The Five Supplemental Essays: What A&M Is Really Asking
Texas A&M 2026-27
The Five Supplemental Essays: What A&M Is Really Asking
Joseph Green | June 24, 2026
Part 2 of 2
If you read Part 1 of this series , you already know how to approach the main Texas A&M essay, the 750-word prompt that anchors your entire application. This post is about the other five: short, focused, easy to underestimate.
Each supplemental prompt has a specific job. A&M is not asking five random questions. Together, Prompts 2 through 6 build a coherent picture of who you are, where you are going, why this field matters to you, why A&M is the right place to pursue it, and whether you are thinking past the degree. If those five essays all tell the same story, and if that story is consistent with your main essay, your application holds together in a way that reviewers remember.
Here is what I tell my students about each one.
Prompt 2 | 250 Words
"Describe a life event which you feel has prepared you to be successful in college."
Start in the middle of it.
At 250 words, you have no room for setup. The students who write the weakest versions of this essay spend their first 80 words explaining the context before anything happens. Do not do that. Open where the pressure is highest. Drop the reader into the moment before you explain anything.
The event you choose matters, but not in the way most students think. It does not need to be dramatic. It needs to be specific, and it needs to mirror something you will actually face at A&M. If you plan to study engineering, choose something that required you to solve a hard problem under pressure. If you are going into business, find the moment you had to make a real decision without all the information you needed. The parallel should be obvious to the reader by the time you are done.
End with two things: the lesson you took from the event, and brief, concrete proof that you have already applied it. Not "I learned to persevere." Tell me about the next time you hit something hard and what you did differently because of this experience.
One sentence per idea. Every sentence earns its place. At 250 words, anything that does not move the essay forward is a sentence you cannot afford.
Prompt 3 | 100 Words
"In a few words, what are some of your life goals and objectives?"
Generic goals hurt you here.
"I want to make a difference." "I hope to use my degree to help others." "I want to be a leader in my field." These are the answers that show up in thousands of applications, and they tell an admissions reader nothing. Vague aspirations are not goals. They are placeholder language.
The goals in this prompt should be ones that only you would have. There are two ways I see students write this well. The first is to start from deep personal motivation: something you have been working toward or thinking about for years, then paint a specific picture of the impact you want to have. The second is to put yourself 15 to 20 years out and describe your actual life. Not your job title. Your life. What problems are you working on? What does your day look like? Who are you helping?
Either approach works. What does not work is staying so high-level that no reader can picture you. Include at least one goal that is personal, and at least one that is outward-facing. Show range.
Prompt 4 | 100 Words
"In a few words, why have you chosen your academic major(s)?"
Write a love letter, not a resume line.
Origin stories take too long at 100 words. Do not start with when you first got interested. Start with what you are interested in right now.
The best versions of this prompt lead with a specific question or problem in the field that genuinely occupies the student's mind. Not "I've always loved math." Something more like: "There is a question in structural engineering that I cannot stop thinking about," and then they tell me what that question is. I want to feel the pull.
Think of this as a love letter to a subject. When you write a love letter, you do not list reasons. You describe what makes the other person irreplaceable. A&M should read this and believe, without any doubt, that this is your favorite thing to think about. Not a smart career decision. Not a practical choice. The thing you would explore even if no one paid you to.
If you find yourself writing about job prospects or salary potential, start over. That is Prompt 3 territory at best. This prompt is about intellectual love, and it should read that way.
Prompt 5 | 100 Words
"We know you have a lot of options. In a few words, why did you choose to apply to Texas A&M?"
"Aggie spirit" is not an answer.
Neither is "great engineering program" or "strong reputation." A&M knows it has a strong reputation. That is not news. Generic praise signals that A&M is on your list. It does not signal that A&M is your choice.
This prompt rewards specificity. Name one or two things you actually found when you looked into A&M. A specific lab. A faculty member's research. A program or certificate track that is offered at A&M and almost nowhere else. A campus organization that connects directly to something in your activities list. Then spend a sentence explaining why it connects to who you are, not just what you want to study.
The goal is to make A&M feel chosen. There is a real difference between an essay that says "A&M is a great fit for me" and one that says "I have been watching Dr. [Name]'s work on [specific topic] since junior year, and there is no other undergraduate program where I can be in that room." One of those reads like a student filling out a form. The other reads like someone who has done their homework and knows exactly where they want to be.
Do that research. It takes two hours and it changes the entire feel of your application.
Prompt 6 | 100 Words
"Briefly describe any educational plans you have beyond earning your bachelor's degree."
Let it follow from Prompt 4.
If you have written Prompt 4 well, Prompt 6 should feel like the natural next chapter. You wrote about a question or problem in your field that genuinely drives you. Prompt 6 asks: where does that curiosity take you after the degree?
This is not a commitment. You are not signing a contract. A&M wants to see that you are a learner by nature, that your education does not end at graduation because that is just how you are wired. The students who write this well name specific questions they want to keep exploring, whether through graduate school, research, industry practice, or some combination. They do not just say "I plan to pursue a master's degree." They say what they hope to do with it.
If you genuinely are not sure whether you want grad school, that is fine. Write about the questions you want to keep close. That signals the same thing: intellectual curiosity that does not expire.
The Bigger Picture
All five supplementals should tell one story alongside your main essay.
Prompt 2 shows you handle adversity and grow from it. Prompt 3 shows you know where you are going and why. Prompt 4 shows you have a subject that genuinely drives you. Prompt 5 shows that A&M is a deliberate choice. Prompt 6 shows you are thinking past the degree.
When all five work together, and when they reinforce rather than repeat the main essay, the reader gets a complete, coherent picture of a student. That is the goal. Not five good essays. One good application.
A note on word counts
The 100-word prompts are not invitations to be vague. They are invitations to be precise. Every word is doing real work or it is not there. Read each short essay aloud. If a sentence does not add something new, cut it. The best 100-word essays I have seen read like they could not be shorter without losing something essential. That is the bar.
The 250-word prompt for Prompt 2 gives you more room, but not much. Do not treat it like a mini-essay with an introduction, body, and conclusion. Treat it like a scene with a lesson attached. Scene, then insight, then proof. That is the structure.
Work With Joe
Your essays should sound like you.
I help students find that voice.
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