How to Write the Perfect High School Resume for College Apps | CollegeXpress
Notebook page with Resume Tips listed next to pair of glasses and binder clips

How to Craft the Perfect High School Résumé

Learn how to build a high school resume that impresses college admissions officers. Discover formatting tips, key sections to include, and expert advice.

You may not think you need a résumé until after you graduate college, but having one in high school can be a major advantage. A well-crafted student résumé can help you stand out to prospective colleges. This is vital considering how many applications colleges review with similar credentials. Your résumé serves as a snapshot of your accomplishments, skills, and potential, giving admission officers a clearer picture of what you'll bring to their campus.

To create a strong résumé, you’ll need to gather important documents, highlight your education and achievements, and showcase your leadership, extracurricular activities, and personal interests. Let's walk through each essential section of a high school résumé and go over some tips to help you make a lasting impression on admission officers.

Reference documents

Before you start crafting your résumé, make sure you have the proper resources at the ready. Gather all your significant personal documents, including your high school transcripts, SAT/ACT scores, and AP scores for reference. If you’re applying to a Theater or other performing arts program, you may also need an appropriate headshot of yourself to include with your résumé.

Related: How to Write a Résumé With No Job Experience

Contact info and professional statement

The top of your student résumé should include your full name, mailing address, email address, and phone number. Next, you should include a short summary giving some details characterizing yourself. This is your chance to build yourself up to admission officers and mention your future career goals and how attending their college will help you achieve them. Just remember to keep it short and sweet.

Education

Your high school résumé should include a section about your education and test scores. This section should contain the name and location of your school (just “city, state” format is acceptable), when you’re planning to graduate, and your current GPA as well as your SAT, ACT, and AP test scores. If you’ve taken any dual enrollment courses at colleges, be sure to include that information here as well.

Related: Three Easy Ways to Make Your Résumé Stand Out to Colleges

Honors and awards

This section should list all honors and awards you’ve received as well as when you received them. Admission officers want to see you’ve excelled and what you’ve excelled in. These honors and awards will help set you apart from the rest of the applicants you’re competing against for admission.

Leadership and extracurricular activities

This section should list all the extracurricular activities you’ve been a part of, from piano lessons to school clubs. Make sure to note when you participated in these activities and if you’re still involved in them. You should include activities from a variety of categories, such as sports, music, clubs, and volunteer work. Most importantly, don’t forget to mention if you held a leadership role in any of these activities, like captain, president, treasurer, etc.

Hobbies and interests

This is where you get to show off the subjects and pastimes you enjoy the most that didn’t fit into any other section. Maybe you love to code and you joined an online forum devoted to coding. Maybe you have an interest in poetry and you’re part of a writing group that attends poetry slams once a month. Show off what matters most to you!

Related: How to Give Your Résumé the Disney Effect

Take your student résumé as an opportunity to display the best version of yourself. Show college admission officers what you’ll bring to their school if they accept you, and illustrate all that hard work you’ve given to reach your goals and make a difference in the world in any capacity. Your high school résumé should speak highly of you and is the perfect way to help you stand out when it matters most.

Ready to find schools based on your résumé highlights? Use our AI-Powered College Search tool to find colleges that match any search criteria. Go ahead—ask it anything!

Like what you’re reading?

Join the CollegeXpress community! Create a free account and we’ll notify you about new articles, scholarship deadlines, and more.

Join Now

Tags:

About Susie Obregon

My name is Susan Obregon, I'm currently 16 years old, and I live in Miami, Florida. My mom likes to say that I could write before I could talk. Writing has always been in my nature and I've always found that expressing myself and my ideas with the world is the best source of happiness in this life. I hope to touch and aid everyone in their lives with my writing, and thank you to everyone for their support on this journey!

 

Join our community of
over 5 million students!

CollegeXpress has everything you need to simplify your college search, get connected to schools, and find your perfect fit.

Join CollegeXpress

College Quick Connect

Swipe right to request information.
Swipe left if you're not interested.

New England Institute of Technology

East Greenwich, RI


Sonny Harris

Sonny Harris

College Student

For the entire year before college, I spent a lot of time deeply considering what major I wanted to go into and how to fund my higher education. After a lot of research, I came across CollegeXpress, which helped me ultimately find a ton of scholarships for which I could apply—and some of which I received! If it weren’t for CollegeXpress, I may not have found those scholarships as they didn't appear on any other scholarship search forum. Additionally, I learned more about the options I had been considering for my major through CollegeXpress’s resources. In the end, I chose to major in Computer Science, as it seemed best suited to me and the careers in the field seemed enjoyable, and I've never been more excited to move into my future! Ultimately, I want to thank CollegeXpress for offering their services. I received enough financial aid in scholarships to fund my entire freshman year of college and even got some money refunded which I used to purchase a new laptop, and I bought all of the books I needed for the semester!

Emilie Delgado

Emilie Delgado

$2,000 Community Service Scholarship Winner, 2013

CollegeXpress has tremendously helped me in my search for financial aid opportunities as I enter my college career. It is easy to navigate and quickly narrowed down scholarships that I could apply for. Being awarded the scholarship will greatly help me in my finances regarding books and tuition. Thank you for this opportunity. Without CollegeXpress, it would have been more difficult to apply. I would recommend this site to everyone!

Alexandra Adriano

Alexandra Adriano

$2,000 Community Service Scholarship Winner, 2016

I've used CollegeXpress quite a bit as a senior, particularly for colleges and scholarships, so it's been a very big asset in that respect! I would recommend it to anyone looking to pursue a college education, especially seniors! This scholarship will help me achieve my goals in ways I couldn't have before, and I know that there are opportunities like that for everyone on the website and in the magazines!

Victoria

Victoria

High School Class of 2019

CollegeXpress has helped me by opening my eyes to new opportunities. I learned about such easy ways to get financial help to achieve my dreams while also learning about myself and who I truly am. I know this isn't a very long explanation of what CollegeXpress has done for me, but nonetheless, I believe it's crucial to how I developed as a person throughout my time as a college student.

Makiyah Murray

Makiyah Murray

High School Class of 2021

The college application process has been a stressful one, but CollegeXpress has eased some of that stress with its readily available college resources. At the beginning of the process, I frequently used the college search feature, and now that I’m almost done applying, I’ve started using the scholarship search. Both of these resources have made it easier to find relevant information.