Common grammatical errors to avoid in your university application
These are the most common grammatical errors made by international students with advice from admissions tutors on what impact they could have on your application
榴莲视频>- Admissions
- Study abroad
Share
As application deadlines for universities around the world approach these are the grammatical rules that international applications should double check to ensure that their personal statements are up to standard.
Many students used the wrong prepositions (for example, 鈥渇or鈥, 鈥渙n鈥, 鈥渁t鈥) and many do not consistently use the correct verb conjugation for the sentence subject.聽
Correcting common grammatical mistakes before you even get to university can set you up for greater success when you explore original ideas in your coursework.
Perhaps more importantly at this stage, correct grammar could make the key difference in impressing admissions tutors.
How not to write a personal statement
Applying through Ucas as an international student
11 most common opening lines in Ucas personal statements
What happens after you submit your Ucas application?
Speaking in his capacity as an admissions tutor, Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University London, said: 鈥淲e鈥檙e only human. On the one hand, that鈥檚 bad because we get irritated when we think people don鈥檛 care enough to make sure they don鈥檛 make mistakes.聽
鈥淥n the other, we鈥檙e often rather humbled by how brilliant non-native speakers manage to speak our language far better than we ourselves speak others, so we can be pretty forgiving. That said, ultimately, applicants are applying to do a degree at a UK university so we need to know that they will be able to cope.聽
鈥淟ots of mistakes in a personal statement might give us cause to worry that someone might struggle. Obviously, we look at everything else, too 鈥 language tests, for instance 鈥 so it鈥檚 not the be-all and end-all. But best advice to applicants is to check, check and check again!鈥
But a member of the international marketing team at King鈥檚 College London took a firmer stance on grammatical errors in applications.
鈥淚t is imperative that a personal statement be free of any mistakes, be they grammatical or factual ones,鈥 they said.
鈥淎n essay littered with mistakes will give the reader an impression that the writer is incompetent and unprofessional, regardless of how proficient they are at their course. It would definitely be a disadvantage for the applicant if their essay was compared with other more well-written and put together ones.
鈥淗ence, it is advisable for applicants to show their personal statements to several proofreaders to make sure there aren鈥檛 any discernible errors in the final product.鈥
So, to maximise your chances of winning a place at a university of your choice, and of producing your best work when you get there, these are the common errors to look out for:
1. Mistaking 鈥渆ffect鈥 for 鈥渁ffect鈥
2. Homophone errors (words that sound the same but are spelled differently such as "course" and "coarse")
3. Use of US English spellings instead of UK English (such as "color" instead of "colour")
4. Misuse of the word 鈥渁bout鈥
5. Lack or misuse of apostrophes
6. Multiple use of 鈥渟aid鈥 or聽 鈥渂ecause鈥 in a single sentence
7. Missing, incomplete or incorrect academic referencing
8. Overly long sentences
9. Syntax issues (how sentences are structured)
10. Missing or misusing some words (鈥渁鈥, 鈥渢he鈥)
11. Failing to make sure singular and plural nouns agree with their verbs
12. Incorrect use of conjunctions (such as 鈥渁lthough鈥, 鈥渢herefore鈥, 鈥渨hereas鈥)
13.聽 Wrong preposition usage (for example, 鈥渇or鈥, 鈥渙n鈥, 鈥渁t鈥 and so forth)聽聽
This article was updated by Student Content Editor Seeta Bhardwa in January 2020. This article was originally聽published in December 2015.
Read more:聽Top tips for writing an original personal statement