Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.gocivilairpatrol.com/
This. My son learned because he was interested in aerospace engineering. He also had to overcome a significant fear of flying, which was his essay. It’s very very time consuming and expensive. There’s also a physical required if you get to licensure. The driving back to and from small rural airports takes a lot of time in the metro area. Towards the end of all of this he joined the CAP. I have no doubt it helped his application to UVA, VTech, Purdue and Georgia Tech but he was applying as an aerospace engineering candidate. He Eve. Flew himself to accepted students day at VT.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.gocivilairpatrol.com/
Anonymous wrote:Colleges will think you have a lotlotlot of money. And you do.
Have him find a volunteer gig where his expensive hobby can be useful to someone else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine any reason why it would hurt an application. Why in the world do you think it might hurt?
September 11, 2001
Anonymous wrote:Is your kid thinking of pursuing just to put on an application? I don’t think it’s a big enough hook to move the needle for them unless there were something else to it— helping those in need somehow or something like that.
If they were already doing it because they were genuinely interested then I would have them add it just like I would have them include their other activities. A school is not to think hard about any one particular activity unless they are performing it at an elite level, helping people that don’t normally get helped, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Is your kid thinking of pursuing just to put on an application? I don’t think it’s a big enough hook to move the needle for them unless there were something else to it— helping those in need somehow or something like that.
If they were already doing it because they were genuinely interested then I would have them add it just like I would have them include their other activities. A school is not to think hard about any one particular activity unless they are performing it at an elite level, helping people that don’t normally get helped, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine any reason why it would hurt an application. Why in the world do you think it might hurt?
September 11, 2001
No. It's because OP is worried it might look like a rich kid's hobby. Read the OP, won't you?
But if he doesn't disclose it what will the colleges think he does with his free time - video games?
and he (my son) has plenty of time to do all homework and other extracurriculars.