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大學入學申請書(通用5篇)

大學入學申請書(通用5篇)

大學入學申請書 篇1

In my mother’s more angry and disillusioned moods, she often declares that my sisters and I are “smarter than is good” for us, by which she means we are too ambitious, too independent-minded, and somehow, subtly un-Chinese. At such times, I do not argue, for I realize how difficult it must be for her and my father—having to deal with children who reject their simple idea of life and threaten to drag them into a future they do not understand.

大學入學申請書(通用5篇)

For my parents, plans for our futures were very simple. We were to get good grades, go to good colleges, and become good scientists,

mathematicians, or engineers. It had to do with being Chinese. But my sisters and I rejected that future, and the year I came home with Honors in English, History and Debate was a year of disillusion for my parents. It was not that they weren’t proud of my accomplishments, but merely that they had certain ideas of what was safe and solid, what we did in life. Physics, math, turning in homework, and crossing the street when Hare Krishnas were on our side—those things were safe. But the Humanities we left for Pure Americans.

Unfortunately for my parents, however, the security of that world is simply not enough for me, and I have scared them more than once with what they call my “wild” treks into unfamiliar areas. I spent one afternoon interviewing the Hare Krishnas for our school newspaper—and they nearly called the police. Then, to make things worse, I decided to enter the Crystal Springs Drama contest. For my parents, acting was something Chinese girls did not do. It smacked of the bohemian, and was but a short step to drugs, debauchery, and all the dark, illicit facets of life. They never did approve of the experience—even despite my second place at Crystal Springs and my assurances that acting was, after all, no more than a whim.

What I was doing when was moving away from the security my parents prescribed. I was motivated by my own desire to see more of what life had to offer, and by ideas I’d picked up at my Curriculum Committee meetings. This committee consisted of teachers who felt that students should learn to understand life, not memorize formulas; that somehow our college preparatory curriculum had to be made less rigid. There were English teachers who wanted to integrate Math into other more “important” science courses, and Math teachers who wanted to abolish English entirely.

There were even some teachers who suggested making Transcendental Meditation a requirement. But the common denominator behind these

slightly eccentric ideas was a feeling that the school should produce more thoughtful individuals, for whom life meant more than good grades and Ivy League futures. Their values were precisely the opposite of those my parents had instilled in me.

It has been a difficult task indeed for me to reconcile these two opposing impulses. It would be simple enough just to rebel against all my parents expect. But I cannot afford to rebel. There is too much that is

fragile—the world my parents have worked so hard to build, the security that comes with it, and a fading Chinese heritage. I realize it must be immensely frustrating for my parents, with children who are persistently “too smart” for them and their simple idea of life, living in a land they have come to consider home, and yet can never fully understand. In a way, they have stopped trying to understand it, content with their own little microcosms. It is my burden now build my own, new world without shattering theirs; to plunge into the future without completely letting go of the past. And that is a challenge I am not at all certain I can meet. 點評Comments:

1.This is a good strong statement about the dilemma of being a part of two different cultures. The theme is backed by excellent examples of the conflict and the writing is clear, clean, and crisp. The essay then concludes with a compelling summary of the dilemma and the challenge it presents to the student.

2.A masterful job of explaining the conflict of being a child of two cultures. The writer feels strongly about the burden of being a first generation American, but struggles to understand her parents’ perspective. Ultimately she confesses implicitly that she cannot

understand them and faces her own future. The language is particularly impressive:“It smacked of the bohemian,” “subtly unChinese,” and “a fading Chinese heritage.” That she is not kinder to her parents does not make her unkind, just determined.

大學入學申請書 篇2

I guess it was inevitable that I’d be on hockey skates at some point in my life, but I did not expect that I’d become one of a rare group of female ice hockey officials before I even reached high school. Being born into a family of hockey players and figure skaters, it seemed that my destiny had already been decided.

