Is it better to be treasurer of my school's Associated Student Body or Senior Board f

<p>Well I was elected for both positions but the principal pulled a 180 on me and forced me to choose</p>

<p>The problem is that the previous year had a President who ran for both and won
The administrators didn't do anything about it but it looks like this year they are taking a stand</p>

<p>This year there was me and one other student who won dual positions. He was elected as president of both and I was elected treasurer of both.<br>
The unofficial reason is that the Principal wanted equal opportunity for other students to get a position for college apps. Which is completely unfair considering I actually won against all odds of a popularity contest but that's besides the point.</p>

<p>The way I see it becoming the Senior Class Treasurer seems to be my best bet as I will still be part of my school's ASB. But if I take the position of ASB Treasurer then I'll just be another person in my Senior class except I'm on the prom committee.</p>

<p>So what do?</p>

<p>It will not matter to colleges which you choose.</p>

<p>I agree. You may as well pick the job you’d prefer to do. Which is probably what you should do even if one job would look better to colleges than the other.</p>

<p>total agreement with Wavery and Sikorsky</p>

<p>This will have NO impact on your college admission chances.</p>

<p>Totally unexciting and normal stuff .</p>

<p>that shhhhhhhhhhhh noise we are hearing is the deflating balloon that the OP is holding – the one where he/she thinks that the position is a magic key to propel her application to the top of the pile.</p>

<p>Like others have said: take the one you want to do. The decision is neglible for your later plans.</p>

<p>I guess it’s worth noting that doing either one of these jobs is better than doing neither of them. They’re not bad extracurricular activities. But neither of them will be an extraordinary feather in your cap, and neither will distinguish you from the scores of other class treasurers who are applying to the same colleges as you.</p>