Anonymous wrote:How was College Bound detrimental? A few posters mentioned that. I understand waste of money but how were they detrimental?
Anonymous wrote:For our first and second we hired the same college counselor. She was fantastic a gem for sure.
Pricing she was middle of the road. At the time I thought it was a huge waste and my kids could have easily done everything themselves. MIT & Yale acceptances.
By the third one I parcelled out this kid in particular was Mr who cares I will get in somewhere. I did not want to spend his senior year fighting. He did do some ACT prep for English-type work, no math because he excels at that. He went to CMU.
My last three no college prep. Similar school acceptances.
Anonymous wrote:We found the person we hired to be invaluable. Her insight into what schools to look at and what those schools want in an applicant was far beyond what our private high school counselor could offer. And, her help with the essays really produced incredible narratives. Results: My son only applied to six schools because he got in ED1 to his top choice. He immediately withdrew the other five. He actually heard from a second school -- he received a huge merit scholarship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We did it by the hour. DC loved the process and by hiring someone to help, it got me, the dad out if the role as “nag”
Did you Sybil?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private counselor helped my niece to Duke and nephew to UChicago (different sides of the family and on opposite coasts but used same counselor) this year in the early round. I'll be hiring the same person for my DC next year.
Do you mind sharing which counsellor ?
Do you have or can set up a throwaway email address you can post here? If so, I’ll send her contact info to you privately. Like the other PP’s counselor, this one only takes 10 students per year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who the hell needs a counselor to curate a list?
Because if you are not just looking at DC/MD/VA area schools, a great counselor will help you identify some hidden gems. I know how to do the process and did it for first kid. They applied to 10 and got into 10 with merit at all of the private schools (OOS publics don't typically offer much merit if any at all)---but this was a kid with a 25 ACT and 3.5 UW gpa and no AP classes---so more targeting schools ranked 80+ where acceptance rates are typically over 40%.
2nd kid had scores for elite colleges (1520/3.99UW, 10+ AP and good ECs) and wanted to apply to a few. Counselor helped us curate a great list of colleges---about 75% were on my original list (I'm good at doing the research). But the top Safety and where my kid ultimately ended up were not on my radar initially during junior year. my kid ultimately had 3 final choices, including the top safety, where they are and one other that I had heard of but my kid had said no due to location. Well guess what, those 3 were my kid's ultimate final 3 choices and my kid would have been happy at any of them. Counselor also helped a procrastinator stay on schedule without me having to nag and definately helped brainstorm the essays---my kid did it all themselves, but the counselor pushed them to think of topics, revise and edit and help them target the supplmentals accordingly.
Note: my kid was not targeting schools anywhere near our home---most were 2-3K miles from home. The safety she assisted with finding is a true gem and the defination of a true safety---my kid seriously considered attending they liked it that much. I never would have found that safety from 3K miles away for a school many have not heard of on the other coast.
Anonymous wrote:Can I ask the name of the safety on "the other coast"?
Anonymous wrote:Nope. Not a great result in early round. We loved our counselor but our Big 3 kid got rejected at Ivy ED and at a competitive state school, waiting to hear on others but not optimistic.
Our counselor did help us find good safeties and was very much a reality check on how hard it is for unhooked kids, even
with great stats from Big 3 schools to get into top 20 Schools. So our kid is into 2 safeties they really like and would be excited to attend.
For me that is where the value is. And she did the nagging for us.
Anonymous wrote:Who the hell needs a counselor to curate a list?