悉尼大学商学国贸双硕士毕业,现居澳洲,在澳学习生活15+年,从事教育咨询工作超过10年,澳洲政府注册教育顾问,上千成功升学转学签证案例,定期受邀亲自走访澳洲各类学校
您所在的位置: 首页> 新闻列表> 美国研究生留学ps范文分享 生物医学篇.
为了帮助同学们理清美国研究生留学ps写作的思路,在今天的文章中,澳际留学小编将与诸位同学分享一份美国研究生个人陈述范文,希望可以在一定程度上帮到大家!更多留学文书资讯,还请继续关注澳际教育美国留学频道!
X同学就读于华中农业大学,食品科学与工程专业,打算申请生物医学工程和材料工程专业。X同学有着跟许多中国大学生类似的经历,高考失利,没有录取到第一志愿,最后含泪从了第二志愿和专业。刚进大学时他很懊恼沮丧,没有目标,每天只是盲目地参加一些社团活动,学习上也不重视。好在后来他尝试了很多事情:学生工作,社团活动,数学建模竞赛等,最后找到了一件自己喜欢的事情——做实验,并一心投入,取得了一定的成绩,也让他对将来的人生规划清晰了不少。
作为一名本科生,X同学有着傲人的研究经历,也在各种期刊上发表了很多论文。但是他的这些“丰功伟绩”我们并没有在美国研究生PS中大书特书。相反我们在美国留学文书的开头讲到他失败的高考经历以及刚开始他是如何的失望。中国传统思想认为“劳心者治人,劳力者治于人”,就读一所农业大学就意味着以后要从事“土苦惨”的工作。然而他的这种偏见随着不断接触高科技的实验器材和尖端的实验项目而消除。原来食品科学并不是种菜,加工食物。X同学的这篇PS以非常诙谐的方式展现的不仅是一个会做实验的学生,更是一个低调,幽默,有思想的人。下面,小编就带申请美国研究生留学的你一起来看看!
美国研究生个人陈述范文:生物医学工程专业
China’s pervasive Confucian value system dates back to more than 2000 years ago. One of the major Confucian tenets is that those who toil their minds rule and those who toil with their hands are ruled. In ancient China when the great sages, such as Confucius and Mencius, lived and taught, the “mind” or what we now know to be the function of the brains was rerred to as the “heart” because the heart was believed then to be capable of thinking. Scholarly people, those who could read and write were superior and held in high regard; People who did manual work, especially those who worked on the land, i.e, peasants, were inferior and looked down upon. This highly discriminatory attitude is very much alive in China even today. So when I failed to be accepted by a comprehensive and well-known university, my first choice, and was admitted by Huazhong Agricultural University, my second and less prerred choice, I felt disappointed. I could tell that many of my friends, relatives and teachers felt somewhat disappointed too. They thought, and I thought too, that I could have done better than just a “Moo U”. In China, the mentioning of agriculture immediately conjures up the Confucian image of a laborer tilling the paddy rice fields, whose hands are dirty and whose mind is not particularly sharp and whose fate is going to be dictated and determined by those who labor their hearts.
I had to admit that when I took up the Food Science and Engineering major, I thought I was going to deal with vegetables, rice/wheat growing and food processing. I had no clue I was going to be exposed to some of the most exciting cutting-edge technologies and research projects in China, including the study on preparation and properties of novel nanomaterials for drug delivery and tumor inhibition. My professor, Dr. Hongbing Deng, introduced me to the wonderful world of nanotechnology, one that deals with manipulation of matters on an atomic and molecular scale. I am sure if Confucius and Mencius were still alive today, they would be impressed with the tools and means with which I conduct my studies in research labs. They may still characterize me as a manual laborer, because my area of specialization, biomedical application of polysaccharide nanomaterials, requires quite a lot of hands-on experiments. But they will dinitely have trouble understanding why a laborer can also read top journals such as Nature Nanotechnology, ACS Nano, Advanced Materials and can write academic papers in a language that is filled with acronyms, jargons, quantitative symbols and bibliographies, just too much and too outlandish for their taste. They will also have trouble understanding why an agricultural institution has to do with advanced materials and medicine. And why things are so crisscrossed, intertwined and interdependent these days, they’d wonder, so much so that they can no longer tell apart those who apply their hands and those who use their minds?
