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College coaches can help kids make the grade

Fees can be large and qualifications small; ‘polishing’ teenager images

San Francisco City College
Students walk to class on the campus of San Francisco City College. The cottage industry of educational consultants, who get teenagers into college, is booming.
Marcio Jose Sanchez / AP
By Roland Jones
Business news editor
msnbc.com
updated 4:11 p.m. ET Aug. 2, 2006

Roland Jones
Business news editor

E-mail
Last year, a Maryland high school student had an all-too-familiar problem: He had good grades and test scores, but he didn’t stand out from his peers. So in his junior year he and his family approached Ivy Success, a small company in Garden City, N.Y., that helps students get into America’s most competitive colleges — for a hefty fee, of course.

The student wanted to major in business at college, so the company's counselors encouraged the student to take more challenging advanced placement courses at high school. And they went further.

“We had him start an organization that dealt with childhood literacy, and it received a lot of funding and media attention, so he was able to demonstrate why he was interested in applying for that particular major — he differentiated himself,” said Victoria Hsiao, a partner at Ivy Success, which charges between $18,000 and $28,500 per student.

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The cottage industry of educational consultants — basically coaches hired by parents to be part guidance counselor and part educator for their teenage children — is booming.

The Independent Educational Consultants Association, a trade group, has mushroomed to about 600 members from 150 in 1990, said director Mark Sklarow. He reckons that 20 percent of the freshmen at private, four-year colleges have used some sort of coaching service.

While just about anyone can hang out a shingle and call themselves a college coach, Sklarow's group requires that members have at least three years of experience in college admissions or high school counseling. Hsiao says all her consultants have worked in the admissions offices of Ivy League schools.

“The college admissions process is extremely competitive these days, but lots of students out there today with great test scores need to differentiate themselves from their peers and they don’t understand what colleges are looking for,” Hsiao said. “They don’t have the perspective of a college admissions officer, and that’s where we can help.”

Sklarow points to a number of reasons for the industry’s growth. With more and more young people headed for college, school-based counselors are overwhelmed, with each one catering to the needs of 400 children on average. (In California the average is 1,200.)

And it’s getting harder to identify the traits that college admissions officers are looking for in prospective students, he added. Another reason is the rising cost of college tuition.

“Of all the kids who will start college this year, fewer than half will graduate from the same college, so making a mistake and enrolling at the wrong college has a big financial impact, and that means an awful lot of tuition credits, money and time are being lost,” said Sklarow. “So it’s really about helping to match students to the school that’s appropriate for them. In that respect we are as much matchmakers as college coaches."

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While companies like Ivy Success tout their success stories, there are some who criticize counseling services, and they are not always looked on favorably by college admissions officers. Colleges want to see the “real” applicant — not an image “polished” by a professional service, said Thomas G. Mortenson, senior scholar at the Pell Institute for the Study of Opportunity in Higher Education.

“There is a great deal of anxiety among parents who want to send their kids to the best college they can, and they’re looking for every advantage they can afford,” said Mortenson.

"But the college people don’t want to be gamed. They want to see who the applicant really is, what he or she has accomplished and that person’s goals in life, and based on that they’ll decide if the college is a good fit. But many of the talented kids they see are not appropriate, so you hear stories of rejected valedictorians. So the question is, do these coaches change unfairly the kid’s image?”


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