Anonymous wrote:There is a spot on the application to estimate the average hours per week spent on each activity. The point of that is to see how much time was spent on non academic activities to put the grades effort into perspective. (a 4.0 with 15 hours in sports =/= a 4.0 with zero ECs, for example). So this is a point in his favor.
The other thing they are looking for in the activity column is to see how your child might contribute to the life of the college, so if the only thing there is something they know you won't be doing at the school (assuming the school doesn't have club level in the sport), it doesn't hurt, but it also isn't helpful. If he truly did nothing else with his time at all, then find a way to morph his sports into something related that he might be interested in doing in the life of the school, like team manager, or sports writer or announcer, or work in the athletic facility, or start a club team, etc. etc.
This is a great post. I’ll add that getting involved in club sports in college is a fantastic way to make friends and blow off steam.
OP, how old is your DS? You should have a pretty good idea if he’s recruitable or not by HS. If you are not sure, check with his coaches and team parents who have been through the process with older kids. If it’s not likely or borderline, I would want him to look at getting a job or volunteering, which he could do in a sports context. If he is recruited in the end, the lack of other ECs shouldn’t be a problem.