Need major help with Brown essay: what don't you know?

<p>I'm currently stuck as far as a conclusion goes, any help would be lovely!</p>

<p>French novelist Anatole France wrote: "An education isn't how much you have committed to memory, or even how much you know. It's being able to differentiate between what you do know and what you don't." What don't you know? </p>

<pre><code>I’m sure that were she given the chance, my mother would be able to provide you a much longer list of what I do not know; in fact most of my time is spent by asking and learning from her. Realistically speaking, I do know that from this point on, my life will become indefinitely more challenging. Life never gives you the challenges that you expect-it gives you the ones that end up consuming most of your time. For example, pursuing my education will definitely be a long term challenge, but it is one I look most forward to.
Having come from very modest means, I know that I wouldn’t be writing this letter were it not for the fact that through the sacrifices of my parents I have been fortunate to attend schools that allowed me to blossom academically and individually. It is because of their sacrifices I have been able to succeed in ways that are not readily available to millions in our world today.
I feel so very strongly about so many possible social-service-centered career paths whether it’s educating our nations future musicians, doctors and leaders, aiding families medically as a traveling pediatrician or as a pro bono family lawyer that I do not know what I will become. While these all may seem like a naive students idealistic approach to help the world, I believe that with the help of Brown’s Open Curriculum approach to education I will be able to explore these avenues and determine where I will not only flourish but also be most needed.
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<p>I like the beginning, but in all honesty, you don’t really say much about what you don’t know.</p>