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Hook generator for Supplemental Type

Hook Generator for Why Major

Get 5 original opening lines for the why this major supplemental essay. Each hook is tailored to your essay topic in a different style: narrative, reflective, bold statement, dialogue, and sensory detail. 250-word prompts demand a tight opener, so these are kept under 40 words each.

The full prompt

"Why do you want to pursue this major? How did you develop your interest and what do you hope to do with it?"

Word limit: 250

How to pick the right hook for Why Major

  1. 1. Read all 5 hooks once without judging. The one you feel a twinge about is often the right one.
  2. 2. Reject any hook that could open someone else's essay. If it could, it's too generic.
  3. 3. Read the hook aloud. If you stumble, it's too clever. If your parents would write it, it's too safe.
  4. 4. The hook doesn't have to be your first paragraph in the final draft. Use it to find the voice, then keep writing.

Why the Why Major prompt is tricky

At 250 words, the hook can afford a full scene, but a strong opener still trusts the reader. Resist the urge to narrate what the scene means.

Selective supplementals reward hooks that commit to specificity. A hook that could open any applicant's essay is invisible; a hook that could only open yours is the one that gets read.

Five hook modes that work for Why Major

  1. Scene. Drop the reader into a specific moment with no setup.
  2. Object. Open on one concrete thing that only makes sense inside your life.
  3. Question. A real question you cannot answer yet. Avoid rhetorical questions.
  4. Dialogue. One line of real speech, no explanation of who said it.
  5. Claim. A small, slightly surprising claim that you spend the essay earning.

Pitfalls at the 250-word length

At this word count, the most common failure is a hook that promises more than the essay can deliver. Avoid hooks that introduce characters you won't return to, set a scene you'll never reuse, or open with a question whose answer takes 200 words to reach. Your hook should be load-bearing — if you cut it, the essay should collapse, not survive unchanged.

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Why Major hook generator FAQ

How long should the hook for Why Major be?+

Aim for 1 to 2 sentences, under 40 words. The Why Major has a 250-word limit, and spending more than a sentence on the opener steals real estate from the rest of your argument.

What kind of hook works best for the Supplemental Type prompts?+

For Supplemental Type prompts, the strongest openers drop you into a specific scene or make a small concrete claim the rest of the essay earns. Avoid dictionary-style definitions, famous quotes, and anything you could imagine someone else writing.

Can I use the same hook for different schools?+

Yes, if the hook responds to the topic rather than the school. A hook for the Why Major often transfers well to similar prompts at other schools, but adjust any school-specific language.

How specific should I get in a 40-word hook?+

Very specific. Name the place, name the thing, use the weird detail. Specificity is what separates memorable Why Major openings from the 80 percent that blur together.

Should the hook give away the ending of my essay?+

Usually no. A good Why Major hook makes the reader want the next paragraph. If your opening summarizes your whole thesis, you've lost your reason to keep reading.

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