College & Workforce Readiness

Companies Step In to Fill Teenagers’ Guidance Needs

By Sean Cavanagh — May 19, 2004 6 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

It was a story fit to impress the most skeptical college-admissions officer. A teenager is raised by her mother in Spanish Harlem. The girl has little contact with her father, but eventually, that void becomes a fount of motivation. She pushes herself academically, takes a position in student government, and resolves that one day she will leave New York City to attend college, though not too far from home.

But before Yasmin Vega, 17, wove those memories into a personal essay for her college applications, she sought an outside opinion. Last summer, the senior at the Manhattan Center for Science & Mathematics High School turned in a rough draft to visiting advisers from College Coach, one of a number of private businesses across the country that offer specialized college- counseling services to students and their families.

The company’s advisers suggested she pare down some of the essay’s chronological details, and focus more on explaining why certain events mattered to her. They told her to think about stripping some details and to be more specific about other accomplishments.

By the time she began applying to colleges last fall, Ms. Vega had a more polished personal essay in hand. She eventually included it in her application to Ithaca College in upstate New York, where she gained admission and will begin her studies in the fall.

Over the years, the range of services offered by companies such as College Coach, based in Newton, Mass., has steadily expanded, and so has their clientele. Today, those businesses market themselves to students and families, schools and districts, and even corporations, which provide college-planning advice as a perk to employees.

College Coach was contracted by Ms. Vega’s school to provide a variety of services that typify the private-counseling business today: advice about personal essays, financial aid, and preparing for college-entrance exams.

Some students are looking for advice that will bolster their chances of getting into a prestigious college—though others, like Ms. Vega, say finding a school that is the right fit means more.

From the start, Ms. Vega was targeting a school with a communications program, located no more than a four- or five-hour drive from the city, and with a medium-size student population. College Coach helped her to come up with a list of possibilities, then whittle it down.

“It helped in the whole process,” Ms. Vega said. “In the fall, everybody was just getting started, and I was already done with my personal essay and everything.”

College Coach is paid $35,000 a year by the nonprofit, New York-based Children’s Aid Society to provide services at the public science and math school, which is part of the 1.1 million-student New York City school system.

The company works in at least 25 school districts, charging them somewhere between $10,000 and $100,000 per year, said Michael London, the president and founder of the company. Some school administrators want the company to help train counselors and teachers in writing recommendations and critiquing student essays; others want the business to stage college-planning seminars and workshops for students and families.

Individual families typically pay from $650 to $6,500 for help from the company, which has 47 employees. Clients seeking the most expensive services can secure one-on-one counseling sessions from its most experienced advisers, such as Lloyd Peterson, a former associate director of admissions at Yale University.

Business Is Good

The private-counseling field is also full of self-employed consultants, often retired high school counselors or college-admissions officers working out of their homes.

Mark H. Skarlow, the executive director of the Fairfax, Va.-based Independent Educational Consultants Association, believes many of the private businesses began to take hold in the 1970s. His organization supplies professional training to individual counselors, offers them ethical guidelines, and provides a list of qualified consultants. Five years ago, his association had 170 members; it has 381 today.

Not surprisingly, the greatest number of counseling businesses can be found in regions that are home to the most selective colleges, with the Northeastern states being a particular hub. Fairfield County, Conn., “has more college consultants than [it does] Starbucks,” Mr. Skarlow quipped, looking over a membership directory.

Demand for private counseling has spiked as pressure on students to get into college has grown, experts say.

Elite private colleges are more demanding than ever, and many public institutions that were relatively nonselective years ago are raising their admissions standards, too, in the face of increasing demand and limits on enrollment, said Barmak Nassirian, an associate director at the Washington-based American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers.

Partly as a result, high school counselors today juggle more tasks than ever. They must help college-bound students make the right college choices, while also reviewing course schedules, arranging tutoring and special services, and helping teenagers cope with crises in their lives.

“College is certainly part of what they do, but it can’t be all of what they do,” said Jill Cook, the director of programs for the American School Counselor Association, based in Alexandria, Va.

Her association recommends a student-to-counselor ratio of 250-to-1. Yet today, that average hovers around 477-to-1 in K-12 systems, Ms. Cook estimates. Many high schools try to cope with those limitations, she said, by practicing “domain counseling,” in which advisers assume different specialties, such as the college-application process, academic counseling, and social problems.

The biggest share of the students and families that College Coach serves, roughly 75 percent, are interested in highly selective colleges and universities, Mr. London said. But he and other industry officials say they are equally capable of helping students find the right two-year or other nonelite campus.

