Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To counter the influence of paid consultants I think you will see an acceleration of the trend already started to accept more minority, low SES, first in the family to attend college, Questbridge kids accepted -- and you can see why. At least they aren't literally buying their way in.
My impression is that schools are already accepting as many of these as they can afford (using that loosely) and have been for quite some time. Now that Pell numbers affect the US News ranking, numbers of Pell recipients may increase, though that may come at a cost to those with need just above Pell-eligible level.
Anonymous wrote:To counter the influence of paid consultants I think you will see an acceleration of the trend already started to accept more minority, low SES, first in the family to attend college, Questbridge kids accepted -- and you can see why. At least they aren't literally buying their way in.
Anonymous wrote:Every delusional parent thinks their child is a precocious maestro when the reality is s/he's just another dime a dozen bore with solid grades and a striver mum pulling strings behind the scenes.
I hate when things veer off course due to rude people (who are just prematurely bitter seventeen year olds, I bet).
Anonymous wrote:Every delusional parent thinks their child is a precocious maestro when the reality is s/he's just another dime a dozen bore with solid grades and a striver mum pulling strings behind the scenes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kid wants to party and get laid in college. There I helped articulate that for you.
Thanks for making DCUM one of the rudest forums on the internet.
You must be a DCUM newcomer. This ain't nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Holy shit people-stop the helicoptering! Follow your kids lead. Drops deadlines or applies to school that doesn’t provide YOU with bragging rights, so what. Talk with them about expectations and finances, but that should be early and often.
Signed,
Parent to keep to kid who handled their own college process and got into their dream school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kid wants to party and get laid in college. There I helped articulate that for you.
Thanks for making DCUM one of the rudest forums on the internet.
Anonymous wrote:If your child is in any decent private school you should not need a private counselor: the school college counselors should be good, and should be able to help them identify colleges that are good fits, help them strategize about how to put their best foot forward on the apps, etc. If your child is a top-performing kid at a top public school, same.
The ONLY situation in which a private counselor might make sense, if affordable, is if your child is at a huge public school and is middle of the pack (meaning counselors, though likely excellent, may not have as much interest/time for your kid), or if your child is at a not-so-great public school AND you yourself do not have the time or cultural knowledge to be helpful (you're an immigrant and unfamiliar with the system in the US, whatever).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP -
I can't tell you a damned thing about those expensive consultants who get kids into ivy league schools.
I can tell you about our experience. I paid a reasonable sum to have a person functioning as a competent guidance counselor because our school did not provide competence there.
The consultant helped our child articulate what he wanted from college, and helped us tell engineering schools apart (it is actually more complicated than I would have thought
and rank between 10 and 50 really doesn't matter). My kid was able to make judgments about where to apply and then where to go that was based on real characteristics about the educational environment, and not whether or not there was a beautiful gym, a chick-fil-A on campus, or any other stupid things.
My son wrote his own essay. They did talk about it, and he got some feedback, but all good writers get feedback.
Your kid wants to party and get laid in college. There I helped articulate that for you.
Anonymous wrote:My DC may have gotten into his dream school without the consultant, but I do believe some of the advice we got from her was valuable and helped us tip the scale in his favor.
Some of the advice she gave us:
Each year we looked at course selections and advised on best course load to demonstrate rigor. Coming from her vs. us (his parents) made an impact and he was much more open to listening to her advice vs. having us try to guide him.
She helped us navigate getting accommodations for the ACT (we already had them for college board). With ACT, you have to actually register for the test before you request accommodations. We registered even though we knew he wouldn't take the test on that day (he wouldn't be ready) and requested accommodations. Then we rescheduled the date once we got the accommodations. This way, he knew how he should prep for the test based on the accommodations he was given. It was a one and done and he scored quite high.
She got us hooked up with an excellent tutor for test prep that was in our price range (only $150 per hour) and came to the house.
She provided him with checklists and deadlines of things to complete, i.e. send ACT scores to schools, have draft of supplemental essay done by this date, complete this section of common app by this date, etc. It provided structure to the process and we were able to be more hands off.
She helped him brainstorm ideas for essays and guided him toward the best approach, subjects to pursue. She proofread essays for punctuation/typos. She did not adjust content, other than to suggest taking out or adding concepts...but no actually editing.
She helped narrow down a list of colleges.
He made out quite well...got into a top 20 which was his first choice. He didn't want any ivies.
Anonymous wrote:Holy shit people-stop the helicoptering! Follow your kids lead. Drops deadlines or applies to school that doesn’t provide YOU with bragging rights, so what. Talk with them about expectations and finances, but that should be early and often.
Signed,
Parent to keep to kid who handled their own college process and got into their dream school.