Anonymous wrote:So, I hired a consultant for my kid from a very reputable firm. It can be very, very expensive. However, if you want to maximize your chances, then yes it is worth it.
Make sure you ask for disaggregated acceptance rate by school. In many cases they'll say "95% were admitted to one of their top 3 choices" but they won't tell you they select the top 3 for your kid.
In the end, they helped mold my children to exceptional and interesting applicants. Both of my kids got into T10 schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No it's not a must.
however, if you can afford it, it can be very helpful. I'm talking about a College consultant who is $4-5K for ALL 4 years of HS. The perks are they help with keeping your kid on schedule, so you don't have to nag, nag nag. They also help create a better list of colleges than you can. I'm good at that, but our CC helped find our kid's top Safety and I most likely never would have found it. It was so good that my kid kept that safety in their final top 3 until mid April (and visited again in April). This is their job, they will help you find gems that are not always discussed. With great targets and safeties, you will be happier if your kids doesn't get into their Reaches.
Then they assist with developing essays. ours did NOT do the work for our kid, but helped them brainstorm and with editing. They make sure you dont' do a topic that is not good---they help your kid's true colors shine thru and make them unique.
IMO if you look at it, it's $1K per year of HS. If you are paying $60K+ for college per year, it's worthwhile.
Yikes. No wonder kids are balls of stress and anxiety!! All four years!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We hired and then fired a consultant once we figured out that we were getting better advice from the school (public). It was work to assist DC, to be sure. But I’m not sure how much of that really could have been outsourced. We know DC much better than any counselor, so our advice on schools to look at was more focused on DC’s personality and needs. We could suggest more specific anecdotes for the essays because we know our kid better. And when it comes to submissions, I don’t think most counselors are going to be available at 11pm when your kid is making a last minute change to an application and needs someone to check for typos before the midnight deadline.
Now that our student is a senior. Our counselor is available on evenings and weekends and response very quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Not at all.
The big, public, competitive schools are very useful because you have a strong cohort of students who know how to roll. You don't need to pay a consultant to tell you what Ryan from Multivariable is already telling you. And he knows things because his sister Sarah goes to Brown.
A consultant is not going to be better than that.
Anonymous wrote:No it's not a must.
however, if you can afford it, it can be very helpful. I'm talking about a College consultant who is $4-5K for ALL 4 years of HS. The perks are they help with keeping your kid on schedule, so you don't have to nag, nag nag. They also help create a better list of colleges than you can. I'm good at that, but our CC helped find our kid's top Safety and I most likely never would have found it. It was so good that my kid kept that safety in their final top 3 until mid April (and visited again in April). This is their job, they will help you find gems that are not always discussed. With great targets and safeties, you will be happier if your kids doesn't get into their Reaches.
Then they assist with developing essays. ours did NOT do the work for our kid, but helped them brainstorm and with editing. They make sure you dont' do a topic that is not good---they help your kid's true colors shine thru and make them unique.
IMO if you look at it, it's $1K per year of HS. If you are paying $60K+ for college per year, it's worthwhile.
Anonymous wrote:We hired and then fired a consultant once we figured out that we were getting better advice from the school (public). It was work to assist DC, to be sure. But I’m not sure how much of that really could have been outsourced. We know DC much better than any counselor, so our advice on schools to look at was more focused on DC’s personality and needs. We could suggest more specific anecdotes for the essays because we know our kid better. And when it comes to submissions, I don’t think most counselors are going to be available at 11pm when your kid is making a last minute change to an application and needs someone to check for typos before the midnight deadline.
Anonymous wrote:I paid one $7000 and all he told me was Bucknell had an awesome pipeline to some street, Northeastern was the next Harvard, & SUNYs were awesome. Don’t know where the heck he was getting his information.
Anonymous wrote:I paid one $7000 and all he told me was Bucknell had an awesome pipeline to some street, Northeastern was the next Harvard, & SUNYs were awesome. Don’t know where the heck he was getting his information.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No of course not, but if you are already asking this question, you are probably going to do it anyway. Or balance the fact that you didn't hire a consultant for any substandard outcome.
OP- No, I would much rather not. I just worry that maybe I am doing ds a disservice because maybe they know "special" ways of phrasing things on the common app, know how to handle all the minute details. We filled most of it out but what if we did some of it wrong?
Use the the AI tools that show you former applications that were admitted. It democratizes the entire process.
For a few hundred dollars over the next 4 months.
Join ApplicationNation25.
Her zoom videos will show you how to fill out the common app and how to phrase certain things in the activities section and honor section. She’ll also edit essays if you need her to, for a large fee.
I found a good Essay editor on Wyzant.
For the $99/mo, Can I ask small questions like "Is this activity useful/well-phrased?"
Yes. I find it helpful and I’ve been through the process before.
Here’s a quick example (note I am not affiliated with it at all, but do find it to be relatively helpful and inexpensive for what it is. It’s also a great way to see the quality, depth and breath of other applicants to - sometimes - the same schools that your kid is applying to. There are some amazing kids out there btw.):
Someone just asked this question below with a picture of the activity entry in the common app:
“Student worked as a researcher in a lab this summer. It was not a “pay to play” program. Does including ”fully funded” in parenthesis look okay? Or is there a better way?
Any thoughts on description itself?
Thank you”
(Picture)
Response from senior member of AN team (not Sara, but another former admissions officer):
The parenthesis work and it's very clear. I'd change the verb "studied" (implies passive) to "analyzed" (little more action implied).