I may have gone a little bit too far in celebrating the “sophistication” of the modern era we live in and in laughing at the “ignorance” of our forathers. I am fully aware that in spite of the constant advancement of science and technology, we still do not have answers or solutions to the numerous problems our forathers had in the past and we have today. When I was told late last year that my great uncle had come down with lung cancer and that when he was diagnosed he was already in the late stage of his illness, I was devastated. I frantically searched all medical rerence materials I could possibly gather. I realized there simply is not much there in the way of a cure. I found I was powerless to my uncle’s disease even though I have previously done research related cancer treatment and made some achievements. How I wish we had diagnostic means for early detection; how I wish we had surgical and chemotherapeutic means that are not destructive to the healthy cells and tissues of the body.
My interest in nanomaterials for biomedical applications and my studies and experiments on the subject preceded my uncle’s diagnosis. I have also learnt the basics of nanotechnology as related to the structure of nanomaterials and the characterization methods. I am convinced that nanobiotechnology holds great promises in diagnostics, pharmaceuticals, surgeries, drug deliveries and medical materials. Indeed, we have good reasons to look up to nanobiotechnology for solutions and treatment of what we now have to accept as terminal illness. My most recent assignment as an academic visitor at the Fourth Military Medical University in Xi’an involved observing surgical experiments on animals and learning the intricacies of operations of biomedical equipment. I gained firsthand appreciation of the application of biomedical research and technologies in the real-life hospital environment. The United States is at the forront of biomedical engineering research and application. I know whatever exposure I have had in this field of studies, both in terms of textbook learning and research methods, much of it originated from America. I want to pursue my graduate work at Tufts University, not only because I am motivated to help people like my great uncle but also because I want to prove the Confucian value regarding the hand verse the heart and the degree of literacy in relationship with one’s social status wrong. In this day and age, it is important to develop our minds, that is, be knowledgeable and technology savvy; it is equally important to use our hands to apply our learning for the well-being of the society in which we live.
关于美国研究生留学的内容到这里就全部结束了。美国研究生不会写?没关系!在今天的文章中,澳际留学小编特意与同学们分享了一份美国留学ps范文,希望可以对大家的ps写作有所帮助!感谢您的阅读!
澳际的知识体系与丰富的申请经验,远超当地留学行业整体水平,海外学子和非本地学生越来越多的选择了我们,海外学生很难获得专业和贴心的留学咨询服务,而澳际用实际行动赢得了学生和家长的信任。澳际六步曲服务体系同样适合远程及海外申请服务的人群。在此基础上,我们还会与您加强具体环节的服务,以保证您获得与现场咨询同样的收获与体验。首次咨询:通过专家答疑、定位评估、电话、视频和面谈等方式与您取得联系,获取所需的留学信息。详细沟通:根据留学目的、学术条件等进行头脑风暴,进一步明确目的院校和专业,并规划就业前景。进度反馈:通过即时系统反馈,学生第一时间获知留学办理进程。如:材料准备情况、申请进度、offer发放等。
Amy GUO 经验: 16年 案例:4272 擅长:美国,澳洲,亚洲,欧洲
本网站(www.aoji.cn,刊载的所有内容,访问者可将本网站提供的内容或服务用于个人学习、研究或欣赏,以及其他非商业性或非盈利性用途,但同时应遵守著作权法及其他相关法律规定,不得侵犯本网站及相关权利人的合法权利。除此以外,将本网站任何内容或服务用于其他用途时,须征得本网站及相关权利人的书面许可,并支付报酬。
本网站内容原作者如不愿意在本网站刊登内容,请及时通知本站,予以删除。