Anonymous wrote:The better thing is to have your kid volunteer teaching their sport to xyz under resourced group and form a summer clinic /camp/business for their sport where they show initiative and other skills.
The sports stuff is sadly a dime a dozen. Make your kid stand out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This has nothing do with the colleges, and everything to do with the consultants. Ivy Coach's entire business premise is that the pointiest kids will win the prize. And they are ever willing to sharpen your kid right up... for a fee.
No doubt, being pointy is one of several different strategies, all of which have a grain of truth/success to them. But they have staked their financial existence on, "This is the way, the one true way," and done so transparently (10 minutes on their website will confirm this).
So take it with a grain of salt. Everybody is selling what they are selling. If this strategy is the right one for your student, go with it. Hard.
But if it isn't, you don't have the wrong kid. You have the wrong strategy.
Pointy is passé. They don’t value that as much anymore. Well-rounded seemed to be valued last round.
Anonymous wrote:This has nothing do with the colleges, and everything to do with the consultants. Ivy Coach's entire business premise is that the pointiest kids will win the prize. And they are ever willing to sharpen your kid right up... for a fee.
No doubt, being pointy is one of several different strategies, all of which have a grain of truth/success to them. But they have staked their financial existence on, "This is the way, the one true way," and done so transparently (10 minutes on their website will confirm this).
So take it with a grain of salt. Everybody is selling what they are selling. If this strategy is the right one for your student, go with it. Hard.
But if it isn't, you don't have the wrong kid. You have the wrong strategy.
Anonymous wrote:This has nothing do with the colleges, and everything to do with the consultants. Ivy Coach's entire business premise is that the pointiest kids will win the prize. And they are ever willing to sharpen your kid right up... for a fee.
No doubt, being pointy is one of several different strategies, all of which have a grain of truth/success to them. But they have staked their financial existence on, "This is the way, the one true way," and done so transparently (10 minutes on their website will confirm this).
So take it with a grain of salt. Everybody is selling what they are selling. If this strategy is the right one for your student, go with it. Hard.
But if it isn't, you don't have the wrong kid. You have the wrong strategy.
Anonymous wrote:Some T25 schools like HS athletes more than others….
Ask your college counselor.
Anonymous wrote:Heck no. They are idiots for saying so. There are many reasons to do sports unrelated to being recruited to play in college.