By: Ryan Kelly
“Assistant Regional Manager.”
“No, it’s ‘Assistant to the Regional Manager.’”
Fans of The Office will be familiar with Michael and Dwight’s frequent, petty banter over job titles. The humor is spot-on. For better or worse, people love fancy titles, clinging to them with utmost pride or admiration.
I mean, just imagine being called the “The Director of Life Enrichment” or “The Director of Operational Excellence” (both real jobs). Sounds amazing, right?
To the average person, yes. To a discerning admissions committee, not so much. The people reading your application will have seen the gamut of job titles and descriptions. They will be comparing you to the hundreds or even thousands of apps they’ve read in the past. To them, your job title will probably seem like some application madlib, with a random assortment of fancy, official-sounding words:
Lead
Head
Senior
Student
Primary
Assistant
Client
Patient
Clinical
Internal
Chief
Principal
Community
Associate
Volunteer
Undergraduate
Intercollegiate
CampusSolutions
Program
Research
Integration
Optimization
Operations
Communications
Quality
Assurance
Data
Creative
Outreach
Recruitment
Department
Development
Fundraising
Youth
ServicePresident
Vice-president
Captain
Chair
Treasurer
Secretary
Coordinator
Investigator
Instructor
Advisor
Mentor
Director
Intern
Counselor
Representative
Manager
Engineer
Liaison
When it comes to your medical school application, your job title doesn’t matter very much. What’s important is the impact you had on your community and the skills you gained to be an effective leader moving forward. Regardless of title, the admissions committees will be able to suss out whether you’ve thrived in the role or merely filled it. How? Through your description in the Work and Activities section.
Let’s consider a few examples to illustrate the difference between a generic and a convincing leadership activity description. Which one do you think is best?
Internal Research Liaison
Eureka Lab
Description (maximum 700 characters)
Chief Operations Manager
Plant A Seed Foundation
Description (maximum 700 characters)
Team Captain, Club Founder
Engineering World Health Hackathon
Description (maximum 700 characters)
generic
If you chose A, it’s likely because you saw the combination of the scientific word ‘research’ and the fancy, professional word ‘liaison.’ It does sound impressive on the surface. Description A is packed with application buzzwords: responsible, crucial, important, strong communication, protocol, assessments, supervisors, adaptability, etc. But what do these words really mean?
That’s the problem with description A. It’s devoid of concretes that support the assertions being made. In short, it’s all telling and no showing. In fairness, 700 characters is not a ton of space for showing, but you must make some effort to paint a picture, or your description will sound like everyone else’s.
Besides its lack of showing, description A is also missing some important strategies for conveying leadership (and writing about activities in general). We’ll cover those in descriptions B and C.
average
There’s a lot to like about description B. It has a feel-good, heartwarming quality to it (albeit a tad corny towards the end). People are clearly being helped, and the community is forming connections. There’s also some indication about the steps the student had to go through in order to organize and actualize the program. I mean, he is the Chief Operations Manager, after all.
So what’s missing? What makes this average and not great?
convincing
This leadership description has all the qualities we’re looking for.
Besides the Work and Activities section, you’ll be able to cover your leadership experiences in the secondary essays and again when you come in for the interview. Whenever writing about leadership, keep our tips in mind. But if you read this before applying, we hope you take away an even larger piece of advice. Don’t view leadership as a pre-med box to be checked off, and don’t settle for impressive-sounding titles. Instead, seek out enterprises that challenge but also excite you, ones that build real skills and force you outside your comfort zone. THOSE will be the leadership activities worth writing about.