The 1990s Advice Trap
Your parents are giving you advice on how to get into Stanford. They tell you: "You need to be well-rounded. You need to play the violin, run cross-country, volunteer at the soup kitchen, and join the math team."
In 1995, this was excellent advice. In 2026, this is a recipe for instant rejection at elite universities.
Admissions officers no longer want "well-rounded students." They want a Well-Rounded Class made up of Spiky Students.
What is a "Spiky" Student?
A "Spike" is a deep, obsessive, world-class dedication to one specific area of interest.If Stanford admits 2,000 freshmen, they don't want 2,000 kids who are "pretty good" at everything. They want:
When you put those 2,000 "spiky" kids together in a dorm, they form a dynamic, world-changing ecosystem.
The Problem with Being Well-Rounded
If you play JV soccer, play 3rd chair violin, and are the treasurer of the math club, you are perfectly average at three things. You have no Spike.When an admissions officer reads your application, they think: "This student is nice, but what are they going to contribute to our campus? They aren't good enough to play on our D1 soccer team. They aren't good enough for our symphony. They are just... fine."
How to Build Your Spike
Choose the one thing you are genuinely obsessed with, and drop the rest.When you apply, your entire application (essays, teacher recs, ECs) should scream: "I am the iOS app kid." That makes you memorable, and that gets you accepted.
Analyze Your Activity Spike
Does your resume tell a cohesive story? Evaluate your extracurricular focus.
Evaluate Your Spike