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联合译通被《21世纪留学交流未来》杂志选为留学文书专栏长期执笔专家!
PS 写作样例一
联合译通认为,对于PS、推荐信这些欧美文化和思维习惯下的事物,只有真正学习那些地道的,既欧美本国学生申请的优秀文章才最有借鉴和参考意义。联合译通的母语写作专家精选了一些为本国学生写的优秀申请文件供大家参考。通过这些样例,您可以了解到欧美英语的文风结构、文书写作的思维方式和英语表达。
Statement
of Purpose
They
call it the last frontier. Last summer I set out for
Alaska, to see the true wildness left in this world.
This spirit of adventure took me to Homer on the Kenai
peninsula, where I became the "dog handler"
for Iditarod musher Jack Berry and his sixty huskies.
Although I came to Alaska to live among the wild, I
found myself spending all my free time teaching English
pronunciation to a Brazilian doctor and arguing plant
physiology with the old women of the Homer Garden Club,
when I wasn't hitchhiking the fifteen miles to the Homer
Public Library. For better or for worse I'm obsessed
with learning, and I want to take my pursuit of knowledge
to a far greater scale.
Theoretical
physicists are in pursuit of the grand unifying theory,
the set of equations that will make compatible all of
this world's macro- and microcosms. As I see it, there
is a similar grand objective in the world of biology.
I feel a drive to elucidate the mechanisms of life through
molecular studies. There are ways, paths, lines of thinking
that converge the realm of the biological with the domain
of chemical logic. I know that a solid understanding
of the physical function of proteins can be that unifying
link.
Now
it is the rainy winter of my fourth and final year at
Reed College. I have been an enthusiastic biochemistry
and molecular biology major enrolled in what is possibly
the best program of its kind. This past spring I worked
independently on a project to deter- mine the preferred
conformation of dehydrated isosorbide. While this was
interesting in its own right, I think that the knowledge
obtained through studies of organic chemistry is most
relevant when applied toward macromolecules. Aside from
being fascinating structures, they have a significance
reaching far beyond the laboratory. I've chosen the
topic of my undergraduate thesis with these greater
interests in mind. For this thesis I am pipetting toward
a crystal structure of xylose isomerase that contains
a single active site mutation. I find it absolutely
amazing that proteins can catalyze reactions and am
obsessed with the relationship between their function
and structure. Enzymes catalyze reactions, but an amino
acid polymer is also capable of much more. Motor proteins,G-proteins,
the amalgamations in the SNARE hypothesis--cells have
created proteins for an intense diversity of uses. I
am lucky to be a structural biologist at a time, when
the techniques necessary to decipher the form of these
proteins are uncovered. I am intrigued by the functional
structure of proteins, and value any laboratory method
that can provide molecular insight. I chose to apply
to Scripps because I have been uncommonly impressed
by the structural research I've seen published by Scripps
researchers. Orton Gilula's and Nigel Unwin's investigations
of the structure and functional mechanisms of gap-junction
and ion channels. are especially intriguing. I find
ion channels to be wondrous edifices. Ion channels are
contraptions straight out of a Dr. Seuss story book:
one massive protein that chooses to allow specific ions
through it, if and only if it is satisfied with the
chemical and electrical environment surrounding it.
This truly is a level of chemistry where biological
decisions are made.
I
could drone on for pages about the research that I find
fascinating, as Scripps has a collection of amazing
resources. I would love the opportunity to work in a
laboratory with this talent. I am enrolling in graduate
school to learn more and to understand greater biological
systems so that I will be able to apply my molecular
knowledge to my own research. I'm fascinated by the
biology of the cell; with a thorough understanding of
the techniques available to the protein scientist, I
will finally possess the ability to address the basic
hows and whys of cell function.
Two years ago I spent a semester abroad with the School
for Field Studies in the Pacific island nation of Palau.
With every mangrove and coral reef transect we took,
I wanted to know: "Why do these angel fish live
here? How can these trees grow out of the salt sea?"
The only answers my professors could give: "Because
the fish do best In this biotic environment. . . because
tl1ey-'ve evolved and adapted for longer than you can
imagine." The answers available are just not satisfactory,
but I know that with more training I could find those
answers for myself. I want answers with a mechanism:
answers that resemble not statistical spreadsheets,
rather blueprints of ingenious design; answers that
might detail how membrane proteins balance harsh extra-cellular
conditions with a cytoplasm that is conducive to life.
These are answers I need to find, and I'm too stubborn
to quit now. I need to go to graduate school, for I've
only just learned the principles of protein structure
and function. I want to be an expert. The MCSC Program
holds the resources that can enable me to continue my
quest.

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