Brainstormer for Columbia
"Why Columbia" Essay Brainstormer
Columbia University is a private ivy league school in New York, New York, known for the Core Curriculum, its location in Manhattan, and cross-registration with Barnard and Juilliard. Most "Why Columbia" supplementals cap around 150 words, so specificity matters more than eloquence. Enter your intended major and interests, and this free AI tool will surface specific programs, courses, and campus details you can weave into your draft.
How to use this for your Columbia supplemental
- 1. Enter your intended major and a short description of what you're actually curious about.
- 2. Review the generated professors, courses, and programs. Verify each one on Columbia's official site before citing it. AI can hallucinate course codes.
- 3. Pick 2 or 3 items that genuinely connect to your interests. One specific professor beats three generic program mentions.
- 4. Use the suggested opening angle as a starting point, then make it your own.
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Score my Columbia essayColumbia at a glance
- Type
- Private · Ivy League
- Location
- New York, New York
- Known for
- the Core Curriculum, its location in Manhattan, and cross-registration with Barnard and Juilliard
- Why-essay word limit
- 150 words
Structural template for a 150-word "Why Columbia" draft
Word count is the hardest constraint in the "Why Columbia" essay. Here's how a strong draft at this length distributes its budget.
Drop into a concrete moment from your life. A physics lab, a kitchen prep line, a bus ride. Let the reader infer the rest of you.
Name what the scene reveals about how you think, then pivot to the version of that thinking you'd pursue at Columbia.
Two Columbia specifics — a professor's research line, a course, a cross-registration option, a student group. Explain what you'd do with them.
One forward-looking beat that sounds like a sentence only you could write. Avoid the "I cannot wait" cliche.
What Columbia readers weight differently from the rest of the Ivies
Ivy League admissions committees see applicants with near-identical academic profiles. By the time a Columbia reader reaches your supplementals, they've already confirmed you can do the work. What they're reading for is pattern — a coherent person across the Common App essay, the activities list, the Columbia supplemental, and the recommendations. A great Columbia draft doesn't introduce a new self; it reveals a specific version of the self already visible in your activities list, using detail only you could produce. Generic Ivy-league language ("rigorous academics," "intellectual community") is invisible noise at this tier.
Location-specific angles most Columbia applicants miss
New York, New York gives Columbia applicants an unusual structural advantage: internship pipelines, off-campus research affiliations, and a commuting academic culture. Referencing how you'd use the city as a learning environment — specifically, not generally — is a stronger fit signal than naming the campus itself.
More Columbia resources
Context on Columbia admissions
Columbia admits roughly 4 percent and has a famously rigorous Core Curriculum required of all undergraduates. Columbia's supplement features three list-style prompts (books, sources, experiences) plus three short essays, including the 150-word Why Columbia.
Current Columbia supplemental prompts
These are the prompts Columbia has recently used. Always verify against the official Columbia application before submitting.
Prompt 1
"List the titles of the books, essays, poetry, short stories or plays you read outside of academic courses that you enjoyed most during secondary/high school."
Prompt 2
"List the titles of the print, electronic publications and websites you read regularly."
Prompt 3
"List the movies, albums, shows, museums, lectures, events at your school or other entertainments you enjoyed most in the past year."
Prompt 4
"A hallmark of the Columbia experience is being able to learn and live in a community with a wide range of perspectives. How do you believe this will form a critical aspect of your undergraduate experience?"
Prompt 5
"What attracts you to your preferred areas of study at Columbia College or Columbia Engineering?"
Prompt 6
"Why are you interested in attending Columbia University? (150 words)"
Three opening angles that work for Columbia
- 1For the lists, lean into the interesting, not the impressive. Columbia reviewers read these to get a read on how you think, not to verify you've read Infinite Jest.
- 2For the 150-word Why Columbia, anchor to the Core. It's the one element of Columbia that every applicant has to reckon with, so show you've actually thought about a specific Core course and what arguing with it would feel like.
- 3For the community essay, don't talk about New York City abstractly. Pick a specific neighborhood, museum, or artistic tradition you'd engage with from campus.
Mistakes Columbia reviewers see every year
- →Filling the book list with prestige titles you skimmed. Columbia's readers catch this.
- →Writing the Why Columbia as 'NYC is amazing.' Columbia is not NYU. Engage with the Core or stay home.
- →Treating the 'community' essay as a diversity essay. The prompt is about how you would engage with other perspectives on Columbia's campus, not your own background.
Columbia essay FAQ
What is the Columbia Core Curriculum?+
A required set of small-seminar courses every Columbia College undergrad takes, covering ancient and modern texts, art, music, science, and a required writing course. It's the single most distinctive feature of a Columbia education.
How long is the Why Columbia essay?+
150 words. The shortest Why Essay among the Ivies except for Harvard's short supplementals, so density is everything.
Do I have to apply to Columbia College or Columbia Engineering separately?+
Yes. You pick one at the time of application and the prompts differ slightly. Transferring between undergraduate schools after admission is possible but not guaranteed.
What should the list prompts look like?+
Columbia expects genuine, somewhat quirky lists that reveal your taste. A very safe list full of canonical titles with no personal throughline reads as curated.
Can I mention Columbia's location in NYC?+
Yes, but specifically. A Columbia student who mentions a particular lecture series at the 92nd Street Y or a museum they'd audit paper at is grounded. 'I love NYC' is not.