Skip to main content

Confronting Xenophobia (275 Words): Tuck MBA Sense of Inclusion Essay

Background Information: The applicant – a white male applicant working with a diverse team from China, South Africa, and India for a technology giant, confronts a peer who makes unflattering comments about his international peers on a visit to the US.

Theme: Inclusion, Courage, Xenophobia

Theme (Explained): Xenophobia takes many forms. In the current fragile global economy, with many countries embracing nationalistic attitudes, immigrants or even tourists are looked at with suspicion. The essay covers one such incident. 

Profile: Technology Consultant

Industry: Technology

MBA Essay Strategy:  One of the senior persons in the team with strong Xenophobic tendencies began making disparaging comments – subtly about an entire community and, in several cases, against the countries¯ the international peers belonged to. 

Asians and Asian Americans become his favorite punching bags. Initially dismissing comments in a jocular spirit, the applicant noticed that the comments became more frequent. 

Witnessing how the disparaging comments began affecting peers and their morale, the applicant escalated the inexcusable behavior to the project manager. 

The applicant’s courage to stand up for values that made America the most welcoming country to immigrants and travelers alike is the core of the narrative.

The big challenge in such narratives is not to present the context with too many adjectives or ‘preaching’ prose. Keep it as a matter of fact to improve the believability of the essay.

Opener: The opening line sets the context of the project – international teams and the many postponements before finally the applicant and his international team meeting at DC.

Sample Tuck Meaningfully contributed to someone else’s sense of inclusion in your professional or personal community (Xenophobia) (275 Words)

After six months of working on one of the toughest machine-learning projects and three postponements, my teammates from South Africa, China, and India finally joined me in DC. 

The final phase of our project required rigorous testing as the FinTech product served the most vulnerable in society who couldn’t afford to risk their savings to security breaches. 

A senior developer in the team who was known for making off-color remarks began sharing typecasting comments about our Chinese peer. Initially, ..

....
 

Read the Complete Essay and learn how the applicant managed to confront this tricky xenophobic remark 

 

Tuck MBA Essay Guide

Essay 1: Why are you pursuing an MBA and why now? How will the distinct Tuck MBA contribute to achieving your goals and aspirations? What particular aspects of Tuck will be instrumental in your growth? (300 words)

Essay 2: Tell us who you are. How have your values and experiences shaped your identity and character? How will your unique background contribute to Tuck and/or enhance the experience of your classmates? (300 words).

Essay 3: Describe a time when you meaningfully invested in someone else’s success without immediate benefit to yourself. What motivated you, and what was the impact? (300 words).

Download F1GMAT's Tuck MBA Essay Guide

About the Author 

Atul Jose

I am Atul Jose, Founding Consultant of F1GMAT, an MBA admissions consultancy that has worked with applicants since 2009.

 

For the past 15 years I have edited the application files of admits to the M7 programs: Harvard Business School, Stanford Graduate School of Business, the Wharton School, MIT Sloan, Chicago Booth, Kellogg School of Management, and Columbia Business School, together with admits to Berkeley Haas, Yale School of Management, NYU Stern, Michigan Ross, Duke Fuqua, Darden, Tuck, IMD, London Business School, INSEAD, SDA Bocconi, IESE Business School, HEC Paris, McCombs, and Tepper, plus other programs inside the global top 30.

 

My work covers the full MBA application deliverable: career planning and profile evaluation, application essay editing, recommendation letter editing, mock interviews and interview preparation, scholarship and fellowship essay editing, and cover letter editing for funding applications. Full bio with credentials and admit history is here.

 

I am the author of the Winning MBA Essay Guide, the best-selling essay guide covering M7 MBA programs. I have written and updated the guide annually since 2013, which makes the 2026 edition the thirteenth.

 

The reason I still write and edit essays every cycle: a good MBA essay carries a real applicant's voice. Writing essays for F1GMAT's Books and Editing essays weekly is how I stay calibrated to what current admissions committees respond to.

 

Contact me for school selection, career planning, essay strategy, narrative development, essay editing, interview preparation, scholarship essay editing, or guidance documents for recommendation letters.