Right from the beginning, my two older brothers and my father strapped me up and threw me onto the ice. I loved it and, in my mind, I was on my way to becoming a female Gretzky! But my mom had to think of something fast to drag her little girl away from this sport of ruffians. Enter my first hot pink figure skating dress! That was all it took to launch fifteen years of competitive figure skating. Even though figure skating soon became my passion, I always had an unsatisfied yearning for ice hockey. It took a great deal of convincing from my parents that competitive figure skating and ice hockey didn’t mix. My compromise became refereeing ice hockey; little did I know that I was beginning an activity that would influence my character and who I am today. When I began, I would only work with my dad and brothers. Everyone was friendly and accepting because I had just started. I soon realized though that to get better I needed to start refereeing with people I wasn’t related to, and that’s when my experience drastically changed. An apologetic smile and an “I’m sorry” wasn’t going to

get me through games now. As I began officiating higher-level games and dealing with more arrogant coaches, I suddenly entered a new male-dominated world, a world I had never experienced before. My confidence was shot, and all I wanted to do was get through each game and be able to leave. Sometimes I was even too scared to skate along the teams’ benches because I would get upset by what the coaches would yell to me. “Do you have a hot date tonight, ref?” was a ment that coaches would spit at me during the course of a game. In their eyes, I did not belong on that ice, and they were going to do whatever they could do to make sure no women wanted to officiate their games. I was determined not to let them chase me off the ice.

I made the decision to stand up for myself. I never responded rudely to the coaches, but I did not let them walk all over me and destroy my confidence anymore. I started to act and feel more like the 4-year certified Atlantic District Official that I am. There were still a few situations that scared me. One time I called a penalty in a championship game during the third overtime and the team I penalized ended up losing because they got scored on. I knew I had made the right call, even though I was unnerved when I saw the losing teams’ parents waiting for me at my locker room; for the moment I wished I hadn’t called that penalty. Although it was scary at the time, I stood my ground and overcame my fears. That was an important

stepping-stone in my officiating career and in my life.

After four years of refereeing, I still can’t say it’s easy. Every game hands me something new and I never know what to expect. Now I have the confidence and preparation to deal with the unexpected, on and off the ice. I now also know take everything with a grain of salt and not let it get to me. I have learned that life is just like being out on the ice; if I am prepared and act with confidence, I will be perceived as confident. These are the little lessons that I’m grateful to have learned as a woman referee.

Things to Notice About This Essay

1. The author tells an interesting story about her experiences as a referee.

2. A sense of her personality—determination, flexibility, good humor—comes through in the narration.

3. Details like “Do you have a hot date tonight, ref?” make the narration memorable (we’d love to hear more of these kinds of details).

4. The essay needs a faster start. The first paragraph (three sentences) says the same thing in both the first and third sentences—and gives away the essay’s surprise in the second! A good revision would all of paragraph one and start at paragraph two.

5. There’s too much frame here and not enough picture. The essay needs further development, especially about the difficulties of

becoming and being a ref, to keep it vivid.

6. The author should “dwell” in the meaning of the experience a little more at the end—“I wonder about…I also think…Sometimes I believe….” Significant experiences like this one, woven through many years of the author’s life, don’t mean just one thing—there are more insights and lessons to explore here.

大學入學申請書 篇3

尊敬的系學生會:

我是計科本二班的學生王建華,現申請加入學生會學習部。小時候曾許下了很多很多偉大的承諾:我要當工程師,我要當警察,我要當老師,當我現在是個大學生的時候,我的夢想是加入學生會為同學們服務,我要鍛鍊我自己並且服務號他人,之所以我還喜歡天藍色和銀白色,它代表着我要飛向天空。我身高172是一個性格外向的人,所以我很喜歡讀書,各種書都喜歡。另我喜歡看動漫,動漫中有很多的經典,我盡情遨遊在書的海洋中,在這裏也希望交到和我擁有同樣愛好的你。我愛好運動,這個愛好導致我的性格外向,大大咧咧的,喜歡和人打交道,我愛好很多運動,籃球、排球、足球、乒乓球、羽毛球都是我所熱愛的,我為系裏在這些球類運動上還爭得了很多的榮譽,這是我的努力付出收到的回報,也是我為系裏貢獻的成果。

