Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:thought this was helpful:
"During the school year, 25 hours is a solid amount of time to devote to extracurricular pursuits. If a student lists many more hours, admissions officers may find it difficult to believe (even if it’s true). If a student lists significantly fewer hours, admissions officers may question the student’s commitment.
But it’s not like all of a student’s extracurricular activities should be spread out evenly. For instance, if a student is involved in five activities during the school year, admissions officers don’t love to see that a student participates in each one of those activities for five hours. They’d rather see a spike in the activities that showcase a student’s singular hook."
https://www.ivycoach.com/the-ivy-coach-blog/extracurricular-activities/are-extracurriculars-important-college-admissions
https://www.saraharberson.com/blog/the-foolproof-way-to-order-extracurricular-activities
25 hours a week for extracurriculars on top of 35 hours a week for school is insane. When are teens supposed to find the time to do normal teen stuff? Chasing girls, shenanigans in the Walmart parking lot, etc. I played a sport in high school that probably required an average of 10 hours a week between practice and games, but that was just in season, which lasted less than half the school year. Senior year I was on a student government committee that met twice a month after school for about an hour. That was it as far as extracurriculars, and I got in everywhere I applied. Not joker schools either. The expectations foisted on today's teens are masochistic. No wonder this generation is having a mental health crisis.
You might find more support for a more mellow high school existence if you didn’t idolize “girl-chasing.” You come across as a dirty old man.
Anonymous wrote:My kid's club swim team is 2 hours a day 6 days a week plus dryland for 4-5 hours a week. Plus weekend meets. That's 49 weeks a year. Then high school swim takes about 5-7 hours a week. That's 18 weeks a year.
He does a few other activities and I'd say he easily spends 20+ hours on activities in a week.
Anonymous wrote:This is the college forum.Anonymous wrote:I bet there are 40 kids at my local high school that spend 25+ on a single activity (student body gov, the super volunteers, the kids who work, the kids who take care of siblings).
This is the college forum.Anonymous wrote:I bet there are 40 kids at my local high school that spend 25+ on a single activity (student body gov, the super volunteers, the kids who work, the kids who take care of siblings).
Anonymous wrote:There's no real way to add it all up since you are not doing them all at the same time usually.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD is an expert in one EC (non athletic) and easily spends 25-30 hrs/wk on it, even during school year. FWIW, her CC said put 15 hrs/wk max.
15 for one activity, right? Not total?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:thought this was helpful:
"During the school year, 25 hours is a solid amount of time to devote to extracurricular pursuits. If a student lists many more hours, admissions officers may find it difficult to believe (even if it’s true). If a student lists significantly fewer hours, admissions officers may question the student’s commitment.
But it’s not like all of a student’s extracurricular activities should be spread out evenly. For instance, if a student is involved in five activities during the school year, admissions officers don’t love to see that a student participates in each one of those activities for five hours. They’d rather see a spike in the activities that showcase a student’s singular hook."
https://www.ivycoach.com/the-ivy-coach-blog/extracurricular-activities/are-extracurriculars-important-college-admissions
https://www.saraharberson.com/blog/the-foolproof-way-to-order-extracurricular-activities
25 hours a week for extracurriculars on top of 35 hours a week for school is insane. When are teens supposed to find the time to do normal teen stuff? Chasing girls, shenanigans in the Walmart parking lot, etc. I played a sport in high school that probably required an average of 10 hours a week between practice and games, but that was just in season, which lasted less than half the school year. Senior year I was on a student government committee that met twice a month after school for about an hour. That was it as far as extracurriculars, and I got in everywhere I applied. Not joker schools either. The expectations foisted on today's teens are masochistic. No wonder this generation is having a mental health crisis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:thought this was helpful:
"During the school year, 25 hours is a solid amount of time to devote to extracurricular pursuits. If a student lists many more hours, admissions officers may find it difficult to believe (even if it’s true). If a student lists significantly fewer hours, admissions officers may question the student’s commitment.
But it’s not like all of a student’s extracurricular activities should be spread out evenly. For instance, if a student is involved in five activities during the school year, admissions officers don’t love to see that a student participates in each one of those activities for five hours. They’d rather see a spike in the activities that showcase a student’s singular hook."
https://www.ivycoach.com/the-ivy-coach-blog/extracurricular-activities/are-extracurriculars-important-college-admissions
https://www.saraharberson.com/blog/the-foolproof-way-to-order-extracurricular-activities
25 hours a week for extracurriculars on top of 35 hours a week for school is insane. When are teens supposed to find the time to do normal teen stuff? Chasing girls, shenanigans in the Walmart parking lot, etc. I played a sport in high school that probably required an average of 10 hours a week between practice and games, but that was just in season, which lasted less than half the school year. Senior year I was on a student government committee that met twice a month after school for about an hour. That was it as far as extracurriculars, and I got in everywhere I applied. Not joker schools either. The expectations foisted on today's teens are masochistic. No wonder this generation is having a mental health crisis.
Anonymous wrote:thought this was helpful:
"During the school year, 25 hours is a solid amount of time to devote to extracurricular pursuits. If a student lists many more hours, admissions officers may find it difficult to believe (even if it’s true). If a student lists significantly fewer hours, admissions officers may question the student’s commitment.
But it’s not like all of a student’s extracurricular activities should be spread out evenly. For instance, if a student is involved in five activities during the school year, admissions officers don’t love to see that a student participates in each one of those activities for five hours. They’d rather see a spike in the activities that showcase a student’s singular hook."
https://www.ivycoach.com/the-ivy-coach-blog/extracurricular-activities/are-extracurriculars-important-college-admissions
https://www.saraharberson.com/blog/the-foolproof-way-to-order-extracurricular-activities