- 22 August 2013
- 3 min read
Writing a personal statement for your UCAS application
SubscribeWhen you apply to become a student / undergraduate in health care you have the opportunity to to choose which branch / specialism you want to study. For instance, in nursing, you can choose adult, mental health, learning disability or child branch. Many universities look for a commitment to one specialism only, so unless it’s absolutely necessary, only apply for one specialism on your UCAS application form.
Places usually go quickly so it’s important to get your UCAS application in as soon as possible.
If you’re hoping to become a student nurse in Sept 2014, you need to be applying by December 2013.
Part of your course application includes your personal statement.
This is your opportunity to give the admissions officers an insight into your motivation for becoming a qualified nurse and pursuing a nursing career.
Be honest and open about your why you want to work in healthcare, and give a real insight into your background and your knowledge of the job.
It’s important to show that you are completed committed to healthcare, and to the medical specialism that you’re applying for.
There can be such strong competition for places that the universities want to be sure they are taking in students who are committed to completing the course and working as in medicine after they qualify.
As with any job application or university writing, it should be all your own work. A university will check for plagiarism in your personal statement, so don’t be tempted to search online for nursing personal statements to copy and paste from.
Make it personal to you and your reasons for becoming a doctor / pharmacist / dentist.
It should take you several drafts to be completely happy with it, so don’t leave it until the last minute before you start work on it.
You can start simply by gathering the key points you want to mention and then start putting them into an order.
You’ll find that tackling a personal statement in stages is much easier than sitting down to write it from start to finish in one go.
Some people find the opening and closing sections the hardest parts to write, so why not write the main part and add the introduction and closing statements in at the end.
A great personal statement could be the difference between you being invited for interview and not, or eventually being offered a place, and not.
It’s worth putting the time and effort into making sure you’re is the best it can be.
About this contributor
Nurses.co.uk Founder
I launched Nurses.co.uk (and subsequently Socialcare.co.uk, Healthjobs.co.uk and Healthcarejobs.ie) in 2008. 500 applications are made every day via our jobs boards, helping to connect hiring organisations recruiting for clinical, medical, care and support roles with specialist jobseekers. Our articles, often created by our own audience, shine a light on the career pathways in healthcare, and give a platform to ideas and opinions around their work and jobs.
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