| Sounds like a diagnostic screen for psycho/stupid parents (with messed up kids)!!! |
Pathological need for external validation. |
| This article was odd. It went from talking about private college counseling to talking about financial aid at private colleges (?). It wasn’t clear. I don’t think the families from Ohio or Kentucky were paying $750k for college counseling. |
I thought it was weird. Like clearly the Kentucky and Ohio families were concerned about college costs and weren’t paying for this level of college counseling. |
Hang on. I didn’t say I know the test scores and GPAs based on my interviewing of over 75 kids since late 90s. I said that I know what the school is looking for. Check yourself. And happy yours got in. Was it this year or last year? Game is entirely different even from 2020 or 2019. |
I was hoping that, too! Would suck for the kid for everyone to know he needed a $750K consultant to get in and suck for the parents to have their friends know they are suckers. |
| Working the university system, with cash, is a slice of some people's way of life. You think it ends when kids gain admission? It continues. I've seen it. They figure out which classes to take for least effort, what they can buy. And then they likely continue this way into their professional lives. Like running their education as a business. |
| Nuts! |
| My consultant only charged $400k |
Thank you for your service. I would note that there are a lot of public school kids in this area, particularly in the magnets and the W schools, who have scores and grades above 1530 and 4.0. It's the rest of your note that's interesting. It's a reminder that it is so pointless for smart kids to even bother applying to HYP and I'd add Stanford. That's at least $320 in application fees saved right there. Shoot your shot at MIT. At least they play fair and strive to be a school for the best and brightest. But I would imagine that over the next 10-20 years the reputational cost of a HYPS degree will suffer considerably. The truly brilliant kids will go to Cal Tech, Michigan, and Rice. And the rich fencing students will go to Harvard, Yale, and Princeton. I don't know about Stanford. Used to be a fun nerd school, but I think they all lay low now for four years and hope they get picked up by a firm on Sand Hill Road. Boring. Regardless, I think HYPS have really rolled the dice with their admissions preferences. But if there are some older people willing to pay 750k for this kind of college advice, something something fool money parted, And how do I get that job. |
This nails it. URM with great stats from a top private school is a golden ticket. |