Extracurricular activity
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Extracurricular activities are activities performed by students that fall outside the realm of the normal curriculum of school or university education. Extracurricular activities exist at all levels of education, from high school and college to university education. Such activities are generally voluntary as opposed to mandatory, non-paying, tend to be social or philanthropic as opposed to scholastic, and involve others of the same age. Students often organize and direct these activities under faculty sponsorship; although student-led initiatives - such as independent newspapers - are common.
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[edit] Historical background
The extracurriculum made its first appearance in American colleges in the nineteenth century. It complemented the curriculum as much as subverted it. The students found in it a kind of laboratory for practical and vocational interests. The first extracurricular activities were student literary societies (which had roots in the previous century at Harvard and Yale), debate clubs, and by mid-century, Greek letter fraternities and sororities. Students also initiated and organized the early athletic programs on American college campuses. Literary societies were on the decline by the turn of the twentieth century, and some educators felt that less desirable extracurricular activities were now distracting students from their curricular responsibilities. Intercollegiate athletics soon became the dominant element in the extracurriculum in most American colleges and high schools.
Such activities as school newspaper and interschool sports programs have been part of American high schools since the World War I era. Today’s public high schools offer a comprehensive array of extracurricular activities to complement the curriculum.
Companies seeking job applicants do not look solely for those with a high GPA; employers look at extracurricular activities to determine if the applicant is the best suited for the job
[edit] Examples
[edit] General
- sports
- art and culture: school band(In music, a band is a company of musicians, or musical ensemble, usually popular or folk, playing parts of or improvising a musical arrangement on different musical instruments.
), art club, ...
- Religious activities
- newspaper
[edit] High School and College
- Clubs such as math club, Key Club(USA) MINT Club and SADD (USA).
- Competitions such as the National History Day program
- Philanthropy Key Club
- DeMolay International
[edit] University
- education: students' union, student government, Model United Nations.
- science & education honor society (USA)
- scholastic, for example in law school students may participate in moot court, or the publication of a law review.
[edit] Debatable Cases
Part-time jobs are sometimes, but not always, classified as extracurricular activities. Generally, they are considered extra curricular activities, if the school offers some sort of work experience option, where credits are earned for work hours.
[edit] Literature
Rubin, R.S., Bommer, W.H. & Baldwin, T.T. (2002), Using extracurricular activity as an indicator of interpersonal skill: prudent evaluation or recruiting malpractice, Human Resource Management, 41 (4).
[edit] See also
- ESIB
- Board of European Students of Technology
- Creativity, Action, Service or CAS component of the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme.
- EURODOC