The "Extra" in Extracurricular Activities for College-bound
Hopefuls
Recently, colleges are reviewing too many applications where
student are addicted to getting good grades, but sacrificing the
time to figure out what makes them "tick" becoming somewhat
robotic in an increasing competitive atmosphere. Although the
academic criteria remains the driving force of college
admissions, the problem lies with what to do when you have too
many applicants have the GPA between 3.80-4.0. Many of us have
heard the stories of the students with the 4.0 not getting in,
while students with less academic numbers are. Sure, colleges
want students who will do well academically at their campus, but
also they want their students to come in with ideas and energy
towards developing innovation, contributing creativity, and
eventually receiving recognition. With this in mind, colleges
need students who can go beyond the expectation, who has a love
in life whether its sports, volunteer work, a talent, traveling,
the list goes on. Most importantly, students need to articulate
this "difference" in a 4-8 page application.
Ok, now how to do this. It is important that students do two
things at all times while maintaining a good academic record: 1)
Have the personal time to breathe and relax, and 2) Commit to
something that they love (or at least like). Students who are
committed to one activity for 2-4 years show a much stronger
commitment and level of motivation compared to the student with
20 for short periods of time. And still, students involved with
more two or more activities for 2-4 years shows even potential.
When I was an admission counselor for a University of California
campus, I questioned the college application that listed a slew
of activities, which seemed to have no connection or correlation
to one another. The applicant would squeeze activities on the
sides of the pages "1 month volunteering at the hospital, 2
times going to the homeless shelter, 2 months interning at the
pet adoption center, 6 months taking piano lessons, etc."
Although the page was "full," my first assumption was full of
questionable motivation and lack of commitment. I questioned if
the student only participated in these things for the sole
purpose of filling out this page, and hoped to have an
explanation in the student's essay. Many times I don't get the
explanation and my assumption continues on.
Always keep in mind that colleges want student who can think
critically and pursue an idea, not student who can follow rules
and meet expected criteria - it's about thinking outside the
box. For help in learning more about getting into college turn
to http://www.collegeconfidence.com for tips and suggestions.