In less than five hours -- midnight tonight -- we're pulling the plug on our last-minute, 11th hour college applications and essays "express" program, The November Sprint.
That means that, if you want help putting together a (nearly) perfect college application and a set of essays so compelling that admissions officers would (practically) crawl naked over broken glass to BEG your child to attend their college...
...In what looks like to be the most competitive, ridiculous college acceptance cycle ever (did you see last year's acceptance rates? Brace yourself!)...
It's time to make your choice.
Either sign up with us, so that our years of specialized college essay and college advising expertise is in your corner -- expertise that has helped our clients get into every top college you can think of...
...or, let this chance slip through your fingers and "wing it."
You've got an important decision to make. If you chose us, we're ready to go to work for you and your kiddo's future...
College essays and applications don't have to be complicated.
I'd argue that the simpler, the better. That's how you avoid stress, frustration and confusion.
That's exactly why we designed the November Sprint, an "express" college advising program for high school seniors who are still treading water with their college list, applications and essays.
It's time to dive in and rescue them.
If you (really, your kiddo) are ready to roll up your sleeves and put together a winning application that positions yourself as an "Incomparable Applicant"...
...so that you give yourself the best shot at getting into your Dream School -- and winning tens of thousands of fat, juicy scholarships...
Then it's critically important that you take action right now, before we pull the rug out from under this offer.
It's go time.
- Andy Lockwood
P.S. If you're like most parents we know, you've done a LOT for your kid: spent thousands of dollars and oodles of time driving them back an...
Sometimes, I'm not exactly tactful.
Case in point, last week I was sitting with an 11th grader, reviewing his grades, PSATs, extracurricular activities and preliminary, highly selective, college list.
I told him that his record was pretty strong. But..."Don't take this the wrong way," I offered.
When you throw your hat into the ring with thousands of kids with equal or better accomplishments, you become something else:
A Dime a Dozen
Colleges are businesses, they sort, exclude and choose kids for acceptance based on their own internal desires and guidelines, some of which have nothing to do with an applicant's qualifications.
A LOT of which, actually.
So if you agree that colleges are actually in business (despite their non-profit status - hah), you might see why I implore my clients to understand things a bit differently about themselves:
They Too Are in Business
They're in the business of getting into the colleges they want, and to win scholarships.
I told this partic...
This August, a Class of 2024 client, Sally (not her real name) told me that she had just met with her guidance counselor. They chatted about her essay topic. The counselor was alarmed.
“Don’t write about death, you’ll depress your admissions officer!”
Sally (still not her real name) and her mom asked me what I thought.
“STUPID!” I offered, tactfully.
"Oh this is fun," Sally's mom said. "I have to come to these meeting more often!"
The back story is that Sally had attended five funerals in a span of four months. Not only is that unusual for a high school senior, it seems like it might be kind of important in her young life, don't you think?
“If this was a big deal, it’s something to consider writing about. Actually, it might be weird to NOT write about it”, quoth the college advisor.
The essay doesn’t have to be about “death,” I said.
I continued, "What if you used the services and eulogies as a lens to look through and examine what YOU would want people to say at your funera...
I usually keep this type of comment to myself, but late in the office last night, I unloaded.
I was meeting with a prospective client, talking about how we help with everything relating to getting into and paying for college, including essay writing.
Somehow, the tone and subject morphed into how BAD some essays are.
I'm talking two page, one paragraph drafts.
Utter absence of capital letters at the beginning of a sentence.
Or for proper nouns.
Sentences that run on longer than the Iditarod.
But those aren't the worst transgressions, sadly. Grammar and punctuation are easy fixes.
What's harder to pull off is the Big Idea of the essay. What personal quality or qualities do you want to convey?
What is the before and after, Hero's Journey or other tale you have to tell?
It's not just the essay that tells your story, incidentally. Your entire application, including the Activities Section, teacher letters of recommendation, guidance counselor's letter of recommendation...
For Frustrated, Worried Class of 2024 Parents...
I'll be quicker than Senator Fetterman's morning grooming routine, because the clock is a-tickin...
If your high school senior son or daughter hasn't made the progress on their essays and applications you hoped for this summer, we might be able to help.
I say "might" because
Here's the scoop -- my team and I are finishing up the application and essay writing process with a bunch of our 2024 private clients. What that means for you is that we have limited capacity to help your kiddo bring the applications and essays over the goal line, if they have October, November and December deadlines.
We call this program The November Sprint, and it's designed exclusively to relieve the blood pressure of moms (and dads) who are ripping out their hair over their kids' looming Early Action, Early Decision and other deadlines.
It'...
It's back to school time, which also means it's college ranking season.
I think ranking colleges is a pretty silly exercise, but I understand that we humans are wired to compare A to B to C and so forth. And I read them too.
To me, one of the most striking things about the various and sundry rankings is what they leave out. Probably because it is unrankable:
Student effort
A couple of the Big Rankers measure average salaries, post-graduation, at each college. Fine. But here's what does not go into those rankings, as far as I can tell:
GM, just letting know that we posted the recording of Sunday night's SAT and ACT walkthrough, to help you figure out Which Test is Best.
Watch it here, I'll keep it up and available tor the rest of the week:
- Andy Lockwood
P.S. We're temporarily offering a $115 off "scholarship" on all of our prep courses, online and in person. Use coupon code PREVIEW23 on our test prep website, LockwoodCollegePrep.com
I'll be faster than and almost as powerful as a speeding locomotive with this message:
Tonight, our head tutor, Marissa U, will host a live walkthrough of each of the sections of the SAT and ACT, in order to help you figure out Which Test is Best...
...to help your kiddo multiply his odds of admission to his Dream School...
...and get his mitts on the scholarships you deserve to help combat the ridiculous cost of college!
The whole thing will be over in order an hour, but there will be plenty of time for Q&A.
Sign up here, and you will discover
See you in class.
- Andy Lockwood
P.S. There's no charge to attend, but the information you learn could save you dozens of stressful hours, not to mention thousands of donuts in wasted tutoring fees for the Wrong Test.
P.P.S. Here's the sign up page one more time:
www.l...
If you've been on my email list for a little bit, you won't be shocked to learn that I was a big Mad Magazine fan back in the day.
One of my favorite features was the Spy vs. Spy cartoon, which depicted outlandish battles between one faceless spy, dressed all in black, the other, identical but in white attire.
To the best of my recollection, there was hardly ever a clear winner, which was satisfying to some people, I guess. But not to me. I always wanted to know which spy was better.
A lot of parents, and kids, feel the same way about the SAT or ACT. There's an assumption that one is "better," meaning one that colleges prefer, or is better in some other, undefined way. Possibly because those of us who grew up in the 80s on the East or West coast may never have heard of the ACT, which was largely a midwestern thang until it grew, and eclipsed the SAT 7-8 years ago.
Here's the deal...
Colleges are agnostic. They accept either test. So the logical strategy is to pick the one ...
50% Complete
Get this unusual but valuable information now -- while it's still available!