<p>I have a great chance at being Debate Captain, I'm going to be Neurology Club president (founder), Healthcare Professionals VP (cofounder), Newspaper Editor, She's the first President. I know that these are a lot of EC's, but does it look bad that there are so many of these executive board spots? </p>
<p>If you show dedication and contributions for each I don’t think so. However a laundry list of ECs with little involvement should be avoided.</p>
<p>No - if your extracurricular activities do not interfere with your academics and they convey a strong passion, interest, or dedication, then there isn’t such thing as too many. </p>
<p>@SwaggyC speaks the truth, but to compound upon that further, I and any Ivy-esque college counselor isn’t going to say, “Wow! A president of a club! I must accept you!”.</p>
<p>It’s one thing to have a leadership role in a club. It’s a whole other matter to do something significant with it. College apps often ask you to talk about what you did in clubs; that’s what colleges care about.</p>
<p>So no one cares that you spent an hour a week at NHS talking to friends. It means nothing, really it does, and I’m not trying to hurt you, but help you find better ECs. The best ECs showcase the passion of the applicant, demonstrate that the applicant isn’t limited by conventional thinking in terms of pursuing and doing what they want and that the applicant is more than one-dimensional as a person [This means that you might like Kandinsky and Kinematics, and that you actively pursue these things].</p>
<p>PM me for more, currently inebriated for the second night of limeade.</p>
<p>I am curious to know what exactly the Neurology Club and Healthcare Professionals (club?) are going to do? How will your leadership of those groups make you stand out as an individual applicant? Are there really that many kids at your school who are interested in Neurology? </p>
<p>My initial reaction is it looks like you are trying to pad your resume with a bunch of fluff (like fancy titles). </p>
<p>I actually think you are better off going out and doing something interesting on your own - things that would demonstrate your commitment to a future in medicine. Maybe if you have some vision for the activities these clubs will be involved with that would help. Good luck to you! </p>
<p>As long as you’re dedicated to all of them, that’s great. You should try to participate in activities other that extra curriculars if you can too, like science fair.</p>
<p>It seems to me like there isn’t enough time in the day to really commit to each executive position properly while doing all your coursework and finding time to sleep.</p>