通過一年的大學生活,從生活和工作中,我學會了怎樣為人處世、怎樣學會忍耐,怎樣解決一些矛盾,怎樣協調好人與人之間的關係,怎樣動員一切可以團結的力量,怎樣處理好學習與工作之間的矛盾。這一切證明:我有能力勝任學生會的職務,並且有能力把學生會發揚光大。

假如我成為學生會中的一員,我要進一步完善自己,提高自己各方面的素質,要進一步提高自己的工作熱情,以飽滿的熱情和積極的心態去對待每一件事情;要進一步提高責任心,在工作中大膽創新,鋭意進取,虛心地向別人學習;要進一步的廣納賢言,做到有錯就改,有好的意見就接受,同時堅持自己的原則。假如我成為學生會中的一員,我將以“奉獻校園,服務同學”為宗旨,真正做到為同學們服務,代表同學們行使合法權益,為校園的建設盡心盡力。在學生會利益前,我們堅持以學校、大多數同學的利益為重,決不以公謀私。努力把學生會打造成一個學生自己管理自己,高度自治,體現學生主人翁精神的團體。

我知道,再多燦爛的話語也只不過是一瞬間的智慧與激情,樸實的行動才是開在成功之路上的鮮花。我想,如果我當選的話,一定會言必行,行必果。請領導給我一個施展才能的機會!?

我自願申請加入學生會學習部,這對於我來説是一次鞭策與提高,也是對我的一次鍛鍊和考驗,我申請加入這個組織,併力爭為學校教學管理做出自己的一份貢獻。我認為學習部的責任很大,它是學院的重要管理組織,不僅擔任學院學生會對學生學習的監督檢查督促等職能,更能激發學生的學習熱情,使他們養成良好的習慣,使學生的精神面貌發生新的變化。因此,它對於促進學生的管理工作有着重要的意義。可以説學習部是學院管理工作的重中之中,是管理之基,是服務之本,因此我申請加入這個組織。

如果我加入這個組織,我將感到無上光榮,我將嚴格要求自己,模範遵守學院各項紀律和規定,對照標準找差距,使自己的自身素質的提高,認真履行學習部所賦予的職能,充分發揮其監督,檢查,管理的職能,堅持標準面前人人平等,不搞小團體,不遜私情,秉公辦事,一切為了學院的發展,一切為了學院的管理,一切為了學生的利益,並把自己置身在學院學生會這個集體中,找準位置,服從組織,聽從安排,在學校管理中,做出自己的貢獻,並在管理中提升自己的能力,激發澎湃的熱情,端正學習的態度,樹立遠大的理想,樹立正確的人生觀,價值觀,珍惜時間,刻苦學習,做遵守紀律的榜樣,做認真學習的榜樣,為學院實現更大的發展,為學院創造新的輝煌做出自己的貢獻,我將從現在起向這一目標奮進,請學院領導批准我的請求各位老師:

兩千多年前莊子説:“吾生也有涯,而知也無涯”。意思是,人生是有限的,但知識是無限的。人的一生都是一個學習的過程,而學生會則為我們提供了一個彌足珍貴的學習的機會。學生會感受着時代的脈搏,和全體同學同呼吸、共命運,使我們火紅的青春中的一個無限精彩的舞台。在學生會的日常工作中可以學到求實精神;在對困難處理中,學會人格的偉岸;在相互交往中學到道德的執著;在活動中學到工作方法。

系學生會,是現在學院中的組織結構之一,是學生自己的羣眾性組織,是學院聯繫學生的橋樑和紐帶。學生自覺接受學生會的領導、督促和檢查,積極支持學生會的各項工作。它的基本任務是:遵循和貫徹黨的教育方針,促進同學德、智、體全面發展,團結和引導同學成為熱愛祖國、適應有中國特色社會主義現代化建設事業要求的合格人才;發揮作為黨和學校聯繫同學的橋樑和紐帶作用,在維護國家和全國人民整體利益的同時,表達和維護同學的具體利益;倡導和組織自我服務、自我管理、自我教育,開展健康有益、豐富多彩的課外活動和社會服務,努力為同學服務。

