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:The column in today’s Post by an essay coach says she meets with the student to get them to talk about themselves, dig out a good topic, get them to be talk about it in depth and detail, then she writes the outline, the student writes a draft, she edits it, then revision, edit, revision, edit, until it is satisfactory. She usually has a student working on multiple essays and the use the best one or use different ones for different colleges.
That sounds like a huge help for the student compared to those who write it themselves, and it looks like it would be easy to cross the line in the topic selection, outline, and edits to practically ghost write it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For top 10 schools almost everyone is in the range but few get in. That’s why we have so many angry posters on this forum. Being in the range is not enough for most kids at a top 10.
But what does a private college counselor do to get a kid who is within range for a top 10 in? Especially if the counselor is ethical and isn't going to essentially write the essay for the kid. Ok, might provide some useful advise over what school to apply to ED, but other than that what else can they really do of value?
Anonymous wrote:For top 10 schools almost everyone is in the range but few get in. That’s why we have so many angry posters on this forum. Being in the range is not enough for most kids at a top 10.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ones people pay big bucks for are often former college counselors at top schools or former admissions officers. They have a huge network of contacts and are well known. They are not new to the system. They take on a limited number of kids from each school and each cycle. There are article and blogs describing what they do that have popped up online since the scandal. The post had two articles within the last few days. If you have the money I can think of no reason not to do this for a top student. People talking about doing it the old fashion way or whatever they did in the 70s-90s should prepare for rejection and not be mad. The system of applying to a bunch of top colleges is arduous and the kids have a ton of other activities at the same time. They are seniors so team captains, newspaper editors, lead actors, debate... all the extra curriculars and possibly testing along with all AP classes and finals happen at the same time. If the kid does not get in early the entire Xmas break is spent on application. No top colleges have rolling acceptance. Kids start dropping schools left and right because there is just not enough time to do the massive essays. It is a process that needs to be paved or managed. The questions are not released until after school starts for most kids so you can’t front load over the summer either. In the 4 years I watched this unfold with my kids those who rushed through did not get in... sometimes anywhere. Each app must be completed like its your number one school. If you are from a disadvantaged background you get cut a break but for middle class kids coming from a top public or private school regardless of race sloppy or error ridden essays meant a rejection. There is so much paper it takes over at least one room of the house.
Do you think a private college counselor can get a kid into a school that they would otherwise not get into on their own? I have heard parents sing the praises of their private counselors, but I have never heard of a case where a kid got into a reach school by using a private counselor. So basically, they are helping them be stronger candidates for schools that they very possibly could have gotten into anyways? And the parents using these counselors are full pay anyways, so if their kid applies to enough schools where they are in the mid-range of the application profile for, they would be getting some acceptances anyways. And can't most kids, figure out what schools out of those whose stats they are a match for they would like to attend anyways?
Yes I do. I deeply regretted not getting one for my oldest. But for maximum effect you need to start in 9th grade so the package is perfect and supported by application time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ones people pay big bucks for are often former college counselors at top schools or former admissions officers. They have a huge network of contacts and are well known. They are not new to the system. They take on a limited number of kids from each school and each cycle. There are article and blogs describing what they do that have popped up online since the scandal. The post had two articles within the last few days. If you have the money I can think of no reason not to do this for a top student. People talking about doing it the old fashion way or whatever they did in the 70s-90s should prepare for rejection and not be mad. The system of applying to a bunch of top colleges is arduous and the kids have a ton of other activities at the same time. They are seniors so team captains, newspaper editors, lead actors, debate... all the extra curriculars and possibly testing along with all AP classes and finals happen at the same time. If the kid does not get in early the entire Xmas break is spent on application. No top colleges have rolling acceptance. Kids start dropping schools left and right because there is just not enough time to do the massive essays. It is a process that needs to be paved or managed. The questions are not released until after school starts for most kids so you can’t front load over the summer either. In the 4 years I watched this unfold with my kids those who rushed through did not get in... sometimes anywhere. Each app must be completed like its your number one school. If you are from a disadvantaged background you get cut a break but for middle class kids coming from a top public or private school regardless of race sloppy or error ridden essays meant a rejection. There is so much paper it takes over at least one room of the house.
Do you think a private college counselor can get a kid into a school that they would otherwise not get into on their own? I have heard parents sing the praises of their private counselors, but I have never heard of a case where a kid got into a reach school by using a private counselor. So basically, they are helping them be stronger candidates for schools that they very possibly could have gotten into anyways? And the parents using these counselors are full pay anyways, so if their kid applies to enough schools where they are in the mid-range of the application profile for, they would be getting some acceptances anyways. And can't most kids, figure out what schools out of those whose stats they are a match for they would like to attend anyways?
Anonymous wrote:Are consultants like private high school counselors in that they make contact with schools, tip them on off what the student's top choice is, and otherwise potentially influence admissions decisions--a little like deal-making? (<--is this even correct? I somehow surmised this from various conversations and info sessions.)
Anonymous wrote:The ones people pay big bucks for are often former college counselors at top schools or former admissions officers. They have a huge network of contacts and are well known. They are not new to the system. They take on a limited number of kids from each school and each cycle. There are article and blogs describing what they do that have popped up online since the scandal. The post had two articles within the last few days. If you have the money I can think of no reason not to do this for a top student. People talking about doing it the old fashion way or whatever they did in the 70s-90s should prepare for rejection and not be mad. The system of applying to a bunch of top colleges is arduous and the kids have a ton of other activities at the same time. They are seniors so team captains, newspaper editors, lead actors, debate... all the extra curriculars and possibly testing along with all AP classes and finals happen at the same time. If the kid does not get in early the entire Xmas break is spent on application. No top colleges have rolling acceptance. Kids start dropping schools left and right because there is just not enough time to do the massive essays. It is a process that needs to be paved or managed. The questions are not released until after school starts for most kids so you can’t front load over the summer either. In the 4 years I watched this unfold with my kids those who rushed through did not get in... sometimes anywhere. Each app must be completed like its your number one school. If you are from a disadvantaged background you get cut a break but for middle class kids coming from a top public or private school regardless of race sloppy or error ridden essays meant a rejection. There is so much paper it takes over at least one room of the house.