Anonymous wrote:💯 worth it for my kid who is disorganized and not likely to listen to us about deadlines. She also had unrealistic goals so she needed someone to push her on picking safeties. My DD ended up loving her advisor and says she probably wouldn’t be in college without her. Also, DD had a really hard time deciding between two schools and the counselor walked her through it - DH and I had a preference but she needed to hear the pros of one school over another from someone other than us. We have hired same person for DD number two who is much more organized and less defiant. I do t know if it it will be worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They have no "secret sauce" because none exists and are they are totally not worth it.
Big difference between them and the "by the hour" person you hire to help your kid.
But the truth is neither will make a substantive difference in the outcomes. Save your $$$, buy a book or two, it is not as complicated as you think.
I disagree with this. We didn't need a counselor to help us put a list together or think of good ECs but it was helpful to have someone look over HS course choices and say which versions they thought were strongest. It also helped to have them brainstorm essay questions, even if we didn't use all their ideas, it was definitely helpful. We only spent a few hours with a counselor, not a whole package deal. I think that's for people with very little time (parents) themselves or who have a fractious relationship with their kid and need some kind of chaperone to keep an eye on the process. We didn't need that.
And how did that result in different outcomes for you? Did you try reading a book on admissions first?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We used one and my DD ended up at a school they didn’t suggest. There’s a lot of fluff to the process that they charge for that isn’t necessary. Talk to your kid about what they want in a school and get organized. In Todays crapshoot of admissions, save your money.
Like everything else in life, it depends upon whom you hire. We were extremely pleased with ours and he was only $3k. Well worth it. And our DS actually enjoyed the process. It brought sanity back to our home
Anonymous wrote:We used one and my DD ended up at a school they didn’t suggest. There’s a lot of fluff to the process that they charge for that isn’t necessary. Talk to your kid about what they want in a school and get organized. In Todays crapshoot of admissions, save your money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They have no "secret sauce" because none exists and are they are totally not worth it.
Big difference between them and the "by the hour" person you hire to help your kid.
But the truth is neither will make a substantive difference in the outcomes. Save your $$$, buy a book or two, it is not as complicated as you think.
I disagree with this. We didn't need a counselor to help us put a list together or think of good ECs but it was helpful to have someone look over HS course choices and say which versions they thought were strongest. It also helped to have them brainstorm essay questions, even if we didn't use all their ideas, it was definitely helpful. We only spent a few hours with a counselor, not a whole package deal. I think that's for people with very little time (parents) themselves or who have a fractious relationship with their kid and need some kind of chaperone to keep an eye on the process. We didn't need that.
Anonymous wrote:They have no "secret sauce" because none exists and are they are totally not worth it.
Big difference between them and the "by the hour" person you hire to help your kid.
But the truth is neither will make a substantive difference in the outcomes. Save your $$$, buy a book or two, it is not as complicated as you think.