
Extracurriculars Columbia Looks For & How They're Evaluated
New York · Private

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
Columbia rewards specificity over breadth. The activity that signals true intellectual passion, whether a rare instrument, an original journal, or a niche pursued for years, beats ten well-rounded leadership roles.
Columbia loves that nerdy passion, that special-interest, nerdy passion. Lean into it. There is no limit to how nerdy one can get about what they're passionate about.

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
Nerdy Specialization
Columbia officers look the activities no student would fake, pursued out of genuine passion.
Institutional Priorities
Beyond academics, Columbia weighs factors that shape class composition & intellectual diversity.
NYC Integration
Columbia notices applicants who can articulate how they'll actually use New York.
I once saw an art history student who created an art history review journal and worked with students all over their county. That's passion. You can't fake that.

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
At the end of the strongest Columbia activity lists is a fully fleshed out student, not an obvious admissions strategy.
An AO has to verify activities. If they have unverifiable activities, that hurts their case. We can flag, like, this doesn't seem as real, can I Google this? Is there a link to this?

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
When you're going after impacted majors, you really need to think in your heart of hearts: who would I be in the econ class full of everyone else who wants to do econ here? What's specific about my view of it?

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
In an impacted major pile, the academic profile blends in. The activity list is the only place a student can stop being interchangeable.
The language we use is, oh, this person is art history but lurking English major. Very clear language to show this person is trying to game the system. We're trained very highly to spot that. Ultimately, the extracurricular list will show what major you really are after.

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
If it's a very prestigious journal, chances are I'm not going to have too many questions about the research itself: someone else has evaluated how strong it is. The other big thing is how nuanced the research question is. What are you trying to answer within the field?

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
What unifies these five files isn't accomplishment. It's that you can't imagine any of these activities happening without the specific student who did them.
There needs to be a clear thread. I'm essentially following your case for admission, does it come together cohesively? The biggest misstep students make is not being specific enough.

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
Activities built exclusively for the application don't survive outside the application. The ones that work were always going to happen anyway.
We want to see that the books or media list lends to a nuanced view of whatever you're trying to study. If you're STEM-aligned and you list The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, that immediately shows you're thinking about ethics and biology together, not just STEM in isolation.

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
