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How To Write The Intel Scholarship Essay
By Daur, ScholarshipTop founder and scholarship data reviewer
Reviewed by ScholarshipTop editorial review · Published Apr 30, 2026
ScholarshipTop editorial guide. Writing guidance does not guarantee eligibility, selection, or award payment.

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Understand What This Essay Must Prove
Start with restraint. You do not need to sound extraordinary on every line. You need to help a selection committee understand who you are, what you have done, how you think, and why support for your education makes sense now.
Because this program helps students cover education costs, your essay should usually do more than list accomplishments. It should connect your record to your next step. In practice, that means showing three things clearly: what has shaped you, what you have already taken responsibility for, and what further education will allow you to do that you cannot yet do as fully.
Before drafting, read the exact prompt and underline the verbs. If the prompt asks you to describe, you need concrete detail. If it asks you to explain, you need reasoning. If it asks why you deserve support, do not answer with entitlement; answer with evidence, judgment, and a credible plan.
A strong essay for this kind of scholarship often leaves the reader with a simple takeaway: this student has used available opportunities well, understands the next gap in their development, and will use educational support with purpose.
Brainstorm In Four Buckets Before You Write
Do not begin with your introduction. Begin by gathering raw material. Use four buckets so your essay has range rather than sounding like a résumé in paragraph form.
1. Background: what shaped you
List moments, environments, or responsibilities that influenced your direction. This could include family expectations, a move, a school context, a financial constraint, a caregiving role, a class that changed your thinking, or a community problem you saw up close. Choose material that explains your perspective, not material that exists only to win sympathy.
- What specific moment changed how you saw your future?
- What challenge or responsibility forced you to grow up, adapt, or lead?
- What part of your environment gave you a problem worth solving?
2. Achievements: what you actually did
Now list actions, not traits. The committee cannot reward “hardworking” or “passionate” unless those qualities appear through evidence. Write down roles, projects, jobs, teams, initiatives, and outcomes. Add numbers, timeframes, and scope where honest.
- How many people did you help, lead, tutor, organize, or serve?
- What improved because of your work?
- What responsibility did someone trust you with?
- What result can you name without exaggeration?
If one experience stands above the rest, break it into a simple sequence: what was happening, what you needed to do, what you chose, and what changed. That sequence gives your body paragraphs momentum.
3. The gap: what you still need
This is where many essays become generic. Do not say only that college will help you “grow” or “achieve dreams.” Name the missing piece. Perhaps you need formal training, technical depth, research exposure, mentorship, a credential, or access to a field that is not available in your current setting. The more precise the gap, the more convincing your educational plan becomes.
- What can you not yet do at the level you want?
- What knowledge or training stands between your current record and your next contribution?
- Why is this the right time for further study?
4. Personality: what makes the essay human
Your essay should not read like an annual report. Add detail that reveals temperament and values: the way you solve problems, the kind of responsibility you accept, the questions that keep returning, the habits that sustain your work. A small concrete detail can do more than a large abstract claim.
- What do people rely on you for?
- What kind of difficulty brings out your best thinking?
- What detail would make this essay unmistakably yours?
After brainstorming, circle one or two items from each bucket. You will not use everything. The goal is selection, not accumulation.
Build An Essay That Moves, Not A List That Sits Still
Once you have material, shape it into a progression. The best scholarship essays feel like thought in motion: the reader sees where you started, what tested you, what you did, what you learned, and why that learning points toward your next step.
A practical structure looks like this:
- Opening scene or concrete moment: begin inside a real situation, not with a thesis about your character. Show the reader a decision, responsibility, obstacle, or turning point.
- Context and stakes: explain why that moment mattered. What larger issue, pressure, or aspiration sat behind it?
- Action and result: describe what you did with specificity. Focus on choices, not just circumstances.
- Reflection: explain what changed in your thinking, standards, or direction.
- Forward link: connect that growth to your educational next step and why scholarship support matters now.
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This structure works because it combines evidence with interpretation. The committee does not just learn what happened; it learns how you make meaning from what happened.
Keep one main idea per paragraph. If a paragraph starts as a story, let it stay a story. If it starts as reflection, let it stay reflection. If it starts as future goals, do not suddenly insert a new anecdote halfway through. Clear paragraph jobs make your essay easier to trust.
