It wasn’t doodling. Re-read. |
Agree 💯 Show color, personality and pizazz!!!! Passion. Interest in varying mediums. Lots of good advice out there. I agree there’s not a right way to do this but it should feel right to the kid. |
Agree. I don't know any HSer who would say "fostered a local network of literary enthusiasts..." Now THAT sounds like a bot. |
Just saw that reddit post in another thread that referenced the following hobbies as ECs: Learning K-Pop dance moves. Cheerleading. Amateur meteorology (following weather models, participating in weather chat groups, and predicting storms). All help AO envision these kids involved with countless campus clubs with a personality and genuine and varied interests. |
A bit too heavy… |
Go ahead, it's fine. Mine listed Reading saying it had become a habit and listed example titles to demonstrate width of interests. Got into a top SLAC. |
Hobbies won't turn the dial one way or another, but can't hurt to list if there's room.
However if the 10 spaces are better served with other stuff, list the more serious stuff. |
What a sad thread. |
+1 we did the same. |
Same with reading and listing a range of books. At Ivy. Note: DS omitted many "low" priority ECs (that were common or where he didn't have a real leadership role) even though he had 4 years. |
Hopefully their reading habit taught them the difference between “width” and “breadth.” |
Way too heavy. I'd lighten it up. Activity: Art; Doodle Art, Regional and National Competitions Position: Mind-Wanderer Turned Competitor Description: I used to think my constant doodling was just a bad habit, but after entering my first [Red Bull Doodle] Art contest, I learned I'd accidentally been training for something I love. [8] competitions later, still surprised I call myself an artist. |
Sad and weird vibes in this thread. |
That's great if that's the way a kid's art naturally develops, but implying that a kid who doodles for joy needs to go sign up for contests, is like implying that reading only has value if you set up a book club. We've got two teenagers for whom drawing, doodling or otherwise, is a hobby and a great stress relief. They both compete in other areas, but art fills a different role for them. Turning it from a relaxed hobby that gives them balance and stress release, to a competitive endeavor would ruin it. |
Did they include something light-hearted like this in the common app activities? |