Classics personal statement guide

例文・執筆ガイド

Classics Personal Statementfor Oxford & Cambridge

Oxford & Cambridge出願用のClassics Personal Statement完全例文(UCAS 2026年度3問形式)。入試担当者が何を求めているかを知る専門家が執筆。

重要な情報 · 形式変更

2025年10月以降のPersonal Statement形式について

2025年10月以降に出願する応募者は、1つの自由記述形式ではなく、UCASが「scaffolding questions」と呼ぶ3つのセクションに回答する新しい形式に従う必要があります。下記の例文はすべてこの形式に従って書かれています。

  1. 01なぜこのコース・分野を学びたいですか?
  2. 02これまでの学習はどのようにこの分野への準備に役立ちましたか?
  3. 03学校外で何を経験しましたか?それらはなぜ有益ですか?

各セクションは最低350文字。全体で最大4,000文字(3セクション合計)。

保護者向け日本語ガイド

古典学(ラテン語・ギリシャ語) | Personal Statementとは

Personal Statementとは何ですか?

Personal Statementは、UCASオンラインシステムを通じてイギリスの大学へ提出する「志望理由書」です。 なぜその学科を学びたいか、どのような準備をしてきたか、課外活動でどのような経験を積んだかを英語で記述します。 字数制限があり(合計4,000字まで)、すべての志望大学に同じ文章を使います。

2026年度の新しい形式(3問方式)

2026年度入学(2025年9月以降の出願)から、Personal Statementの形式が変わりました:

質問1(各最低350字)

なぜこのコースを学びたいのか?

Why do you want to study this course or subject?

質問2(各最低350字)

学業の準備はどのようにしてきたか?

How have your qualifications and studies helped you prepare?

質問3(各最低350字)

課外活動でどのような経験をしてきたか?

What else have you done to prepare outside of education?

Oxford・Cambridgeが重視すること

  • 学科への本物の知的関心(スポーツや慈善活動は重視されない)
  • 古典学(ラテン語・ギリシャ語)に関連する書籍・研究・発展的学習(Supercurricular)の経験
  • 何を読んで、何を考え、何を疑問に思ったか。具体的な事例
  • 面接で詳しく話せる内容のみ書くこと(面接の出発点になる)

このページの使い方

このページには古典学(ラテン語・ギリシャ語)のPersonal Statement例文(英語)が掲載されています。お子様がこれを参考にしながら、オリジナルの文章を書くためのガイドとして活用してください。コピーは厳禁ですが、構成や深さの参考にはなります。

以下は詳細ガイドと例文(英語)です。お子様と一緒にご確認ください。

01

Section 01

Classics Personal Statement 例文

Question 1

1,590 chars

Why do you want to study this course or subject?

When I read in October 2023 that letters had been recovered from an unopened Herculaneum scroll, what stayed with me was not just the technology but the precariousness of the text itself. A work buried by Vesuvius in AD 79 had survived for nearly two thousand years only to return first as marks that still needed interpretation. That made me think differently about Classics. I had tended to imagine the ancient world as something fixed, preserved and waiting to be studied. Instead, I became interested in the unstable route by which texts reach us at all: damaged, edited, translated and argued over. I want to study Classics because that combination of recovery and interpretation is what I find most absorbing. That question became sharper when I studied the Odyssey. Before reading it closely, I thought of Odysseus mainly as the clever survivor of a long series of adventures. What unsettled me was the violence of his return and the social world that makes that violence appear normal. Reading Emily Wilson's translation alongside older versions made that impossible to ignore, especially in Book 22, where translating enslaved women as "slaves" rather than "maids" changes the moral pressure of the scene. I then read M. I. Finley's The World of Odysseus, which moved my attention away from heroic personality and towards the structures around it: the oikos, status, exchange and obligation. Mary Beard's Confronting the Classics widened that further by making me think not only about the ancient world itself but about the later readers who decide what counts as "the classical".

Question 2

1,028 chars

How have your qualifications and studies helped you to prepare?

My school study has prepared me best when it has forced me to slow down. Working on Homer in class taught me that interpretation depends on details of tone, register and narrative framing, not only on plot or theme. Essay writing also made me more precise about evidence. I could not just say a translation felt more honest; I had to show how a choice of diction altered the reader's judgement. My EPQ pushed that further. I asked how far English translations of the Odyssey shape a reader's moral judgement of Odysseus, comparing Wilson and Robert Fagles across Books 9, 19 and 22. At first I tried to build the project around single words, especially polytropos, but that was too narrow. What mattered more was the cumulative effect of pacing, formality and narrative sympathy across a whole scene. That shift in method was useful preparation for degree-level study because it taught me to move from an interesting hunch to a more defensible argument, and to accept when a better question matters more than a quick conclusion.

Question 3

1,373 chars

What else have you done to prepare outside of education, and why are these experiences useful?

