<p>i had a school course that required like 15+ hours of extra, out of school work, will this count as EC? Its an entrepreneurship program that required out-of-class selling, marketing, meetings etc.</p>
<p>I would mention it in an essay, but considering it was for a class, that by definition makes it curricular.</p>
<p>the way it's been explained to me, there are extra-curriculars, curriculars, and co-curriculars. the first two are pretty self-explanatory. a co-curricular class would be something along the lines of what you described in which there is an expected extra-curricular commitment, i.e. debate, journalism, etc.</p>
<p>hmm but are there even co-curricular spaces on applications? i agree with your idea tho, this is almost like work experience class</p>
<p>ps: i kinda want this an EC tho ;)</p>
<p>well, people list debate as an extra-curricular all the time, but they're also enrolled in it...
i'd totally put it on your resume somewhere.</p>
<p>And athletes are often enrolled in athletic PE classes, but that doesn't stop them from listing their sport as an extracurricular. Same thing with other subjects, such as journalism and debate, as others have mentioned.</p>
<p>Agreed. Stuff like Orchestra and Band go on EC lists, and those are classes.</p>
<p>Excellent. </p>
<p>but should i put the FULL course name, like including the 101, or should i just the course name without the 101? i mean, 101 makes it look less authoritative. i think. Since i don't have band/orchestra classes, i'm wondering how those ppl put those classes on their apps</p>