Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on your goal. If its to find merit aid to reduce costs, it could pay off because the consultant might direct your child to schools he/she would not otherwise consider that offer good merit aid. If its to reduce parent-child stressors by having someone else make sure child is completing essays, etc. in a timely manner, also beneficial. If its to get a leg up in admission to a competitive college, I see no benefit to hiring a college consultant whatsoever.
--signed parent of a hs senior
Bolded part above - priceless.
--signed another parent of a hs senior
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on your goal. If its to find merit aid to reduce costs, it could pay off because the consultant might direct your child to schools he/she would not otherwise consider that offer good merit aid. If its to reduce parent-child stressors by having someone else make sure child is completing essays, etc. in a timely manner, also beneficial. If its to get a leg up in admission to a competitive college, I see no benefit to hiring a college consultant whatsoever.
--signed parent of a hs senior
Bolded part above - priceless.
--signed another parent of a hs senior
Anonymous wrote:Depends on your goal. If its to find merit aid to reduce costs, it could pay off because the consultant might direct your child to schools he/she would not otherwise consider that offer good merit aid. If its to reduce parent-child stressors by having someone else make sure child is completing essays, etc. in a timely manner, also beneficial. If its to get a leg up in admission to a competitive college, I see no benefit to hiring a college consultant whatsoever.
--signed parent of a hs senior
Anonymous wrote:Is this really a thing? How common is this to do and how beneficial is it?
Anonymous wrote:Are there any good ones that do hourly without a minimum? I’m pretty informed but have a few questions I’d like to run by someone who preferably worked in admissions before.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on your goal. If its to find merit aid to reduce costs, it could pay off because the consultant might direct your child to schools he/she would not otherwise consider that offer good merit aid. If its to reduce parent-child stressors by having someone else make sure child is completing essays, etc. in a timely manner, also beneficial. If its to get a leg up in admission to a competitive college, I see no benefit to hiring a college consultant whatsoever.
--signed parent of a hs senior