Brainstormer for Cornell
"Why Cornell" Essay Brainstormer
Cornell University is a private ivy league school in Ithaca, New York, known for seven distinct undergraduate colleges, its agricultural and hotel school legacies, and the 'any person, any study' motto. Most "Why Cornell" supplementals cap around 650 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 Cornell 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 Cornell'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 Cornell essayCornell at a glance
- Type
- Private · Ivy League
- Location
- Ithaca, New York
- Known for
- seven distinct undergraduate colleges, its agricultural and hotel school legacies, and the 'any person, any study' motto
- Why-essay word limit
- 650 words
Structural template for a 650-word "Why Cornell" draft
Word count is the hardest constraint in the "Why Cornell" essay. Here's how a strong draft at this length distributes its budget.
One extended specific moment. Not three things you care about — one thing rendered in detail. Long essays die when they try to do too much.
The meaning of the scene and how it connects to your intellectual pattern. Earn the reflection by showing the work that produced it.
Three specifics from Cornell, with a clear throughline. Why would these particular things pull you — not just any elite school?
A forward-looking image, not a summary. The reader should close the essay seeing you on Cornell's campus doing something specific.
What Cornell readers weight differently from the rest of the Ivies
Ivy League admissions committees see applicants with near-identical academic profiles. By the time a Cornell 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 Cornell supplemental, and the recommendations. A great Cornell 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 Cornell applicants miss
Ithaca, New York gives Cornell 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 Cornell resources
Context on Cornell admissions
Cornell's seven undergraduate colleges have substantially different admit rates. CALS, Human Ecology, and ILR are often (but not always) somewhat less selective than the College of Arts and Sciences or Dyson. You apply to one specific college.
Current Cornell supplemental prompts
These are the prompts Cornell has recently used. Always verify against the official Cornell application before submitting.
Prompt 1
"College of Agriculture and Life Sciences: Why are you drawn to studying the major you have selected? Please discuss how your interests and related experiences have influenced your choice. How will an education from the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS) at Cornell University specifically serve to support your learning, growth, and the pursuit of your goals?"
Prompt 2
"College of Arts and Sciences: At Cornell, we aim to bring people together to think about the world's most enduring and pressing questions. Describe a question that excites you about the world."
Prompt 3
"College of Engineering: Why do you want to study engineering? Why do you want to study engineering at Cornell specifically?"
Prompt 4
"Dyson Business School: The readings on Dyson's website indicate that applicants should connect their interests to Dyson's specific programs. Share an experience that has positioned you to succeed in Dyson's unique environment."
Prompt 5
"ILR: Describe your intellectual interests, their evolution, and what makes them exciting to you."
Three opening angles that work for Cornell
- 1Open with a specific experience that led you toward your intended major, grounded in a place (a farm, a lab, a factory, a newsroom, a family business). Cornell's college-specific prompts want to see a real origin story.
- 2Name a Cornell program specific to your college (the Dyson Business Minor, the Meinig Family Cornell National Scholars, the Cornell Tradition). Generic Cornell references get lost across seven schools.
- 3If you're applying to CALS or ILR, be clear about why not the College of Arts and Sciences. Cornell reviewers want to see intent behind the college choice.
Mistakes Cornell reviewers see every year
- →Applying to CALS or Human Ecology because they're perceived as 'easier,' then writing a supplement that reveals you actually want Arts & Sciences.
- →Writing a long Why Cornell essay (up to 650 words) as if it's the Common App personal statement. The prompt asks about fit, not your origin story.
- →Mentioning 'any person, any study' as if it's a substitute for specific engagement with a program. It's famous; it's also cliché.
Cornell essay FAQ
How many undergraduate colleges does Cornell have?+
Seven: Arts and Sciences, Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS), Engineering, Dyson (business), Human Ecology, ILR (industrial and labor relations), and Architecture, Art, and Planning.
How long is the Cornell Why Essay?+
Up to 650 words, longer than many Ivies. The length invites genuine engagement with a specific college's programs, not filler.
Can I transfer between Cornell undergraduate colleges after admission?+
Internal transfers are possible but not guaranteed. Admissions officers notice if your supplement suggests a mismatch with the college you applied to.
Does Cornell evaluate students by undergraduate college?+
Yes. Each college has its own admissions committee and its own culture. Dyson and Engineering have distinct criteria from CALS or ILR.
What does 'any person, any study' actually mean at Cornell?+
It's Ezra Cornell's founding motto describing his vision for a university open to any student and any subject. On paper it explains the seven-college structure. In an essay, it's name-check content unless you pair it with a specific program you'd pursue.