this is hilarious and unfounded
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I agree with this. You need a strategy - not just a person who will help your kid upload activities into Common App. Someone who knows how to make your kid stand out and maximize changes with a unique, distinguishing profile attractive to T20 (with your kid's authentic interests in mind). A person like this likely charges at least $25k to help with 5-10 reach schools. |
Come on. You are the kind of sabretooth parent, who also spent a ton on money on tutors, thousands of dollars on other programs, researched a ton and not willing to take a chance also spend a boatload of money on an expensive consultant. Nothing wrong, but your child already had all the advantages to make getting into a selective college very likely. No surprise. Most of these AO's are long out of the admissions loop and just relying on their name to make money. They are out of tune and out of touch most of the time with current admissions. |
Unfortunately, the schools my kid is targeting don't offer merit aid, and I feel confident about my research, but I'm glad your expense was offset! |
You can get excellent college counseling assistance for much less. |
That is a crazy amount of money and can make clients feel their kid iss entitled to acceptances. Both of these are wrong. OP, ask friends and neighbors. The most satisfied people I know are the ones who spent 4-5K and hired independent counselors, not people in the big companies. The biggest pluses I have seen is helping a kid stay on track and lower the stress plus strong feedback on essays. |
The big companies are hit or miss. My brother hired a a big name and the counselor assigned was just terrible and didn't click with my niece. The replacement was better but in no way worth the money. Maybe one of the founders would have been. With their son, they are going with a non-big name person recommended by a friend for 1/4 of the cost (literally) and have found it much more useful. |
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Find someone who is really dedicated, and, smart, and strategic and read a bunch of their edited essays. That’s what you probably need. The essay editing, though adds up if they are good and in demand. But it can and does make a big difference that is more important in my mind than anything else. - Two kids at T10/Ivy |
I’m sorry, that really sounds like gaming the system. When is it no longer a student essay? |
DP here. The student writes the essay, the counselor reads it and provides comments/feedback. The student revises the essay. In my kid's case, the counselor told my kid that her essay is completely the wrong topic and told my kid to write an entirely new essay. Well, my kid would never have taken that kind of advice from me, but in this case she followed-through. It was entirely her work and I don't think the essay sounds at all like it was written by an adult (I read the final common app essay). |
| Does anyone actually have a recommendation besides Richard Montauk who has been mentioned on DCUM multiple times but no one can actually vouch for having used him. Seems like this question gets asked often enough and yet there are never solid recommendations. |
Agree, this is our experience. A good essay counselor goes back and forth on each essay 5-20 times, but they aren't writing it. They'll ask the kid to go deeper, explore why, show them way their essay hook isn't working, and what a deeper hook might look like. Light word suggestions/changes when word count is an issue. The big thing a good person does is (ime) they spend weeks helping a kid outline/create an inventory of potential supp essay topics - anywhere from 20-30 essay starts or topics worthy of spotlighting for the various essay categories (why major; why school; community; diversity; intellectual curiosity; character trait, etc.). While it seemed exhausting this summer, well worth it. And the other big thing to ask essay people when you interview is their experience with selective T20 essays: in their experience, which types of essays resonate with which schools; what traits should be emphasized at certain schools (I'd expect they won't tell you it all - but their response should show you if they'll be able to guide your kid with this degree of specificity); what material is good for an essay and what is good for a video or a potential LOCI, etc. This is kid #2, and I found our essay person through word of mouth. Quite expensive and didn't use them with kid #1. I'd expect the good ones only go through personal referrals, so ask friends with older kids. |
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We used one for our kid. He had a 3.84 UW and a 1500 SAT, so he was strong, but not perfect.
He ended up getting into Vanderbilt ED1. The counselor helped a lot because he strategically positioned him by shifting his major, giving him a passion project, and reworking his activity sheet. He knew so much about the process and I'm confident he would've been rejected without the private consultant. |
| We used Richard Montauk. very happy |
I can vouch for him. Create an email and I will talk freely with you. He got my DD into UVA, Cambridge for a Masters, a DPhil at Oxford and now Yale Law. And he is by the hour, not the $30K to sign on operations. Both of my kids have used him. |