If you’re a freshman or sophomore this year, college might feel like a distant problem. But the choices you make right now, in early high school, can shape how things unfold over the next few years… Including the core strength of your final college applications. Admissions officers know this, too. They don’t just read your senior year transcript in isolation. They’ll read your whole story.
So, what do colleges actually value from your earliest years of high school? And what can you do to get started on the right track?
What admissions readers are really looking for early in high school isn’t perfection; it’s evidence of who you are becoming. And that evidence gets built one small decision at a time, starting now.
Why your early high school experiences set the stage
Ninth and tenth grade are usually the first two years of high school. For many high school underclassmen, these first few years feel like “just a warm-up,” or free time to settle in before anything real starts happening. But the approach you choose as a freshman can influence the rest of your path in high school.
Why?
Because by junior year, the academic stakes escalate. Advanced Placement courses, IB programs, dual enrollment, and other examples of college-level coursework available to you as an upperclassman demand a considerable level of self-discipline, time management, and intellectual stamina. And that can’t be manufactured overnight. Those who waited to challenge themselves tend to find themselves scrambling to catch up at the worst possible time.
And frankly, the same is true for extracurriculars. Colleges aren’t just impressed by leadership roles; they’re impressed by trajectories. A student who joined a club as a freshman and worked their way into a leadership role several years later tells a much more compelling story than someone who listed a handful of clubs in their final semester. Admissions readers are looking for progression, not last-minute positioning.
Starting early gives you time to grow into good habits.
Want to make the most of your freshman year? Check out this video for more perspective on standing out in high school and building a foundation that sets you up for long-term success.
What colleges are actually evaluating (even in 9th grade)
Admissions officers are not judging you on prestige or perfection early on. They are tracking patterns:
- Do you follow through on commitments?
- Do you increase rigor over time?
- Do your interests deepen or stay surface-level?
- Do you rise to challenges, or avoid them?
Early high school is where these patterns begin.

How to “walk the walk” throughout early high school
When admissions officers look at your involvement in early high school, they’re not counting titles or checking boxes. They’re reading for characteristics of successful students: specific human qualities that predict both college success and meaningful contribution to a campus community.
Here are five of the most important traits that colleges actually value from early high school involvement.
1. Adaptability to new environments
Freshman year is, by definition, a year of transition. You’ve moved to a whole new campus, you’re meeting new teachers, and navigating new social dynamics. Not to mention, for many students, this is their first real encounter with academic pressure. How a student handles that transition says a lot.
Colleges value students who demonstrate resilience in the face of change. Did you struggle and push through? Did you find your footing and adjust your approach when something wasn’t working? Adaptation isn’t about breezing through difficulties; it’s about showing that you can rise to meet new responsibilities without falling apart.
Qualities to practice:
- Adjusting to a new campus and environment.
- Rising to meet new expectations.
- Demonstrating resilience despite changes.
2. Exploration without overcommitting
One of the great gifts of early high school is that it comes with permission to experiment. You don’t have to know who you are yet. You’re allowed to try things and find out they’re not for you. Stay involved long enough to understand the commitment and make sure it’s not a fit. Then, when you’re sure you’re dropping strategically, not impulsively, feel free to politely excuse yourself.
Colleges value students who got involved in their campus during their early high school years because it shows curiosity and community-building skills. You don’t have to occupy every single minute of your free time. The spirit of exploration tells admissions readers that you’re someone who engages with the world rather than waiting for the world to hand you opportunities.
Qualities to practice:
- Trying new things and going outside your comfort zone.
- Getting involved in your campus (try 2-3 activities, not 7).
- Openness to new responsibilities.
3. Curiosity in the world around you
Beyond formal clubs and sports, colleges want to see evidence that your intellectual life doesn’t stop when the bell rings. Personal initiative, the drive to pursue your own interests, ask your own questions, and educate yourself outside of class requirements, is one of the most compelling signals an applicant can send.
This doesn’t mean you need to be publishing your own research papers in ninth grade. It means reading about things that fascinate you. Watching documentaries or lectures on topics your classes haven’t touched yet. Building things, making things, asking questions that don’t have easy answers.
Think about it from the college’s perspective. Curiosity is the engine behind every great academic and professional career, and the students who cultivate it early arrive at college ready to thrive.
Qualities to practice:
- Intellectual vitality (asking “why” and “how”, and making connections between ideas).
- Initiative to pursue education in your free time.
- Personal passions and interests that show up in your work.
4. Investment of time
Commitment matters. Not commitment in a rigid, “you-must-do-this-one-activity-forever” kind of way. The quiet, consistent commitment of showing up, doing the work, and following through on what you’ve said you’ll do.
When a freshman or sophomore in high school takes on a responsibility and sticks with it, whether that’s a part-time job, a sport, a volunteer role, or a passion project, it demonstrates a work ethic that colleges take seriously. Admissions officers have seen thousands of applications. They can tell the difference between a student who genuinely invested their time and a student who padded a list of activities for appearance’s sake. Investment is visible in the details: the hours logged, the progress made, the way a simple member becomes someone others rely on.
Qualities to practice:
- Diligence and perseverance in your activities.
- Sustained dedication to your interests over time.
- Consistently follow through on your promises and responsibilities.
5. Growth mindset
The ability to view your experiences, particularly the challenging ones, as data for learning rather than definitive verdicts is perhaps the most crucial quality of all. Embracing a growth mindset means that a poor grade is not seen as proof of a lack of intelligence, but as information indicating a need for a different approach. Similarly, a failed audition is not rejection; it’s a prompt to practice more.
When early high school students adopt this mindset, they gain more than just academic improvement. They become more engaging and interesting individuals who adapt quickly, recover from setbacks with grace, and genuinely seek and utilize feedback instead of avoiding it. Colleges are looking to build a thriving community, and students focused on growth are the ones who contribute most meaningfully to it.
Qualities to practice:
- Emotional maturity.
- The ability to reflect on your experiences.
- Using data to inform your growth trajectory.

Making your early high school years count
Here’s the real “secret sauce”: the students who approach early high school with intention, who show up, explore, commit, and reflect, don’t just build better college applications. They build better versions of themselves. And that, more than any award or GPA, is what college admissions officers are actually trying to find.
Starting early doesn’t mean burning yourself out at fifteen. It means paying attention. It means saying yes to things that scare you a little and being brave. And it means treating freshman and sophomore year not as a waiting room before the real game begins, but as the beginning of a story worth telling.
By the end of sophomore year, aim to have:
- 2–3 consistent extracurricular commitments
- Increasing academic rigor (honors/AP where appropriate)
- At least one area of genuine interest worth exploring deeper
- Evidence of follow-through and responsibility
The great news?
You have time to get there. More time than you think. And what you do right now, in these early years, will speak volumes about who you are when it matters most. Take your time and review a checklist of everything you should focus on during freshman year (or sophomore year).
Even better?
You’re not alone. A college counselor can be an invaluable mentor during your early high school years, long before applications are on the horizon. Together, you’ll identify your strengths and build a four-year plan that sets you up for success. A great guide can help you see your own story clearly, connecting the dots between who you are now and who you’re working to become.
See for yourself. Check out this video from Empowerly counselor Ben, providing the perspective of an admissions officer reviewing extracurricular activities:
If you have access to a college counselor, now is the time to start that conversation. Reach out to Empowerly to learn more about how our program works.