Which activities/clubs would make my application look the strongest?

<p>Please stop posting every half hour. Thank you.</p>

<p>Yes, it really is what you need to do. Be true to yourself - if you try to be something MIT wants, you won’t end up liking who you are, and you won’t enjoy your 4 years at MIT (or wherever else you got in). If MIT is looking for a student who spent 500 hours each of the last 4 years feeding the hungry, they would rather accept the person who did it, because it’s just what they do, as opposed to the person who did so just to get into MIT. The former is likely to continue to do so, and improve her world, the latter is likely to stop, unless it will help them get something else they want.</p>

<p>Forget passion - what do you enjoy doing? How can you share that with others? What have you done, in the smallest of ways, to make the world a better place?</p>

<p>But is the I really need to do the only thing I can do?</p>

<p>Yes, what do you expect? There are no fail-safe ways for college admissions. The best you can do is work hard and pursue your passions. Remember that chances of acceptance are so small even for the most competitive applicants, so you might get rejected whatever you do. But if you love your ECs, then it will not feel like you wasted 4 years of your life doing things you never enjoyed or even hated.</p>

<p>JJoy15, you have been given good advice on this thread, and it has run its course. I’ll leave you with a closing comment from Ben Jones, an admissions officer at MIT. Although he’s talking about APs, his point is the same if you substitute “competitions” or “extracurricular activities.”</p>

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<p>Really, I didn’t know how even the best appliacants had such low acceptance rate? :frowning: What you said was very true and I’m truly sorry for annoying all the CC members. :frowning: I thank you all for your insightful posts and I ask that this thread be closed. :smiley: No one else should post in this thread anymore. :)</p>