OOS regular MD secondary received Click to expand...
yokiguz said: Prompts please I'm a bit confused by the other posts here Click to expand...
proteinfolder said: Seconding what a responder above said – what are the actual prompts for this year?? Click to expand...
threepwood said: +1 Click to expand...
  • At the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, students are provided with curriculum and experiences enabling them to become an "Outstanding Physician, AND...," dedicating themselves to important societal missions. What missions do you want to embrace? What have you done toward your missions? (800 characters)
  • Describe how the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted your pathway to medical school. Include any academic, personal, financial or professional barriers, as well as other relevant information. (800 characters)
  • Describe how this inequity has impacted you or your community and how educational disparity, health disparity and/or marginalization has impacted you and your community. (800 characters)

TheGranolaKing

TheGranolaKing

born2bewilder said: +3 Click to expand...

Does anyone know how many applicants or what % get a secondary at UCLA?  

deleted1037524

trojantotrojan said: +4 Click to expand...
trojantotrojan said: Does anyone know how many applicants or what % get a secondary at UCLA? Click to expand...
NormalUsername42 said: +1 would love to know this too Click to expand...
2021-2022-NonTrad said: +1 been verified since 6/4 Click to expand...

deleted555445

no secondary yet, only the primary received email. for reference I got UCSD and UCD immediately  

This is only a speculation, but when I applied during my first cycle when I got screened out, I did not even get the primary received email. This year I improved my app and I got the primary received email. Let's see how it unfolds 🤷‍♂️  

Screamapillar said: no secondary yet, only the primary received email. for reference I got UCSD and UCD immediately Click to expand...

[deleted]  

2021-2022-NonTrad said: I received UCSD as well but no UCD. I am MSTP for Davis though so that might be the cause. Click to expand...
Screamapillar said: Yeah MSTP is weird. Are you MSTP for UCLA too? Not mad, La Jolla > Westwood anyways! Click to expand...

abdum

If anybody with high stats and an IA receives a secondary, let us know! Hoping that UCLA gives our applications a look, even if it's later in to the cycle.  

+N for 'primary received' but no secondary. Hoping they're sending (e: secondaries) to MSTP applicants first?  

4lphabet said: +N for 'primary received' but no secondary. Hoping they're sending (e: secondaries) to MSTP applicants first? Click to expand...

deleted1074206

IS received "primary received" notification but not secondary  

deleted1106140

Does someone have the heart to post the secondary prompts?  

apismnfla1003 said: Does someone have the heart to post the secondary prompts? Click to expand...

brown_skin_girl

  • Jul 8, 2021

OOS secondary received this morning  

neurocurious2014

OOS Secondary received!  

OOS MSTP +1!  

Morningnight

Morningnight

IS secondary received this morning  

Morningnight said: IS secondary received this morning Click to expand...
2021-2022-NonTrad said: Am high stats OOS MSTP and haven’t received. Click to expand...
abdum said: High stats IS and haven't received either. Pretty sure it's the IA screen. Last year, a few IA's got secondaries around September, but none before Click to expand...

Similar threads

wysdoc

  • Apr 23, 2022
  • Mar 23, 2023

chilly_md

  • Apr 21, 2022

koffeekween

  • koffeekween
  • Mar 10, 2022
  • This site uses cookies to help personalize content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register. By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies and terms of service . Accept Learn more…

What are your chances of acceptance?

Calculate for all schools, your chance of acceptance.

Duke University

Your chancing factors

Extracurriculars.

ucla 2021 essay prompts

The 2021-2022 Common App Essay Prompts Are Here

Do you know how to improve your profile for college applications.

See how your profile ranks among thousands of other students using CollegeVine. Calculate your chances at your dream schools and learn what areas you need to improve right now — it only takes 3 minutes and it's 100% free.

Show me what areas I need to improve

What’s Covered:

2021-2022 common app prompts, what has changed, tips for writing your common app essay.

  • How to Get Your Essay Reviewed for Free

The Common App recently released their essay prompts for the 2021-2022 admissions cycle, and unlike the past several years, the prompts are not the same as before.

In this post, we’ll go over the prompts, the changes, and tips for writing a strong Common App essay.

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Here is a list of the prompts for this cycle. While they are largely unchanged, Prompt #4 is different this year (which is kind of a big deal, considering that the prompts have been the same since 2017).

Prompt #1: Some students have a background, identity, interest, or talent that is so meaningful they believe their application would be incomplete without it. If this sounds like you, then please share your story.

Prompt #2: The lessons we take from obstacles we encounter can be fundamental to later success. Recount a time when you faced a challenge, setback, or failure. How did it affect you, and what did you learn from the experience?

