Meet Mike, Father of Alex
Meet Mike - he's the father of Alex, a current freshman at Emory University in Atlanta, GA.
Last year, Alex (Chicago, IL) was a senior in high school and Mike was (and still is) a dedicated father who was slightly stressed because he didn't know how best to help his son navigate the college application & admission process.
Mike was a dedicated father who wanted the absolute best for his child.
What he didn't know was how to guide his child with the proper college admissions insight.
Let's break it down:
Who? Mike S.
Problem: Inability to confidently provide college admissions guidance to his son.
Solution: Join The Start-to-Finish, All-Inclusive College Confidence Program
Did it work? Yep. Less than four weeks after joining the The Start-to-Finish, All-Inclusive College Confidence Program, his son Alex received admission off the waitlist at his dream school, Emory University.
Mike recently shared his thoughts with the CC.us Community --
While Mike & Alex reached out near the end of the college admissions cycle, you don't have to wait. Do you need help navigating the college search process (or know someone who does)? Students should begin college planning their sophomore fall to give themselves the best chance of college admission success. Click here to see if and how we can help (or pass the link along to your fellow parent that might be able to use it)!
To your college planning success,
Jack Delehey
Founder, CollegeConsulting.us
P.S. - Have a high-performing high schooler w/ a 3.7 GPA or higher? We specialize in changing the lives of students just like this, giving them the right structure, mentorship, and accountability to excel in high school...and ultimately gain admission into the college of their dreams. We do it year after year after year. It's not rocket science. But it is a science.
P.P.S - Our most common question is "When should we start?!" The answer is, if you truly care about giving your high schooler the best chance of college planning success, you should start NOW. 9th grade is not too early to start! 10th grade is certainly not too early to start! And 11th grade is far, far too late! (supporting data here to show just how much of an advantage you give your child by starting the process early).