Anonymous wrote:
Me again. Searching.
Anyone hear of Sierra?
https://sierraadmissions.com/
Any feedback???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did it work out for your kid so far, to date, in ED, or REA/EA? What schools/results?
If non-DMV, can you list state?
If rejected or deferred, has your counselors advice, been helpful, comprehensive and specific as your kid enters the RD process? What types of suggestions have they made and what types of schools did they add to your kid’s list?
If you have to do it all over again, would you hire that firm or company?
Yes, would do it again because they worked w/ my kids on deadlines and saved our relationship because I didn't need to nag them.
One got in ED was happy as a clam (this round).
The other was applying during covid, first round of test optional and got screwed. 36 ACT (because they took it summer between 10th/11th) and because so many got in TO they got into targets (UMD for example) that they didn't really want to go to but we made them apply. Reaches ended up WL and then rejected. They ended up at a safety with lots of merit, graduated in 3 years (lots of APs) and is now using all the money we had saved in their 529 for grad school.
It all worked out, but for that year or so I was beyond furious
Anonymous wrote:How did it work out for your kid so far, to date, in ED, or REA/EA? What schools/results?
If non-DMV, can you list state?
If rejected or deferred, has your counselors advice, been helpful, comprehensive and specific as your kid enters the RD process? What types of suggestions have they made and what types of schools did they add to your kid’s list?
If you have to do it all over again, would you hire that firm or company?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one else??
My friend hired someone for her 11th grader because both parents work long hours and prefer to outsource this to reduce conflict in the home.
My other friend hired someone just to help with essays for her 12th grader. Student in question has received top tier early action college acceptances so far.
Neither myself nor any of my other friends hired college counselors, but we all hired tutors.
This question is often asked on DCUM, but in general people will steer you away, explaining it's not worth the money. I think if you really want to maximize a college counselor, you need to hire one to plot high school trajectory, starting in 9th grade (so hire in 8th grade when it's time to choose courses). I considered this for my younger kid, but ultimately I think we'll go without, just like for the first kid.
. Supplemental essay/?s came easier. He just expanded on his hobbies and things from common app. I advised him to just 'be himself'. Don't think about 'crafting some phony narrative'.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did it work out for your kid so far, to date, in ED, or REA/EA? What schools/results?
If non-DMV, can you list state?
If rejected or deferred, has your counselors advice, been helpful, comprehensive and specific as your kid enters the RD process? What types of suggestions have they made and what types of schools did they add to your kid’s list?
If you have to do it all over again, would you hire that firm or company?
Not a college counselor but someone to help with reading essays and giving feedback. Tried 2-one very expensive one ($300 per hour) and another a Yale grad in English ($50 per hour). The Yale grad was so much better. The expensive one kept (suspiciously) nitpicking. Would pick on technical minutia. The Yale grad read holistically and for flow and emotion. Spent close to $1200 on expensive one and then let DC work only with the Yale grad. DC in at first choice ED>
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Melanie Drake at Summit Solutions
melanie@findyoursummit.com
She’s down-to-earth, practical, easy to work with. Did the college counseling at a fancy STL prep school, now works on her own. Clients on the coasts but lives in rural midwest so not as expensive as DMV-based advisors. Really nice mix of expertise and value.
Thx!
Where did your kid end up committing?
Anonymous wrote:All essays are written by DC only, and effectively written.
Have access to following:
College Counsellor: pretty useless
Ex AO form an Ivy (30K for their services):
- Overall narrative, common app story, language/flow for activities and the essay
- College essays (for top 10 filing) - review, catching red flags, additional eyes
- Completing and filing support for specific colleges
- Secret insights about respective process
- Guide / coach and provide motivation to DC during this stressful process
Partner with a Strategy/MBB firm:
- Research and analysis on all college / Univ - overall strategic approach
- Prioritization - which college to drop, file and keep as backup etc
- Structuring the narrative along with the ex AO
- Structure essays, ECs and story part
- Program manage the entire process
- Use his network to get internship and LOR
- Fund and bank roll the entire process
Anonymous wrote:Melanie Drake at Summit Solutions
melanie@findyoursummit.com
She’s down-to-earth, practical, easy to work with. Did the college counseling at a fancy STL prep school, now works on her own. Clients on the coasts but lives in rural midwest so not as expensive as DMV-based advisors. Really nice mix of expertise and value.