Proving Extra Curriculars

<p>I would like to get a jump start on financial aid and any other things that may come up down the road. I didn’t even think about it until a few minutes ago but, when I read the Common App from head to toe, it states that colleges have a right to force us to provide proof of our extracurricular accomplishments. Current Bulldogs or anyone else who goes/went to an ivy league school: Must I start gathering documentation to prive I participated in every activity “x” amount of hours? Did they ever send you an email telling you to send in records of your community service?</p>

<p>This is from Yale’s Supplement
“The Admissions Committee may confirm information provided in your application, and may withdraw an offer of admission if you are found to have violated the terms to which you agreed when you signed the Common Application or if there are omissions or errors in your information that the Admissions Committee regards as serious or substantial. Understand that by signing the honesty statement at the end of the Common Application and submitting your application to Yale, you also are giving your consent to Yale’s Admissions Committee to obtain directly those documents needed to make an accurate confirmation if necessary.”</p>

<p>Here is my list of accomplishments so everyone knows what I will be submitting; it isn’t phenomenal but I’d still like to start asking the leaders for records if it seems I might need to. </p>

<p>A+ Mentor; 11th-12th Grade; 3 hours per week; 26 weeks per year; I assist teachers by independently working with students on problems they may be having with schoolwork; My greatest achievement was leading the fifth-grade Gifted Education class in a research project involving supplies for special needs children. I compiled a purchase order during Junior year for the middle school’s Special Education classroom with the information they presented.</p>

<p>Belton Vision Team; 11th-12th Grade; 2.5 hours per week; 20 weeks per year; The Belton Vision Team is a local community service organization that is dedicated to the enhancing of life for Belton’s neediest people; I am the Videographer (and am currently creating a documentary about the program for the All-American City Award application) and I was selected from the Belton High School student body to become a Student Leader during Junior and Senior year.</p>

<p>Service Learning; 9th-12th Grade; 2.5 hours per week; 26 weeks per year; Service Learning ties the school’s curriculum into community service; I am the Videographer and have been a Student Leader since Junior Year.</p>

<p>Service Learning Student Advisory Board; 12th Grade; 8 hours per week; 4 weeks per year; Student Advisory Board Members travel to (capital of state) and determine which applications for grants for service learning projects will be approved</p>

<p>Scholar Bowl; 11th-12th Grade; 5 hours per week; 10 weeks per year; Scholar Bowl is a school v. school Trivial Pursuit competition; I am “The Filler” of our team; my greatest contribution to the team is during a timed fill-in-the-blank round.</p>

<p>National Honor Society; 11th-12th Grade; 2 hours per week; 8 weeks per year; National Honor Society is an organization devoted to recognizing academic and leadership achievement by high school; I have attended multiple highway clean-ups, house clean-ups, and other community service projects.</p>

<p>Debate/Speech; 9th-10th; 8 hours per week; 15 weeks per year; I was a Lincoln-Douglas debater; I placed 5th in districts my freshman year.</p>

<p>As you said yourself in the post, OP, Yale is checking for the extracurricular accomplishments, e.g. partcipating in the USNCO, winning a medal in an athletic competition, etc. I don’t think they would (or even could) check how many hours you did extracurricluar A every week. </p>

<p>I heard about a student that submitted a music supplement (to Cornell, not Yale) that was so extraordinary that the staff asked the student to perform in person. When the student could not, the staff eventually figured out (correctly) that the cello music supplement was copied from another source.</p>

<p>They would probably start by talking to your guidance counselor if they were suspicious for some reason. They’re not going to be investigating how many hours you spent on NHS projects.</p>