
What Extracurricular Activities Does Brown Look For?
Providence, Rhode Island · Private

Mariama A
Former Brown Admissions Officer
They want to see you venture out, be a little less conventional. For things that are most common, if you're not unconventional, then you start reading like everyone else in the pool. There's really no way to distinguish you.

Mariama A
Former Brown Admissions Officer
Brown doesn't count activities. It reads them for what grades can't show: the talent and character it rates Very Important. Depth in one real thread tells a reader more than a long list ever will.
Depth over breadth
One sustained commitment with real growth always outshines a long list of shallow involvements.
Rooted in community
Admissions officers favor students who spotted a need close to home and stayed to address it.
Initiative and ownership
Did you build, start, or create something that would not exist without you?
A coherent thread
Activities point at the same student your essays and transcript describe.
It's really the students who focus on local impact who we could say are really going to contribute to Brown, rather than the students who focus on global impact. The local students observe their community and see what's needed.

Mariama A
Former Brown Admissions Officer
My econ kids, I always say, econ is great and starting a business is great, but show the academic side of economics too, that you've dived into it in your extracurriculars.

Mariama A
Former Brown Admissions Officer
Brown holds your activities next to your essays, transcript, and recommendations and asks whether they describe one person. A list that pulls against the rest of the file is what stalls it in committee.
We saw a really successful student, had everything academically, did all the activities, but they came across as very arrogant. That's where they probably wouldn't get in, even though their profile is technically perfect.

Mariama A
Former Brown Admissions Officer
Brown measures leadership by subtraction. Take you out of the role, the team, the project, and ask what falls apart. Whatever wouldn't have happened without you is the only part that counts.
Mental health and neurodivergence advocate
The builder across six domains
The pediatric-medicine builder
The physics applicant who builds for people
The single-cause advocate
A reader doesn't count activities, the reader looks for the line connecting them. A list where the activities accumulate offers nothing to trace. A list where they connect offers a student to advocate for.
Most admitted Brown students don’t walk in with a shelf of national titles. They have a handful of activities they truly committed to, grew through, and can speak about with real conviction.
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.

Mariama A
Former Brown Admissions Officer
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.
At a school with no requirements, every choice on your file is yours alone. That's why Brown reads your transcript, activities, and essays as one decision repeated, and why a file that points three ways is the hardest kind to admit.
