Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't help my kid, who was the captain as both a junior and a senior for both his HS and club teams. He has real leadership skills, but either he wasn't able to communicate that through his applications, or the schools didn't find it compelling enough to offer admission (he applied to six top-10 schools and wasn't admitted to any).
depends on the sport sometimes - if it’s a soft sport with weak participation like x country probably doesn’t help, where lacrosse captain conveys a real commitment, strength and leadership
How entitled!![]()
lacrosse!
Anonymous wrote:My child is a captain of a sports team at TJ and want to know how it helps in top 10 college admission. Can one of the essays be written on the work done as a captain?
Anonymous wrote:My child is a captain of a sports team at TJ and want to know how it helps in top 10 college admission. Can one of the essays be written on the work done as a captain?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Service academies care.
They care about baseball, football and basketball. I think they award the most points for those.
Anonymous wrote:My child is a captain of a sports team at TJ and want to know how it helps in top 10 college admission. Can one of the essays be written on the work done as a captain?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't help my kid, who was the captain as both a junior and a senior for both his HS and club teams. He has real leadership skills, but either he wasn't able to communicate that through his applications, or the schools didn't find it compelling enough to offer admission (he applied to six top-10 schools and wasn't admitted to any).
depends on the sport sometimes - if it’s a soft sport with weak participation like x country probably doesn’t help, where lacrosse captain conveys a real commitment, strength and leadership
Anonymous wrote:My son is not writing about this (he has another topic) but perhaps the most resilient thing he's done in his 17 years is to ride the bench (zero playing time) for 15 straight varsity baseball games (despite playing years of high level travel baseball) but then creating a role for himself as the designated pinch runner (with great enthusiasm) and then moving into a position role when another player got injured and ending the season as a starter and the lead-off hitter (on a really high level team that played in our state championship--none DMV).
Sports can have great material for essays, no matter how overdone the subject matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't help my kid, who was the captain as both a junior and a senior for both his HS and club teams. He has real leadership skills, but either he wasn't able to communicate that through his applications, or the schools didn't find it compelling enough to offer admission (he applied to six top-10 schools and wasn't admitted to any).
depends on the sport sometimes - if it’s a soft sport with weak participation like x country probably doesn’t help, where lacrosse captain conveys a real commitment, strength and leadership
Anonymous wrote:My DC was disappointed to be placed on JV junior year, but was elected captain. Wrote about how the initial disappointment of being placed in JV turned out to be the best year of sports in high school. Discussed getting to know the freshman and helping them navigate social issues, being the older teammate they all looked up to and how this perspective was so wonderful since they are the youngest in their family and never had that role. It was a good essay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't.
My kid got into several T10s last year. He's at an Ivy this year. He didn't write anything about sports. And the sport and title 'captain' was featured in the common app activities.
He had a lot of injury and obstacle overcome in the sport ---but wrote nothing about it.
+1
Colleges don't want to hear about overcoming adversity and definitely stay away form the "d's" - death, divorce and disease. They get way too many essays on those and none of them are unique.
Anonymous wrote:Service academies care.