而學習部作為學生會的一個分支,除了具有以上所説的學生會的優點外,還具有自己獨具的特點:以提高同學們學習意識、營造校園學習氛圍為目的,開展各種同學喜聞樂見的活動。瞭解反饋廣大同學在學習方面的意見和要求,在師生之間搭起一座橋樑本站整理,促進師生的相互交流,協助教師共同探討我係教改新方向。

在學院範圍內營造良好的學習氛圍,促進我係優良學風的的形成,具體工作如下:

1。 嚴抓學習紀律。

2。 開展學術性活動。除了在校藝術節期間舉辦較為大型的學術活動外,另根據本校的專業特色和實際情況,開展各類學術性活動。

3。 加強師生之間的溝通與了爭,做好“教”,“學”雙方的信息反饋工作,配合我校教改的順利進行。定時瞭解並解決學生中學習上的問題,協助有關部門抓好學風建設,參加“評教”活動,積極反映學生對學校教學、教育工作的要求和意見,並及時向教務處反饋。

4。 提高學生會的整體成績與學習興趣。並抓好本班和全校的學習情況。

5。 進行各班間的學習經驗交流,與老師的溝通。

此致

敬禮!

20__年_月_日

大學入學申請書 篇4

敬的各位學長學姐:

你們好。

我是來自文法x班的史豔梅,在這裏我申請加入我們學習部。

首先,請允許我做一下自我介紹。我是一個平凡的女孩,但是我不甘於平庸。我性格比較活潑,隨和,能和同學們很好的交流溝通。我辦事認真嚴謹,對工作負責。在高中時代,雖然學習很緊張,但是我仍然擔任班級學習委員併兼任英語學習課代表,很好的完成了老師安排下來的任務。通過一些學長學姐的介紹和自己的一些瞭解,我對於大學有了一定的認識。大學不再像我們高中時期那樣,除了學習還是學習,而大學相對自由的時間比較多。在經歷高中三年的默默學習之後,我希望可以在大學收穫一些不同以往的經歷與經驗,所以在這裏,我再次鄭重的申請加入學習部。

其次,談一下我對於學習部的認識,學習部作為學生會的重要部門之一,肩負着組織和管理學生,豐富同學們的課餘生活,促進同學們各方面的發展。學習部始終以“創造良好的學習環境,全面提高廣大學生的綜合素質”,為同學們努力營造一個良好的學習氛圍,為實現大學生高素質,高文化的目標而奮鬥,學習部通過各種形式的活動使廣大同學對學習更有興趣,帶動同學的學習熱情,豐富同學的業餘生活。大學,雖然學習不是要做的事情,但是作為學生,我們的首要任務就是要把學習搞好。而現在的很多同學們,很多的時間都用來逛街或者上網等等一些瑣事上,浪費了寶貴的大學時光。所以,在這樣的情況下,學習部的作用也就日益重要了。

也許我瞭解的並不夠,但是我始終是懷着一顆真誠的心,來看待我現在所做的的事情,來了解這個部門,咱們學習部的主要任務有組織新老師生交流會,加強新老生的交流,促進新生儘快適應大學生活。定期開展到課率的查詢工作,營造良好的學習風氣。舉辦各種知識講座。豐富校園文化,提高學生素質。舉辦各種朗誦、徵文比賽以及趣味知識競賽,為廣大同學提供一個展示自我的平台。我已經認真瞭解了我們的任務,我有信心並且有能力完成安排下來的每一項工作。

在我們入學的時候,是學生會的學長學姐們,不求回報的幫助了我們,從火車站到宿舍的接待,讓我非常感動。我希望我也有機會能幫助下一屆學弟學妹們。

加入學習部,在服務同學的同時對我自身也會有很大的幫助。首先可以促進我自身的學習,為大家做出一種表率。在組織參加各種活動的同時,對於我自身也是一種鍛鍊。在與同學,同伴的交流合作時,能夠使我的視野更開闊,知識更豐富,使我接觸更多的人,增強我的交際能力和辦事能力。

