<p>@Mandalorian I think I was a little unclear about defining what the club does or why I like it (sorry). The club works with the admissions office at my current high school for families that are looking into coming to that high school. The people in the club were chosen for being leaders in thier grade, charismatic, mature and for showing enthusiasm and love for school. We basically are “the face of the school” for prospective families. On open house days, we roam the halls, give tours of the school, and invite families to come back to shadow us for a day. I have now become a President so I am in charge of chosing new members, organizing tours, bringing structure to open houses, and being the first face to prospective families. I actually love this job! It gives me lots of freedom, a voice to change things at the school, and even give an opinion on who I think would be good to admit to my school. I’ve surprisingly never done anything just to help my application except maybe taking the ACT (you would be surprised how much of an amateur I am to the whole process). I just like being over the top busy and setting goals to always do more and better (sometimes a bad thing). Freshman year I was actually an active member of over twenty clubs from the school’s gay-straight alliance to student council to quiz bowl (a time-turner was useful) just to be more known around the school and make friends! Every year I’ve dropped more until I only have the clubs left I truly love. For this resume, I’ve already narrowed down my EC list to just the clubs I’m a leader in, but do you think I should leave my ECs even more focused on the actual application to avoid seeming like a drone? Or just elaborate like I did here? That’s a really helpful remark, by the way, thanks a lot! I never thought someone would see it in that way and I’m glad you said it before an admission’s officer did. And oops I just checked my ACT writing it was a 9 (will try to get a higher score on the next one though).</p>