Anonymous wrote:I would never use a consultant for high school but am considering 2 or 3 sessions for my graduating DC to maneuver and get more insight into the college application process.
We will, of course, use the college counseling office in addition to college info. Sorry but DCUM isn't invited to this party.
Anonymous wrote:We have hired an educational consultant for the first time this year. She is very nice and certainly knowledgeable about which schools would be a good fit for our child. We signed up for her complete (and expensive!) package and perhaps had unrealistic ideas about how much she would be helping us throughout the process. She always responds if we contact her with a question (we've only had a few), but we otherwise never hear from her. Since this is our first experience, we wonder if we perhaps had unrealistic expectations or whether an educational consultant, in fact, should be doing a bit more. Has anybody had a similar experience?
Anonymous wrote:little harsh here on OP. Both DH and I were working very hard when DC1 was applying for schools. We considered using an ed consultant, then realized DC had no extenuating circumstances (e.g., wildly divergent test scores, crippling social anxiety, etc), so we just handled on our own. I think ed consultants probably help families where parents may not be realistic about their DCs' potential at that time or greatly underestimate how steep admissions odds are at some schools.
If OP believed that an ed consultant could pull a string, then that is probably misguided.
Anonymous wrote:Wtf is an educational consultant? I think I've heard it all now.
Anonymous wrote:sucka