<p>What are some good extracurriculars for Business or International Relations majors? I'm hoping to get into the Huntsman Program at Penn (I know it is a little unrealistic, but I can dream), so extracurriculars in both of these fields are pretty important.</p>
<p>FBLA? or you could start your own mini buisness…
Model United Nations
Some kind of debate club maybe?
Try teaching yourself a foreign language or help others with english?</p>
<p>I’m interested in International Relations too so I kinda have the same question/problem you have…</p>
<p>what the person said above.</p>
<p>Maybe try to get an internship at a magazine related to your interests
Learn as many languages are you can
Try to get internships at various businesses. Bank of America, State Street, whatever
You could even try an internship at your mayor’s office
I’m also not sure if this interests you (or differs too much for your interests) but you could try paging at your state house</p>
<p>I’m more of a science nerd, sorry if this doesn’t help much. but i’ve known a bunch of kids into the business/polysci/economics/international relations track and this is what they did…</p>
<p>@TheGreatCatsbyx:</p>
<p>What extracurriculars do you recommend if I like music, art, politics/MUN/international relations, and science?</p>
<p>Thanks!</p>
<p>I’m already in FBLA, I’m trying to start an international club… And there’s some more. But I definitely don’t have time for an internship. Maybe I could ask my dad for an internship at his business because that could possibly be easier to deal with time constraints, but would that not look good for colleges?</p>
<p>Bummmmpppppppppp</p>
<p>Teach yourself Chinese?
You could even do volunteer work as an ESL teacher. That’s what I did and it was a lot of fun. It also shows you can communicate with others without speaking their language.</p>
<p>MUN
Becoming proficient at a relatively unusual language (that will actually apply to your career, don’t learn Welsh or something just to impress people)
Internships, especially with the State Department, UN, or any major corporations
Starting a business
Studying/traveling abroad
Write a few intelligent articles about foreign policy and/or economics and try for publication (blogs, local newspapers, Letter to the Editor, esp. in something big like the NY Times or Newsweek)
Start a Sister Cities program in your city
Host an exchange student</p>