I need a pesonal statement critque and advice please
Posted: Mon Aug 15, 2011 5:50 pm
I haven't completed my personal statement, but I was wondering if this was a good opener to it.
Personal statement:
As a former foster child I was raised for failure. While other children were nourished, loved, and cared for, I was the property of the government, traveled temporary home to temporary home, and was malnourished. I lived in an abusive foster home for nine years of my life. I saw as that home fell apart. The divorce was the hardest part, as I watched my foster father old a gun tomy foster mothers head. Two weeks later I lived in a trailer park with a complete stranger. Over the next five months I was placed in four different homes. By the time I was eleven I witnessed more violence than the average adult witnesses in a life time. I was a product of a flawed system that allows foster parents to recieve a check with no intentions on loving or adopting said child.
Somtimes the grass is greener on the otherside. My life changed when I was adopted, May, 1999. After checking out of four foster homes, I was taken to the Hosage family. I was only supposed to be a temporary child for the weekend. I arrived with one garbage bag full of belongings. The Sunday that I was supposed to leave to go to a permanent orphanage until the age of eighteen, the Hosage family told me they were going to adopt me. They gave me a life, a home, and opportunties that were only real in my dreams.
Bloomsburg University Spring of 2012 brings another chapter to my life. I join a rare minority of former foster children that have earned their degree. Only two percent of former foster children in the United States graduates college.
I'm going to add to this and talk about how my experiences affects my ambition to be a lawyer. If you take the time to read this thanks, and any feed back would be great.
Personal statement:
As a former foster child I was raised for failure. While other children were nourished, loved, and cared for, I was the property of the government, traveled temporary home to temporary home, and was malnourished. I lived in an abusive foster home for nine years of my life. I saw as that home fell apart. The divorce was the hardest part, as I watched my foster father old a gun tomy foster mothers head. Two weeks later I lived in a trailer park with a complete stranger. Over the next five months I was placed in four different homes. By the time I was eleven I witnessed more violence than the average adult witnesses in a life time. I was a product of a flawed system that allows foster parents to recieve a check with no intentions on loving or adopting said child.
Somtimes the grass is greener on the otherside. My life changed when I was adopted, May, 1999. After checking out of four foster homes, I was taken to the Hosage family. I was only supposed to be a temporary child for the weekend. I arrived with one garbage bag full of belongings. The Sunday that I was supposed to leave to go to a permanent orphanage until the age of eighteen, the Hosage family told me they were going to adopt me. They gave me a life, a home, and opportunties that were only real in my dreams.
Bloomsburg University Spring of 2012 brings another chapter to my life. I join a rare minority of former foster children that have earned their degree. Only two percent of former foster children in the United States graduates college.
I'm going to add to this and talk about how my experiences affects my ambition to be a lawyer. If you take the time to read this thanks, and any feed back would be great.