Prompt #3: Reflect on a time when you questioned or challenged a belief or idea. What prompted your thinking? What was the outcome?

Prompt #4 (NEW): Reflect on something that someone has done for you that has made you happy or thankful in a surprising way. How has this gratitude affected or motivated you?

Prompt #5: Discuss an accomplishment, event, or realization that sparked a period of personal growth and a new understanding of yourself or others.

Prompt #6: Describe a topic, idea, or concept you find so engaging that it makes you lose all track of time. Why does it captivate you? What or who do you turn to when you want to learn more?

Prompt #7: Share an essay on any topic of your choice. It can be one you’ve already written, one that responds to a different prompt, or one of your own design.

As usual, there are six prompts, with the seventh allowing you to write on a topic of your choice. The prompts are all the same except for Prompt #4. 

Here’s a side-by-side of the old and new versions of the prompt.

Before: Describe a problem you’ve solved or a problem you’d like to solve. It can be an intellectual challenge, a research query, an ethical dilemma – anything that is of personal importance, no matter the scale. Explain its significance to you and what steps you took or could be taken to identify a solution.

After: Reflect on something that someone has done for you that has made you happy or thankful in a surprising way. How has this gratitude affected or motivated you?

While all Common App essays should be personal, the old prompt was more “scientific” and analytical than the new one. The focus of the essay was a problem, its relevance to your life, and how you found a solution (or how you would find a solution).

The theme of the new prompt is gratitude, and it is inherently more reflective than the old prompt, as the focus is a personal story. The new prompt is likely to apply to more students, but there are some potential tripwires to keep in mind.

A common mistake is to spend too much time elaborating on the “thing” that was done, or on the person who did it. While you should absolutely provide some context, the essay should mainly be about you and how this event impacted your life.

It’s also important to note that the prompt asks for an act that “made you happy or thankful in a surprising way. ” Admissions officers don’t want just a classic feel good story about an act of kindness. This act of kindness can be small or significant, but it should have a relatively big impact on your life that you may not have expected. The act itself may have also been surprising, or maybe your response to it was the unexpected part. 

While this prompt may seem straightforward, it’s actually encouraging a reflection on a nuanced situation. Some examples of good topics would be: 

  • Your friend signs you up for robotics even though you didn’t want to join at first, but then you discover a love for programming and want to use it to help build medical devices and prosthetics.
  • Your parents don’t approve of your artistic pursuits due to their immigrant background and desire for stability in “practical” careers, but after years of showing no interest in your art, they attend your gallery opening. This leads to a mutual understanding and inspires you to create art based on your parents’ struggles.

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Discover your chances at hundreds of schools

Our free chancing engine takes into account your history, background, test scores, and extracurricular activities to show you your real chances of admission—and how to improve them.

1. Get a head start

The topics are out, so you should consider drafting your Common App essay before the rush of the fall semester. Once senior year begins, you’ll be dealing with schoolwork, supplemental essays, extracurriculars, and other responsibilities. Your Common App essay will go to most, if not all, of the schools on your list, so it’s important that you take the time to write, edit, and get feedback on your essay. 

Read our ultimate guide to the Common App essay (which will soon be updated with the new prompt) and take a look at some strong essay examples to get a better idea of what admissions officers are looking for.

2. Know what topics are good, and which ones to avoid

There are two ways to brainstorm your essay. You can either pick a prompt that resonates with you and look for a matching story from your life, or come up with a story essential to who you are and find a prompt to match.

Keep in mind that there are some essay topics to avoid, however. Some cliche college essay topics include:

  • Sports injury story
  • Working hard in a challenging class
  • Immigrant story
  • Tragedy (death, divorce, illness)
  • Volunteer trip
  • Your religion
  • Romantic relationships
  • Family pressure to pursue a particular field

In general, these topics are bad because they’re extremely common and too often focus on the event itself rather than you and your personality. This doesn’t mean you can’t cover these topics, but it’s very difficult to do so in an effective way (see the post linked above for tips on how to revamp these cliche topics).

On the flip side, some good topic ideas are:

  • A unique extracurricular activity or passion
  • An activity or interest that contrasts heavily with your profile
  • A seemingly insignificant moment that speaks to larger themes within your life
  • Using an everyday experience or object as a metaphor to explore your life and personality
  • An in the moment narrative that tells the story of a important moment in your life

These topics are much broader and allow for greater creativity. 

3. Answer the 4 core questions

The point of the Common App essay is to humanize your application and put a face to your transcript. That’s a tall order for only 650 words max! 

