Volunteering can often be a requirement for your high school. But rather than drag your feet, you can actually leverage the opportunity to get to know yourself better and build your brand! So, instead of thinking of the requirement as just a quota to fill, consider volunteering time to discover yourself. Volunteering in high school can be a moment to define and flex your empathy, all while strengthen your candidacy toward college admission.
Depth vs. Breadth Strategies
Depth of experience and consistent efforts are strong narratives to present to top 20 highly selective colleges and the Ivy League Schools. In contrast, a breadth profile belongs to a versatile student with many varying interests, but to an admissions officer, may come off as unfocused. A breadth profile is less competitive but will still appeal to top 100 colleges. Building a depth profile is a great strategy to go for when applying to top 20 universities and the Ivy League Schools. Selecting your volunteering opportunities intentionally can play a big part in this.
Having a unified story or personal brand makes your application stronger. Similarly to when you write an essay at school, there’s sort of a thesis statement binding together the argument of your essay. Your paper should coherently gather around that central topic.
How Volunteering Strengthens Your Profile
Your high school career should also gather around a central purpose that you cultivate over time. One of the strongest ways to emphasize your thesis statement is volunteering in high school. For example, if you are a student who values housing the homeless, then many of your extracurricular activity should support initiatives to serve this community. That doesn’t mean volunteering just once with Habitat for Humanity over spring break and calling it quits. Rather, it means engaging with solutions and organizations disrupting homelessness in varied ways for an entire year or longer during high school.
You could also support such an organization in varied ways. For example, you could volunteer on Habitat for Humanity build sites, and ask the volunteer coordinator what other initiatives the organization could use your help with. Maybe they need fundraising efforts, or social media marketing.
Don’t Forget: You Can Forge Your Own Path
Sometimes, you can create your own niche volunteering opportunity that isn’t necessarily posted anywhere. In the case of working with Habitat for Humanity, one could ask if they need help with fundraising, or marketing. Ask:
“What are some additional ways I could support your organization’s mission on a more regular basis?”
This question can open doors for you to engage more deeply and uniquely. This also demonstrates initiative and ambition come time for college admission. The organization may ask you to serve as a marketing intern, or to help them brainstorm and orchestrate fundraising events.
That doesn’t mean you can’t also play the tuba and soccer—”you most certainly can—”but your service projects should be focused toward consistently reversing a societal disparity that you care about.
The more focused your volunteering story, the more persistence and determination you indicate to your college admissions officers. Utilize summers intentionally and direct your focus to tell a consistent story. Work toward an evolving goal. When you reach that goal, aim higher and challenge yourself to learn more and iterate upon your contributed solutions.
How do I start building my volunteer story?
Start thinking about things that define you. Are there problems in the world that you want to address or change? Are there inventions rattling around in your head that you want to get out there to disrupt a problem you’ve observed?
Ask yourself:
- When I observe my community, what is a problem I see that doesn’t sit right with me?
- Who are people in my community that are disenfranchised from access to something? How can I help them gain access?
- If you don’t know how to help people gain access, you can interview someone affected. Ask them to tell you more about their experience and their needs. Working directly toward solving a specific person’s problems empathizing with their personal experience is the first step in the Stanford Design Thinking method.
- What patterns or systems can I observe around me that don’t seem fair? What skills do I have that contribute to creating fairness in this area?
- Draw upon your personal experience. Do you have a family member or friend who struggles with a particular issue that resonates personally with you? Can you become an advocate for the cause?
We have a great informational network within Empowerly to get some ideas about organizations you might like to support long term, but we discourage jumping around from one unrelated organization to the next as a high school junior or senior volunteering strategy. Check out the example below!
Note of Caution: Things to Avoid
Sometimes, schools require a certain number of volunteering hours in order to earn your diploma. It can be tempting to scan a list of volunteering opportunities and volunteer with a bunch of unrelated organizations and causes to fill the quota. While this might satisfy your school’s requirement, it wouldn’t show colleges that you deeply care about any specific social issue or cause. This doesn’t mean that you can’t occasionally volunteer for seasonal or unrelated causes beyond your central passion project, but your central observed disparity should drive most of your volunteering efforts.
If you lose interest in a cause your freshman or sophomore year, don’t stick with it just for the sake of continuity too early on. It’s okay to explore other causes and organizations. You have time to cast a wide net and explore during your freshman and sophomore years, and then commit to disrupting a central disparity by your junior year, if not sooner.
Does volunteering really pay off?
Yup! Beyond buffing up your resume, your volunteering engagements can help you declare a major, explore a career path, or explore a future career path. For example, if you’re interested in coding, and you also care about civic engagement and voter turnout, then you could potentially make a career out of creating an app to help people engage with local government.
An interest in industrial engineering will always need an applicable project to serve. For example, if you’re a budding engineer interested in physical mobility, you could volunteer with a maker space that uses its 3D printers to print affordable prosthetic arms for amputees. This could blossom into a career trajectory in bioengineering or patient advocacy via working in public health. Plus, college admissions officers would take notice of such a mission-driven extracurricular activity.
In Conclusion
Find a common thread—”your own thesis statement. You’re not a gingerbread man, so why should you fit into a cookie-cutter? More dynamic than the unit circle, every student has niche dreams and an individual narrative. We want to help you craft and tell that story—”in your voice. Volunteering in high school with this purpose in mind will develop your character and strengthen your candidacy for college.
Working with an Empowerly counselor can help you craft the most powerful narrative to present to colleges based on your driving passions. Reach out to learn more about the program today.