Tell me more about how they helped with course selection. I already know that students need to take the 5 core courses every year, the most rigorous appropriate. What other advice did they give? My DS has the opportunity to consult with his school's college counselors as part of the course selection process, but I don't know what he would ask. |
Not great if you don’t get one of the good ones. |
They handpick the students they want. More money/influence = better counselors. Know this from experience. |
| As someone said above, whether you like the college counseling team depends on where DC is accepted. In our high school experience with older DC at a big 3, there was SO MUCH changing and quitting and hiring of new college counselors that the process was hard. And I felt that DC was accepted to a decent SLAC (not top 10 but top 20) was in spite of the staff. Results always look great cause of hooked kids. Younger DC now going through the process at a different school and it seems to be night and day from last experience. Funny enough, we would have expected big 3 to have the best counselors, instead other school seems so much more caring and more individual attention. |
I also have kids at two different privates. One private starts active college counseling with both students and parents in the last half of 9th grade which I think is the way it should be. The other private has done very little until 11th grade which quite frankly is starting too late. |
| NCS should start earlier. They don’t meet with kids until January/February of junior year. By then it’s too late to course correct if you’ve chosen the wrong classes, lack leadership etc. college guidance is fine just need to meet with the girls starting in 9th in my opinion. |
Yep, that’s Bullis in a nutshell |
There is no such thing as “wrong” classes. They offer a small variety from which to choose along with a lot of required courses. They aren’t going to allow you to go too far off the rails in course selection. |
| SSFS college counseling is meh and they too start too late. Part of the justification for high tuition should be stellar college counseling that starts in 9th grade with a required one-on-one meeting with each student and their parents. |
This is the situation at Potomac as well. By the time you speak to a counselor it is too late to make any meaningful adjustments. |
| No CC until 2nd half junior year. Then biweekly group meetings and some 1 on 1 meetings as desired. Actual rec for my kid were puzzling, to say the least - relied on some bs AI program I think. |
| Visi is wonderful. They start focusing on the girls sophomore year and then it ramps up junior year. |
Name the school |
Why are you here? |
Oh my gosh +1000! SSFS recently held a workshop for juniors and parents of juniors to look at sample applications and then had us determine which of these fake applicants would get admitted. It was a decent exercise but not when you're in the second half of your junior year. My kid came away from this workshop super anxious and with the deflated belief that getting in to their top choice of schools is now compromised because they should have been doing more to boost the application. This workshop should have happened during the day for ALL students (not just those who could attend in the evening) AND should have happened in the spring of freshman year or fall of sophomore year. Like a lot of things at SSFS, the college counseling is slow and detrimentally casual. Another thing we are not getting our money's worth on. |