To make sure you’re sharing the fullest range possible of who you are, try to answer these four core questions in your essay:

  • Why Am I Here?
  • What is Unique About Me?
  • What Matters to Me?

4. Consider the different college essay structures

The Common App essay is a piece of creative storytelling, and not your typical analytical paper for school. You don’t necessarily want to write an essay with the standard introduction, thesis, and supporting body paragraphs. 

How should you structure your essay, then? Here are a few ideas:

  • In-the-moment narrative: Take us to a specific moment in time and share your story as it’s unfolding, using this moment as a segue into broader themes of your life.
  • Narrative told over an extended period of time: This structure allows you to cover several experiences, and is well-suited for those looking to highlight their long-term development.
  • Series of anecdotes, or montage: Use several scenes (that aren’t necessarily related or chronological) to highlight an element of your life or personality.

There are also unconventional essay structures that you may consider, such as writing a movie script or a poem. These are high risk, but also high reward if executed correctly.

Learn more about essay structures and see examples in our blog post.

5. Show, don’t tell

One common mistake students make is to simply state what happened in their essay, rather than to use storytelling techniques like imagery and dialogue. To keep your essay as engaging as possible, you need to bring us to these experiences and allow us to be there with you, rather than telling us what happened. 

Here’s an example of telling: “Running a half marathon was a challenge.”

And here’s an example of showing: “My shoe became untied at mile 11, so I paused and bent over to lace it back up. Pain shot through my lower back. I grimaced and let out an audible groan.”

Where to Get Your Essay Edited for Free

Once you clear the academic threshold for selective schools, your essays and extracurriculars are the deciding factors for admissions officers. In fact, your essays and extracurriculars matter almost as much as grades and test scores at top schools. Why is this? Most students applying to top schools will have stellar academics. Your essays and extracurriculars are your chance to stand out and share your personality.

This is especially true for the Common App essay, as the prompts invite reflection and personal storytelling. It’s vital that your essay is engaging and presents you as someone who would enrich the campus community.

Before submitting your application, you should have someone else review your Common App essay. It’s even better if that person doesn’t know you personally, as they can best tell whether your personality shines through your essay. 

That’s why we created our Peer Essay Review tool , where you can get a free review of your essay from another student. You can also improve your own writing skills by reviewing other students’ essays. We highly recommend giving this tool a try!

ucla 2021 essay prompts

Related CollegeVine Blog Posts

ucla 2021 essay prompts

  • Medical School Application

UCLA Secondary Essay Prompts and Examples

UCLA secondary essay examples

Looking for UCLA secondary essay information? You've come to the right spot. In this blog, we will go over several UCLA secondary essay examples and give you tips for how to make your secondaries stand out!

>> Want us to help you get accepted? Schedule a free initial consultation here <<

Listen to the blog!

Article Contents 8 min read

The David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California in Los Angeles (UCLA) receives thousands of applicants each year competing for approximately 160 places into its MD program. Upon receiving the supplemental application request letter, students will have just fifteen days to complete and submit their secondary application, which requires addressing 10 different prompts. This is a tight timeline for most, so preparing your UCLA secondary essays in advance will allow for well-thought, well-crafted responses. This post will provide you with the UCLA secondary essay prompts along with sample essay examples.

Secondary applications are sent by medical schools between August - October to further assess a candidate's suitability for the profession. The secondaries are comprised of questions or prompts that are designed to help the admissions committee learn more about a candidate's passions, interests, and experiences. Applicants are required to answer these prompts while adhering to strict word or character counts. The length of each essay is school dependent, some prompts will require a response in 150 words, while others will allow for 1500 words. While some schools send out secondary applications to all applicants, others only send out secondaries to applicants they are interested in learning more about. While there are many medical school secondary essay examples , " why do you want to be a doctor ", " tell me about yourself " and  diversity essay medical school  prompts are common.

Every institution will have its own medical school application timelines . UCLA accepts applicants on a rolling admissions schedule. Once an applicant has received the secondary application request letter, applicants are given a maximum of 15 days to submit their application, or it's due by UCLA's mid-October deadline, whichever is earlier. Due to this, it's recommended that applicants submit their primary application to AMCAS early, well before the UCLA AMCAS application deadline. Here is UCLA's typical timeline:

Rolling offers of admission starting in October of the year of application "}]">

Each school has its own list of medical school secondary essays  comprised of between one to ten prompts on average. The UCLA medical school requirements call for 10 different secondary essay prompts, probing students to explore their interests, volunteer experience, significant achievements, and hardships. Use the examples below as a guideline to help you create your own unique responses.

