
Extracurriculars Harvard Looks For & How They're Evaluated
Cambridge, Massachusetts · Private

Devery D.
Former Harvard Admissions Officer
Harvard isn't impressed by a long list of activities. It's looking for proof that you act with purpose, take initiative, and create impact within the context available to you.
It was their extracurriculars, it was where they took them, and getting a sense of this person as well. It really came down to everything else

Devery D.
Former Harvard Admissions Officer
Extracurriculars are where Harvard finds out whether you wait for the world to come to you, or whether you go out and change it.
Depth Over Breadth
A sustained commitment to something you care about will always outshine a long list of involvements.
Initiative and Ownership
Did you build, start, or create something that wouldn't have been there without you?
Purpose-Driven Impact
Admissions officers quickly tell if your effort is genuine passion, not just checking boxes.
I like when a student includes a hobby they just genuinely love. It could be rock climbing, it could be knitting, it could be baking. When they make time for something and you can really feel that they're excited about it.

Devery D.
Former Harvard Admissions Officer
Harvard's cellist, its entrepreneur, its student with a perspective no one else in the room has: that's what the activity list is really building toward. The category doesn't matter. The conviction does.
Your activity list isn't evaluated in isolation. Admissions officers are checking whether your activities, essays, transcript and recommendations all point to the same person. When they don't, that inconsistency is hard to overlook.
You're just doing things that are kind of easy to do, you're not really going outside of the box or making anything your own, or having a lasting impact. It's more participatory.

Devery D.
Former Harvard Admissions Officer
Title Leadership
What matters is what you did with the role and what would have changed if you hadn't been there.
Initiative Leadership
Unearthed a problem. Didn't wait for permission. This is the kind of leadership Harvard looks for
Influence Leadership
Elevated others, mentored peers, Harvard seeks people who raise the bar for everyone around them.
A title tells Harvard you were elected. What they actually want to know is what you did once you got there, and what happened to the people around you because of it.
How do you take initiative? How do you get things done? Do you have to be told what to do? Can you think outside the box? Do you step in because you see something needs to be done, and you don't need to be told to do so?

Devery D.
Former Harvard Admissions Officer
Engineering, Community & Research Admit
Debate, Advocacy & Journalism Admit
Community Service & Global Advocacy Admit
Research, Policy & Civic Impact Admit
Art, Advocacy & Community Impact Admit
Invention, Care & Humanitarian Impact Admit
These examples aren’t transferable. Each one worked because the activity was inseparable from the student behind it. The goal is to be so specifically yourself that no one else could have submitted your file.
We don't expect every student to have everything. We're going to get our cellist here, our little entrepreneur here, our student that can share this perspective here.

Devery D.
Former Harvard Admissions Officer
Most admitted Harvard students don't walk in with a shelf full of national titles. What they have is a handful of activities they truly committed to, grew through, and can speak about with real conviction.
The most common extracurricular mistake isn't having too few activities. It's having too many that don't connect to anything real about who you are or what you actually care about.
Your extracurriculars are often your richest essay material. Not because you should write about them directly, but because the experiences that shaped your activity list are usually the ones that say something only you could explain.
Do the things that are important to you. Not only will there be purpose and meaning behind it, but you're much more likely to stick with it, you're much more likely to go deeper with it, and to reach those levels of commitment and accolades that we typically see in the students that we admit.

Devery D.
Former Harvard Admissions Officer