如果我有幸能成為咱們學習部的一員,我一定加倍努力,以學習部為平台展示我的能力發揮我的創造力和想象力來更好的完成我的工作,腳踏實地的去對待每一件事情,增強責任意識。也會充分發揚團隊精神,積極的參與、組織各種形式的活動,和同學共同進步。即使最後,我失敗了,我也不會灰心喪氣,這次競選本身對我來説就是一次很好的鍛鍊機會。我會找出自己的不足,更加努力,讓自己做的更好。我再次鄭重的申請加入學習部,希望組織給我一個機會。

此致

敬禮!

申請人:

大學入學申請書 篇5

尊敬的團委老師:

您們好!

我是來自﹡系﹡級﹡班的﹡﹡﹡。現在我要申請﹡﹡學院學生會文藝部部長一職。

陽光向上,積極樂觀是我對自己的評價。我想,擁有這一點,是要競選文藝部部長最基本的一個條件。然而我知道,擁有一個樂觀的心態並不能勝任文藝部部長一職,更重要的是熱情、能力和責任心,還要有願意為大家服務的決心。

不知不覺中在學生會生活和工作的時間已經有一年了,對文藝部的各項工作都有了深入的瞭解。學生會作為在我院團委直接領導下學生組織,它是聯繫老師和同學的溝通的橋樑,而文藝部更是在構建這個橋樑必不可少的一塊磚,在各個大型活動中都要有文藝部的身影,文藝部不僅給大家帶來歡樂,豐富大家的業餘生活,並且在文藝部舉行的各大活動中,也給同學們創造一個展示自我的平台。在文藝部這個大家庭教中,我學會成長,我也變得更加成熟,不管在工作方面還是為人處事。在文藝部工作的一年多的時間裏,我深刻的認識到團結、協作是文藝部成員最應具備的精神。 回顧這一年,部裏的每項活動我都積極參加,讓我的日常生活更加充實,文藝部在這一年裏舉辦很多有質量的晚會,有水準的比賽,同時我們和學生會其他部門積極合作共同完成學生會的工作。這些工作,讓我的經歷變得更加豐富,是我的能力得到更好的鍛鍊,讓我能夠更好地處理人際關係,能夠更出色的完成其他工作任務。

加入文藝部是興趣的指引,而熱情是我競選部長的最大優勢。過去的一年在老師的指導下,學長學姐的幫助下以及同學們的協助下我逐步熟悉並瞭解了文藝部的工作,先後參與了很多的活動,提高了自己的工作能力,與同學之間的配合也越來越來默契,與文藝部以及其他部門的同學建立了深厚的友誼和關係,在工作方面得到了來自他們的大力幫助。從進入文藝部起,我全力協助部長的工作,與全體文藝部成員一起將文藝部凝聚成了一個團結向上的集體,並加強與學生會其他部門之間的聯繫與配合。

我來競選文藝部部長,因為我相信我的勤勞刻苦,相信我的努力進取之心,我希望把我的全部的熱情以及自身日益增長的組織辦事能力投入到文藝部的工作中去。假如我當選了文藝部部長一職,首先我會保質保量的完成團委老師、主席團發放的任務。其次,我會多思考,努力完善各大型活動的方案,讓同學們枯燥的學習生活中多一些歡樂。並且在例行事務上儘量做到優化、精簡化、高效化,加強與其他各部合作,以我們共同的熱情、責任心以及能力,帶給大家一個全新的學生會。也給自己一個展現自己、鍛鍊自己的舞台。 如果我沒有當選文藝部部長一職,我也不會氣餒,我會繼續努力,全心全意儘自己最大的努力為同學服務。

希望團委老師能批准我的文藝部部長申請

此致

敬禮!

20xx年x月x日

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