1. Describe your involvement in the one most important non-academic activity in your life. (800 char)

In high school, I developed a hobby that quickly turned into a daily habit: exercising. Exercise has had a formidable impact on many areas of my life. Regular exercise creates discipline and amplifies my work ethic. When I was insecure, working out increased my confidence. Exercise gave me a sense of control by displaying the direct correlation between my hard work and the results that are attained. This revelation was first noticed through this habit, but it swiftly carried over to many other areas of my life as well. I strongly believe that this habit played a major role in my character development, and I would not be the same person I am today if I never began exercising.

Click here to see another response to this prompt.

2. What has been the one most unique leadership, entrepreneurial or creative activity in which you participated? (800 char)

While volunteering at the Arts Academy, a society serving those with disabilities, I noticed the boys participated in activities not otherwise available to girls. Many girls had issues making friends, while the boys seemed comfortable with each other. To improve the girl's situation, I started the first girls’ basketball team. Many families were against the girl's participation as they believed sports were for boys. By explaining the mental and physical health benefits of participating, I successfully convinced half of the families. The girls became more confident and self-sufficient. I felt accomplished, not just because I taught them basketball, but because they'd become friends. This experience taught me compassion, commitment, and how to work with people from different backgrounds.

1. Streamline your responses.

The UCLA secondary essay prompts are quite challenging for students. At first glance at the low character counts, you may feel relieved to discover you won't be writing ten different chapters. However, many of the prompts require a response between 300-500 characters, equating to roughly 3-5 sentences. To convey maturity, passion, and lessons learned in only a few sentences is extremely difficult. Students must be able to craft a concise, direct response to the question while adhering strictly to the character count. To create a streamlined response, focus on the main takeaway point that you want to convey, and structure your response around it.

2. Demonstrate self-reflection.

It isn't enough to simply state an experience that you've had when answering the UCLA secondary prompts, you need to be able to demonstrate your ability to self-reflect by conveying to the admissions committee what you learned, how an experience has helped your growth, and how it can benefit you as a physician. If you notice in the examples provided above, each entry includes a takeaway message which not only shows reflection, but also maturity and growth.

3. Perfect your spelling and grammar.

Your UCLA secondary essays have to be perfect as they are a direct reflection of who you are as a candidate. Mistakes indicate a lack of professionalism, a lack of interest, and therefore, a lack of suitability for the profession. It's essential to proofread your essays multiple times to ensure there are no spelling or grammatical errors. 

Like our blog? Write for us ! >>

Have a question ask our admissions experts below and we'll answer your questions, get started now.

Talk to one of our admissions experts

Our site uses cookies. By using our website, you agree with our cookie policy .

FREE Training Webinar:

How to make your secondary essays stand out, (even if you think you don't have extraordinary experiences).

ucla 2021 essay prompts

IMAGES

  1. Spring 2021 Prompts

    ucla 2021 essay prompts

  2. 2021-22 UCLA Essay Prompts, Other U CAL prompts, plus U Michigan & U

    ucla 2021 essay prompts

  3. UCLA's Supplemental Essay Prompts

    ucla 2021 essay prompts

  4. 007 Lauren Force Field Ucla Essay Prompt ~ Thatsnotus

    ucla 2021 essay prompts

  5. UCLA Medical School Secondary Application Prompts

    ucla 2021 essay prompts

  6. UCLA's Supplemental Essay Prompts

    ucla 2021 essay prompts

VIDEO

  1. 2024 CLS Program Application Tips

  2. How to NAIL the UCLA Essay Prompts (pt. 1)

  3. Chip Kelly UCLA 2021 OZ Read

  4. How Do You Write Awesome Essays For The University Of California?

  5. 2024 COLLEGE DECISION REACTIONS (Brown, Columbia, UCLA, USC, etc.)

  6. Chip Kelly UCLA 2021 RPO

COMMENTS

  1. Personal Insight Questions

    Answering personal insight questions is a key part of your UCLA application. Learn more about the requirements and get helpful tips on how to best answer the questions.

  2. Personal insight questions

    Personal insight questions Imagine UC was a person. If we met face-to-face, what would you want us to know about you? These personal insight questions allow you to tell us. You could write about your creative side. Your thoughts on leadership. A challenge you've faced. Whatever questions you answer, make sure you show us your personality—just as you would in real life. How to answer UC's ...

  3. 20 UC Essay Examples

    Learn how to write outstanding Personal Insights Questions for the University of California, including prompts and UC essay examples.

  4. Prompt's How-to Guide for the UCLA Personal Insight Questions

    The University of California-Los Angeles personal insight essay prompts for 2020-2021, and how to nail them.

