Extracurricular Activity List

The extracurricular activities list is a required element of the Common Application and other universities who do not use the Common Application also ask for some form of document detailing a student’s extracurricular endeavors. This section focuses on showing you how to help your mentee select and showcase their extracurriculars in a concise, yet informative way.

When reading your mentee’s extracurricular activities list, try and place yourself in the shoes of an admissions counselor. If your student has worded something in such a way that you do not understand, or if they have used turns of phrase better understood by a Spanish audience, this is something you will need to work on with them. 

On the Common Application, students are only allowed to include up to 10 activities, and each one can only be described in 150 characters. There are also an additional 50 characters to describe their role in the activity, such as “captain” or “president.” Given such little allowance makes this a tough task! 

Extracurricular Activity List Template

Students have been provided this template to draft their descriptions before adding them to Common App.

What counts as an extracurricular activity?

Volunteering

Activities within their local community

Hobbies or self-led projects

After-school activities or clubs

Activities related to their religion

Academic or personal honors

The Arts

Physical activities

Work (internships, part-time jobs)

Family responsibilities

Sports

Cultural activities

Questions to ask while editing your mentee’s activity list

The extracurricular activities list should give you a better idea of your mentee as a whole; their interests, passions, commitments, values, and contributions to society. Ideally, the way that your mentee presents their extracurriculars will show an admissions counselor what they will bring to their campus.

Does my mentee’s list show breadth?

Are their titles and descriptions clear? Do they need to make certain phrases more accessible for an American reader?

Could certain activities be explained more clearly?

Could some of the descriptions be shortened? The Common Application does not require that the students write in complete sentences. For example, “Member of school soccer team. Voted MVP 3 times.” will suffice, as each section has a character limit, not a word limit.

Could some of the descriptions be shortened? The Common Application does not require that the students write in complete sentences. For example, “Member of school soccer team. Voted MVP 3 times.” will suffice, as each section has a character limit, not a word limit.

Is the activity mentioned of personal significance and impact? Does it impact others, such as their friends, family, or community? Evaluate whether your mentee’s activities are significant, whether that be the activity itself or the amount of time they have dedicated to it. 

Was your mentee the ‘first’, ‘best’ or ‘only’ student to do this activity? If so, an admissions counselor will want to know.

What were your mentee’s motivations for doing the activity? Is this obvious?

What experience has your mentee gained from the activity?

Do you feel that your student has correctly ordered their activities? Suggest changes to the order depending on the significance of each activity; the most significant should go first.

CCC should definitely be on their list!

Based on your knowledge of your mentee and their hobbies, interests, and accomplishments, do you see anything missing from the list?