Outside class, I tested those ideas by leading a discussion in my school's humanities society on whether translation can ever be neutral. I brought the opening of the Odyssey in Wilson and Fagles, then moved to Book 22 to see whether people's judgements changed when the ethical stakes became less comfortable. The conversation was useful because it did not confirm my first assumptions. Several students preferred Fagles because his language felt more elevated, and I realised I had too quickly equated accessibility with truthfulness. Because Greek is not taught at my sixth-form college, I had to work within that limit rather than pretend to expertise I do not have. That made me rely more carefully on translators' introductions and critical commentary, and it taught me that responsible reading sometimes begins with recognising what you cannot yet prove. At university I want to deepen that work by learning Greek formally and by studying how texts survive materially, editorially and in translation. What keeps me returning to Classics is not the idea of a finished canon, but the harder problem of how authority is created around ancient works: by scribes, editors, translators and readers. The Herculaneum scrolls first drew me in because a lost text had started to speak again. What has kept me interested since is the question of who teaches us how to hear it.
3,991total charactersWithin UCAS range

This is an illustrative example reviewed for factual accuracy. Use it for structure and reflection quality, not for copying.

02

Section 02

ClassicsのPersonal Statementには何を含めるべきか?

内容

分野への深い理解

学校のシラバスを超えたClassicsの知識。読んだ本・追加学習・独自調査の証拠。

思考

批判的な反省

「何をしたか」ではなく「そこから何を学び、考え方がどう変わったか」を書く。

具体性

具体的な証拠

本のタイトル・著者名・出来事・実験など、面接で詳しく説明できる具体例を必ず含める。

構成

一貫した物語

Q1からQ3まで一本の知的な軌跡が通っていること。各答えはそれぞれ独立しつつ、全体で1つの物語を形成する。

03

Section 03

やること・避けること

Do This

  • Open Q1 with a specific idea, question, or moment, not a cliche
  • Show genuine intellectual curiosity about Classics throughout all three answers
  • Reference specific books, papers, or lectures and reflect on what you took from them
  • Use each question to show something different: motivation, preparation, initiative
  • Let your authentic voice come through; tutors can spot a template

Avoid This

  • Start Q1 with "I have always been passionate about Classics"
  • List activities without reflecting on what you learned from them
  • Name-drop books or theorists you cannot discuss at interview
  • Repeat the same point across multiple answers
  • Waste space on irrelevant extracurriculars or filler phrases
04

Section 04

Oxford・Cambridgeが求めるもの

OxfordとCambridgeの入試担当者はClassicsのPersonal Statementを特定の視点で読みます。実績や課外活動の羅列ではなく、学校のシラバスを超えたレベルでclassicsに真剣に取り組んだ証拠、そして読んだり経験したことについて批判的に考える能力を求めています。

Cambridgeでは、面接官はPersonal Statementを面接質問の出発点として使うことが多いです。本・研究論文・実験に言及した場合、詳細を聞かれると思ってください。つまり、陳述書に書くことはすべて真実であり、深く理解されていなければなりません——効果のために名前を出すだけでは不十分です。

Oxfordでは、Personal Statementは入試テストのスコア・学校からの推薦状・面接のパフォーマンスとともに総合的な出願書類の一部として評価されます。Oxfordの講師は公式に、知的好奇心・アイデア間のつながりを作る能力・自主的にカリキュラムを超えた取り組みをした証拠を重視すると述べています。

上記の例文はこれらの要件を念頭に置いて設計されています。ClassicsでOxfordまたはCambridgeを目指しているなら、自分のPersonal Statementが目指すべき深さと具体性の基準として活用してください。

よくあるご質問

Your personal statement must be no longer than 4,000 characters (including spaces) or 47 lines, whichever limit you hit first. Most successful statements use close to the full character allowance.
Start with a specific academic idea, question, or experience that sparked your interest in Classics. Admissions tutors read hundreds of statements — an opening that shows genuine intellectual curiosity stands out.
Only if they are directly relevant to your academic interest in Classics. Oxbridge tutors want evidence of intellectual engagement, not a list of achievements.
Most successful applicants go through 5 to 10 drafts. Ask a teacher or tutor who knows Classics at university level to give feedback.
Essential. Admissions tutors want evidence that you read independently and critically. Mention specific books, articles, or primary sources that shaped your thinking about Classics. The key is depth over breadth — it is better to discuss one text you genuinely engaged with than to list ten titles. Be prepared to discuss anything you mention at interview.

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合格者の声

Jason helped me understand the entire Cambridge and Imperial application process and greatly improved my confidence in mock interviews. I was surprised to be given extra help from other PhD tutors. I looked elsewhere and could not find a service like this.
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Offers from Cambridge (Engineering) and Imperial College London

Really helpful throughout the whole process. I felt much better prepared going into my interviews.
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Engineering Applicant

The trial was not easy and certainly helped me to practice answering questions about an unfamiliar topic on the spot. Successful.
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Offer from Oxford, Physics

Jason was very invested in ensuring I got the best help available. Very invested and enthusiastic support throughout.
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Oxbridge Applicant

The questions are carefully picked, both rich in logic and worthy to delve into. I am really grateful to have met Jason.
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Cambridge Engineering Applicant

I received offers from both Cambridge and Imperial. Jason prepared me to a level higher than the actual interviews and that made them much less intimidating.
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Offers from Cambridge and Imperial, Engineering

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