  5. How to Write the University of California Essays 2024-2025

    How to Write the University of California Essays 2024-2025 The University of California (UC) school system is the most prestigious state university system in the United States and includes nine undergraduate universities: UC Berkeley, UC San Diego, UCLA, UC Santa Barbara, UC Santa Cruz, UC Davis, UC Riverside, UC Merced, and UC Irvine.

  6. First-Year Admission

    Your first stop for freshman application and admission to UCLA requirements, including dates and deadlines, tips to prepare and more.

  7. Apply

    Learn about applying to UCLA, the personal insight questions and what we look for. Get info for freshmen, transfers, international students, first-generation students and more.

  8. How to Write the UC Personal Insight Questions 2021-2022

    When applying to the University of California, you'll need to write four essays for the Personal Insight Questions (PIQs). Use this guide to write your essays and earn an acceptance letter. We'll guide you through choosing the right prompt, brainstorming responses, and writing the UC essays.

  9. University of California, Los Angeles

    Applying to University of California, Los Angeles | UCLA and trying to find all the correct essay prompts for 2023-24? Find them here, along with free guidance on how to write the essays.

  10. 18 UCLA Essays That Worked (and Why) for 2024

    18 UCLA Personal Insight Question Examples Here are the 18 best UCLA accepted essays that worked written by accepted students for each Personal Insight Question prompt #1-8.

  11. UCLA Essay Prompts 2023-2024

    UCLA's Supplemental Essays for 2023-2024 present a unique set of challenges and opportunities for applicants, distinct in several ways from the essays required by other top universities. A notable feature of UCLA's prompts is their focus on personal growth, community involvement, and the demonstration of practical skills and talents.

  12. UC Essay Prompts: Berkeley, UCLA, UCSD

    UC Berkeley, UCLA, UCSD, and the other UC institutions have released their 2023-2024 essay questions for applicants to the Class of 2028.

  13. UCLA Successful Essay Examples

    UCLA is one of the most popular universities in California. In recent years, it has received a record number of applications. If the West Coast calls to you and you like the idea of finding your niche in a large top tier university, UCLA may be the school for you. If you're still working on your responses to the UC essay prompts, these examples may help.

  14. UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Secondary Essay Prompts

    These are the secondary application prompts for University of California Los Angeles David Geffen School of Medicine for the currently application cycle. To view the previous year's secondary essay prompts, scroll down.

  15. University of California Personal Insight Questions

    Not sure how to approach the UC Personal Insight Questions? With tips from an Ivy League graduate, CollegeAdvisor.com's guide to the UC essay prompts will show you how to write engaging UC essay prompts. Using both the UC essays guide and our UC PIQ examples, you can stand out from the crowd and maximize your admissions odds.

  16. How To Stand Out for Medical School

    We'll teach you how to be a leader and stand out on your Geffen UCLA secondary application essays. Get UCLA secondaries essay prompts.

  17. 2024-2025 UCLA (Geffen)

    2024-2025 UCLA (Geffen) Secondary Essay Prompts (essays 800 characters Each) 1. At the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, students are provided with...

  18. Personal insight questions

    Personal insight questions There's a lot more to your UC application than grades and coursework. There's the journey you took to get here too. From developing your talents and skills, to making a difference in your community, to preparing for your major: everything you've done has led you here. That's the story we want to hear. How to answer UC's Personal Insight Questions Watch on

  19. 2023-2024 UCLA (Geffen)

    2023-2024 UCLA (Geffen) Secondary Prompts. Please note that they are strict on the prompt completion of the secondary essays: Fifteen days from the invitation to complete the Secondary application. 1) At the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, students are provided with curriculum and experiences enabling them to become an "Outstanding ...

  20. 2021-2022 UCLA (Geffen)

    2021-2022 UCLA (Geffen) Secondary Essay Prompts: **A word to the wise - they are serious about their deadline to return your secondary app! Get it in before the deadline or the portal will block you out.**. 1. At the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, students are provided with curriculum and experiences enabling them to become an ...

  21. The 2021-2022 Common App Essay Prompts Are Here

    The Common App prompts have changed slightly this year! Here's what you need to know, plus our tips for writing a strong essay to improve your chances.

  22. PDF ELWR blurbs

    Write essays that synthesize and respond to the ideas of authors you have read. Produce clearly organized, thesis-driven writing that responds effectively and imaginatively to assignment prompts.

  23. UCLA Secondary Essay Prompts and Examples

    This blog will provide all 10 UCLA secondary essay medical school prompts with sample essay examples for each prompt.