
How To Write Brown's Supplemental Essays For 2025/26
Providence, Rhode Island · Private

Mariama A
Former Brown Admissions Officer
Brown asks you to design an education with no required courses outside your concentration. All three essays are versions of one question: handed that freedom, what would you do with it?
The Open Curriculum question comes up always. That's Brown's pride. How will they utilize this Open Curriculum? They look for students who will take advantage of it.

Mariama A
Former Brown Admissions Officer
When it's written for us, we can tell. They're saying everything they think we want to hear, rather than telling us who they are. The story of who they are.

Mariama A
Former Brown Admissions Officer
Open Curriculum fit
Specific Brown classes, programs, and professors, each named with a real reason it matters.
Authentic voice
The essay sounds like a real 17-year-old, and the voice matches the rest of the file.
Show, don't tell
Concrete scenes and specific images. Skip abstract claims about qualities you want noticed.
Narrative coherence
The three essays form one student. Each one confirms what the others already say.
Engaging across difference
Brown wants people who can room with someone they disagree with and value the conversation.
Brown is looking for kindness. They want nice people. They have something special on campus, and they want to continue that. They want people who want to have an impact on the world.

Mariama A
Former Brown Admissions Officer
Writing about someone else
If a reader learns more about your grandfather than about you, the essay fails its job.
Paraphrasing Open Curriculum
Restating Brown's website instead of applying the Open Curriculum to your specific interests.
Poems and indirect language
Brown readers move fast. Poetry wants a slow read most officers won't give it.
Thesaurus essays
A word like plethora reads as performance. The words you'd actually use are the right ones.
Ghostwriting by an adult
Polished essays that don't match the voice of the rest of the file get flagged in committee.
We want to admit you, not your grandfather. Your grandfather might be this amazing man, but we're not admitting him. If we're learning more about him than we are about you, that's not a strong application.

Mariama A
Former Brown Admissions Officer
Nearly every Brown essay mistake comes down to writing that could belong to anyone. If the reader can't picture the distinctive person on the page, the essay has failed the one thing it's there to do.
You want a cohesive story, a narrative seen throughout the whole application. Is the story told in your transcript, testing, activities, essays, and what teachers write about you? All of that has to be consistent.

Mariama A
Former Brown Admissions Officer
Your transcript and activities are the record of what you did. Your essays are the only place that says why, and when the why doesn't fit the record, a reader trusts the record over the essay.
