Anonymous wrote:I am a college counselor. I recommend you ask friends and neighbors with college students. They will have recommendations for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a college counselor. I recommend you ask friends and neighbors with college students. They will have recommendations for you.
DP. A couple of our neighbors used folks across the country. We'd like a counselor in the local area who we can at least meet face to face a couple of times to help with course selection/correction for a sophomore who is still trying to figure out what he wants to do in college and needs some motivation.
Anonymous wrote:I am a college counselor. I recommend you ask friends and neighbors with college students. They will have recommendations for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD is a freshman so we have ample time to start thinking about college, but thinking ahead we might need some guidance on course selection in the future. Any recommendations for college counselors. Looking for someone realistic to give us a little direction as we navigate the process with our first kid. It seems things have changed since the 1900s
Consultants can give you good advice on course selection if you don’t mind paying some crazy money for something that you can do for free with a bit of research. Basically take four years of science, math, English, history, and language aiming for the most rigorous sequence your kid can stomach
Yes, obviously, but....
For kids with specific interests or target schools or overseas aspirations or extreme acceleration or summer learning or LD or evening out APs or or or, there are times when rearranging the obvious course selections makes a difference.
Marks Education is crazy money. Most others are not. Flat fees or by the hours fees. OP just needs to make some phone calls and decide. Getting the right application tighter with high enough test scores can repay those fees in merit money/scholarships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD is a freshman so we have ample time to start thinking about college, but thinking ahead we might need some guidance on course selection in the future. Any recommendations for college counselors. Looking for someone realistic to give us a little direction as we navigate the process with our first kid. It seems things have changed since the 1900s
Consultants can give you good advice on course selection if you don’t mind paying some crazy money for something that you can do for free with a bit of research. Basically take four years of science, math, English, history, and language aiming for the most rigorous sequence your kid can stomach
Anonymous wrote:My DD is a freshman so we have ample time to start thinking about college, but thinking ahead we might need some guidance on course selection in the future. Any recommendations for college counselors. Looking for someone realistic to give us a little direction as we navigate the process with our first kid. It seems things have changed since the 1900s
Anonymous wrote:We used Richard Montauk. Richardmontauk.com
