Résumés aren’t always required as part of applications to colleges and universities, but when they are, they represent an opportunity. Submitting an effective résumé enables you to present your best self to colleges by allowing you to emphasize your most noteworthy extracurricular accomplishments.
Many students encounter a problem with standard application formats that can be solved with a résumé. They’re frustrated by the limited space available to describe extracurricular activities. Extracurriculars are important. They’re among the “soft” factors, along with essays, letters, and interviews, which you’ll use to build a case for admission in support of your academic record
As an example, the Activities Section of the Common App has spaces for you to describe 10 activities, but you must do so in no more than 50 characters each. For many applicants, this is insufficient to describe an unorthodox organization or leadership positions. This lack of space causes two problems that can both be resolved by submitting a résumé:
1. The limits don’t accommodate students who want to describe their leadership progression within an organization, which is
something that colleges value, and,
2. It constrains students who want to describe extracurricular activities that are uncommon because it doesn’t let you to identify
activities in your own words. It forces you to select from a pull-down menu.
Unfortunately, colleges vary widely in their policies regarding résumés. Some require a résumé, some will review your résumé if you submit one, and other don’t want it at all. Many colleges indicate that a résumé is optional, so you should seize this opportunity.
Below are a few examples that indicate the range of policies:
- Princeton won’t review any non-required documents such as résumés that are submitted with applications, but Dartmouth will.
- Vanderbilt will review a 2-page résumé, but they discourage them.
- Brandeis and Georgetown allow you to upload a résumé, but don’t require it.
- Penn states in their admissions material that, “You are required to complete the Activities Section of the [Common] application. If an activity needs to be explained in greater detail, you may include an expanded explanation or a résumé.”
Avoid shortcuts in developing your résumé. Don’t use a template that you find on the web. They inhibit your ability to present your information in the manner that you see fit. Although the opportunity to use as many words as you want to in a free-form document is tempting, we advise that you keep your résumé as short as possible. It need only draw the reader’s attention to those activities that you want to emphasize. These should be the non-academic pursuits that will make you appealing as a potential addition to a college’s student body. Remember that your résumé is a selective representation of your activities, not a dumping ground for everything you’ve ever done.
At
MyCollegeFit, we advise our students to avoid bragging, especially on their résumés. Among our culture’s social norms is the assumption that a person should be modest. If a person isn’t modest, it upsets expectations. Impression management, an art practiced by many successful people, is about subtly leading others to view you favorably. If an admissions officer thinks you’re trying too hard, they may be turned off by you — the exact opposite of what you’re trying to accomplish.
Opportunities to brag present themselves on applications, in interviews, and on résumés. Below are some tips to help you avoid bragging in your communications with colleges while still coming across as upbeat about yourself and your qualifications.
1. Be likable: An unlikable student may have difficulty gaining admission to a selective or highly selective colleges no matter how
good their academic record. Colleges have many other applicants who are equally as well qualified as you but more likely to fit in
well with their other students.
2. Let others brag about you: Your teachers and others who are writing letters of recommendation can sing your praises. You should
be modest.
3. Describe what you did, not what you are: Which sounds better, “I’m a great humanitarian” or “I set up and managed a food bank in
my town after a hurricane”? One of the problems caused by bragging is the question of whether something you say about yourself is verifiable. How can the reader know that you’re telling the truth? If you make such a claim about yourself but don’t describe an
outcome as evidence, they have only your word alone. You may not be believed.
4. Share the glory: In the above reference to a food bank, for example, it’s recommended that you add something like, “…with the
cooperation and assistance of other caring people in the town”.
5. Be kind: In an interview, never say anything negative about a person or organization. Colleges would prefer not to have highly
judgmental people in their student body.
6. Be confident: Come across as having confidence in yourself and your accomplishments, but avoid self-admiration.
Your goal is to maximize your chance of being accepted by colleges. Your résumé is one of the ways to make a positive impression on college admissions officers.
MyCollegeFit, as an experienced college admissions consulting firm, has the expertise to guide you through all stages of your admissions campaign. Part of our contribution to your success is assistance in creating a résumé that ideally suits your individual profile and the expectations of colleges.