His company guides teenagers with interests ranging from “community colleges through Harvard,” Mr. London said. “Some students haven’t done well in high school. Some may ask us if they should take a year off, or go to a community college first, then transfer.”

Mark H. Kuranz, a former president of the American School Counselor Association, acknowledges that the everyday burdens faced by his colleagues have fueled interest in college advice from private counselors. But in his view, a traditional counselor offers students insight that a hired consultant can’t.

An on-site counselor can write letters of recommendations and help shape application essays based on a detailed knowledge of students’ personal histories, he said, from having spent hours with the students. Those counselors can ask for individual teachers’ tips about students’ strengths and anecdotes illustrating their abilities.

“By the time the kids are seniors, I feel I know them,” said Mr. Kuranz, one of six counselors at the 2,000-student Jerome I. Case High School in Racine, Wis. “What specialization do [these companies] bring that gives these kids an advantage?”

Helping the Wealthy?

Mr. Nassirian said there was truth to the oft-cited worry that private-counseling services help more affluent students and families who can afford to pay for those services.

Schools and districts that contract with private companies have the opportunity to bring more equity to that process, he added—though wealthier schools, which are more likely to have well-funded counseling services, are also more likely to be able to pay for private consultants.

Students and parents can help themselves, Mr. Nassirian noted, by researching colleges on their own, early on—and committing to a strong academic curriculum. “If there’s a magic bullet,” he said, “that’s it.”

He also cautions that admissions officers are generally more impressed with the totality of a student’s achievements than with a single dazzling essay or recommendation. And that’s why he says schools and parents should weigh the services of counseling consultants carefully before doing business with them.

“There are some [companies] that provide nothing more than window dressing that admissions officers can immediately see through,” he said.

A version of this article appeared in the May 19, 2004 edition of Education Week as Companies Step In to Fill Teenagers’ Guidance Needs

Events

Jobs Regional K-12 Virtual Career Fair: DMV
Find teaching jobs and K-12 education jubs at the EdWeek Top School Jobs virtual career fair.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
College & Workforce Readiness Webinar
Blueprints for the Future: Engineering Classrooms That Prepare Students for Careers
Explore how to build career-ready engineering programs in your high school with hands-on, real-world learning strategies.
Content provided by Project Lead The Way
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
School Climate & Safety Webinar
Cardiac Emergency Response Plans: What Schools Need Now
Sudden cardiac arrest can happen at school. Learn why CERPs matter, what’srequired, and how districts can prepare to save lives.
Content provided by American Heart Association

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

College & Workforce Readiness Inside One District’s Experiment to Anchor Learning Around Career-Ready Skills
Employers identify skills like creativity and collaboration as key to success in careers.
8 min read
An 8-year-old girl in a purple t-shirt leans over a butcher block counter inside a retrofitted school bus to glue together a map. Behind her, two classmates glue their projects.
Aiden Montanez Castro, 8, Zayne Mendez, 8, and Violet Ward, 8, work on a lesson in making a topographical map of their hometown at Fulton Elementary School in Ephrata, Pa. The Ephrata district refashioned a school bus into a Maker Bus, which parks at each of the district’s elementary schools for hands-on projects. The district has oriented its teaching around projects that allow students to demonstrate skills like empathy and creativity alongside content knowledge.
Scott Lewis for Education Week
College & Workforce Readiness Reports Work-Based Learning in Postsecondary Education: Results of a National Survey
Based on a 2025 survey, this report examines key questions about educator perspectives on work-based learning in postsecondary education.
College & Workforce Readiness Spotlight Spotlight on College and Career Pathways Designed to Serve All Students
CTE is transforming career prep: AI, high-tech training, and real-world learning connect students to in-demand jobs and future-ready skills.
College & Workforce Readiness Trump Admin. Makes Workforce Training a Focus in College-Access Program
The feds seek changes to a program designed to help low-income secondary students access higher education.
3 min read
Scranton High School student Elizabeth Kramer participates in the Program 3-D Prototyping during Luzerne County Community College's STEM Technology Day on Monday, February 17, 2020, in Nanticoke Pa. More than 100 students from four school districts will attend. The students were part of "Talent Search," an Educational Opportunity Center program. The Talent Search program identifies and assists individuals from economically disadvantaged backgrounds who have the potential to succeed in higher education.
Scranton High School student Elizabeth Kramer participates in a 3-D prototyping program at Luzerne County Community College's STEM Technology Day on Feb. 17, 2020, in Nanticoke, Pa. The students were supported by Talent Search, funded by a federal program that identifies and helps economically disadvantaged students who have the potential to succeed in higher education. The Trump administration seeks to broaden the program to include more workforce-based training.
Mark Moran/The Citizens' Voice via AP