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Prompt deconstructor
Dinner Party Prompt Deconstructor
Break down the Dinner Party (Who Would You Invite?) Supplemental Essay into its hidden question, angles that work, traps that sink drafts, and signals admissions reads between the lines. Pre-loaded with the full prompt so you can go straight to the analysis.
The full prompt
"If you could host a dinner party with any three people, living or dead, who would you invite and why? What would you want to talk about?"
Word limit: 250
What this tells you about the Dinner Party
Running the Dinner Party through the deconstructor reveals the gap between the literal prompt and what admissions is really evaluating. The literal question is rarely the real one. The real one is what makes a draft stand out or blur into the pile.
What this prompt is actually asking
Most applicants answer the prompt they think they see, not the prompt that's there. The Dinner Party prompt has specific language that admissions readers will check your essay against. The deconstructor surfaces the verbs, nouns, and constraints you need to hit so your draft reads as a direct response to the prompt — not a pre-written essay loosely rebranded.
How to use the deconstruction
Read the prompt's key verbs ("describe," "reflect," "explain") as instructions, not suggestions. A "describe" prompt wants scene and detail; a "reflect" prompt wants evidence of thinking; an "explain" prompt wants a reasoned throughline. Drafts that confuse these categories almost always score below 70, regardless of prose quality.
Word-limit constraints at 250 words
At 250 words, you have room for one scene, one reflective middle, and one forward-looking close. Attempting two scenes at this length almost always produces a draft that feels thin because neither gets rendered.
Related tools
Dinner Party deconstructor FAQ
What is the Dinner Party actually asking?+
The Dinner Party (Supplemental Type, 250-word limit) literally asks you to respond to a specific prompt, but admissions reads it as a signal of how you think. Run it through the deconstructor to see the hidden question.
How long should my Dinner Party essay be?+
The official word limit is 250 words. Treat it as firm. Going over is a common cause of admissions fatigue, and staying well under often means you haven't gone deep enough.
Can I answer multiple Common App prompts with one essay?+
No. Pick one prompt and commit. Most applicants write an essay first, then pick the prompt that best frames it. That's fine. What doesn't work is writing an essay that tries to straddle two prompts.
What are the biggest mistakes on the Dinner Party?+
Generic framing ('I've always been passionate about...'), missing the actual question by answering a related one, padding to reach the word limit, and a last line that summarizes instead of landing. The deconstructor flags these by showing you what admissions reads between the lines.
How much of my Dinner Party should be reflection versus scene?+
Strong drafts usually land around 60 percent scene and 40 percent reflection for Dinner Party-length essays. Scene alone reads as a story, reflection alone reads as a personal statement essay on the page. The balance is where voice emerges.