Draft An Opening That Earns Attention
Your first paragraph should create interest through specificity. Avoid announcing your topic with lines such as “I am applying for this scholarship because...” or “I have always wanted to succeed.” Those openings waste your strongest real estate.
Instead, open with a moment that reveals pressure, responsibility, or insight. Good openings often include one of the following:
- a task you had to carry out under real constraints
- a conversation that changed your direction
- a problem you noticed and decided not to ignore
- a small but telling detail from work, school, family, or service
Then pivot quickly from scene to significance. Do not leave the reader asking, “Why am I being told this?” Answer that question within the first paragraph or two. The point of the opening is not drama for its own sake. The point is to establish a credible lens on your character and trajectory.
For example, if you begin with a demanding responsibility, the next paragraph should show what that responsibility taught you about judgment, discipline, or service. If you begin with a setback, the next paragraph should show what you did in response and how that response changed your standards.
As you draft, test every paragraph with one question: So what? If the paragraph does not deepen the committee’s understanding of your readiness, growth, or purpose, revise or cut it.
Connect Your Record To Need And Future Use
Many applicants can describe effort. Fewer can explain why support matters in a way that is concrete, dignified, and forward-looking. If the prompt invites discussion of financial need, be factual and measured. Name the pressure without turning the essay into a ledger. Then show how support would protect time, expand access, or make a specific educational path more feasible.
Be careful here: the strongest case is rarely “I need money.” It is “Here is the work I have already done, here is the next level I am prepared to pursue, and here is how support would help me use that opportunity well.”
Your future paragraph should also avoid inflated promises. You do not need to claim that you will transform an entire field. Instead, describe the scale at which you can speak honestly. That might mean contributing to a community, entering a profession with purpose, deepening expertise in a subject, or building on a pattern of service or initiative you have already begun.
If your essay includes goals, make them legible:
- Near term: what you plan to study, build, join, or learn next
- Medium term: what role or capability you aim to develop
- Long term: what kind of contribution you hope to make
This progression helps the committee see that your ambitions are grounded in action rather than slogans.
Revise For Precision, Reflection, And Voice
Strong revision is not cosmetic. It is structural. After your first draft, step back and check whether each paragraph has a clear function. Then revise sentence by sentence for force and clarity.
Revision checklist
- Is the opening concrete? Replace general claims with a real moment.
- Did you show action? Use verbs that name what you did: organized, designed, tutored, analyzed, led, built, negotiated, improved.
- Did you include accountable detail? Add numbers, duration, frequency, or scope where truthful.
- Did you reflect? After each major example, explain what changed in you and why that matters now.
- Did you identify the gap? Make clear what further education will help you do better or differently.
- Does the essay sound like a person? Keep one or two details that reveal voice and values.
- Did you cut résumé repetition? The essay should interpret your record, not duplicate a list.
Also listen for weak diction. Replace vague praise words with evidence. “Dedicated” becomes believable when you show the schedule you kept, the responsibility you carried, or the result you sustained. “Passionate” becomes believable when you show what you chose to do repeatedly, especially when no one required it.
Prefer active sentences when a human actor exists. “I coordinated three volunteers and redesigned the schedule” is stronger than “The schedule was redesigned and volunteers were coordinated.” Clear actors create credibility.
Mistakes That Weaken Otherwise Good Essays
Several common habits make scholarship essays blur together. Avoid them early so you do not have to rescue the draft later.
- Cliché beginnings: do not open with “From a young age,” “I have always been passionate about,” or similar formulas.
- Trait dumping: listing qualities such as resilient, hardworking, and motivated without proof.
- Résumé narration: moving chronologically through activities without a central insight.
- Unclear stakes: telling a story but never explaining why it mattered.
- Generic future goals: saying you want to “make a difference” without naming where, how, or through what preparation.
- Overwriting: using inflated language where plain, exact language would be stronger.
- Need without agency: describing financial pressure without also showing initiative, judgment, and direction.
Before submitting, ask someone you trust to answer three questions after reading your essay: Who is this student? What have they actually done? Why does support for their education make sense now? If the reader cannot answer all three, revise until they can.
Your goal is not to sound like everyone else trying to impress a committee. Your goal is to make a clear, credible case that your past actions, present judgment, and next educational step belong in one coherent story.
FAQ
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Can I reuse an essay from another scholarship application?
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