Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did. I think it helped for law school admissions and big law interviews, where the academic fitness is a threshold matter and there are more qualified applicants than spots. As part of a complete profile with research, internships/work experience, grades, and test scores.
As someone who worked in big law and did not include sorority leadership on resume, couldn’t disagree more. People will think you are a lightweight. Leave it off. There will be five people who think it reflects poorly on you for every one that thinks it’s an asset.
Anonymous wrote:I did. I think it helped for law school admissions and big law interviews, where the academic fitness is a threshold matter and there are more qualified applicants than spots. As part of a complete profile with research, internships/work experience, grades, and test scores.
Anonymous wrote:No. If I saw this in a resume, I’d put it in the circular file. Waste of time. Shows poor judgement.
Anonymous wrote:My DS is academic chair of his fraternity and he has it on his resume. He is a college student so he doesn't have a ton of other things (yes he has had jobs and currently works but still not that much experience) and he thinks it shows he is smart and has a leadership position. It's not a big school or large chapter but it helps.
My older kid also had college leadership positions but since he has been out of college for a while and he has better stuff on his resume, he dropped those off his current resume.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. If I saw this in a resume, I’d put it in the circular file. Waste of time. Shows poor judgement.
Even for a recent or future college grad with little or no work experience ?
To be blunt, if you would discard an applicant's resume for containing a line about a position in a sorority, you are showing poor judgment.