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Why parents are willing to pay $500,000 for Ivy League admissions counseling | Real Time Headlines

Ivy League Architecture at Princeton University.

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across the country top schoolsincluding many Ivy League schools, with admission rates hovering around all time low.

“College admissions is only going to get more competitive, and there’s a lot of pressure on families about the risks and how to get into college,” said Thomas Howell, founder of Forum Education, a New York-based tutoring company.

For some families, getting their children into top schools is an investment, and to do so, they can spend almost unlimited money on tutors, college counselors and test preparation.

“The top 20% either fail”

Meanwhile, as some private universities approach prices six figures per yearsome students choose cheaper public schools or Complete degree replacement. It is often assumed that for those willing to pay for a four-year private college, it should be worth it.

“The value proposition of higher education is splitting,” Howell said, “either top schools or real value.”

For this group of college applicants, he added, “you’re either in the top 20 percent or you’re a loser.”

As a result, so-called “Ivy+” colleges have seen record growth in applications, according to a report from Common Application.

“Ivy Plus” is a group that usually includes eight private universities ivy league — Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Penn, Princeton and Yale — plus the University of Chicago, Duke, MIT and Stanford.

To get into these elite schools, many families look to outside help for help.

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“The consensus is that college is worth attending only if it changes your life,” said Hafeez Lakhani, founder and president of Lakhani Coaching in New York.

“What hasn’t changed is that people with significant resources are willing to invest more than $100,000, which is about 20 percent of our clients,” Lakhani said. “That’s probably the biggest amount of money they’re going to spend on it other than the car.”

The average Lakhani Coaching client spends $58,000 on counseling, but some clients spend as much as $800,000 over several years, Lakhani said.

At this price point, he said, students “get a SEAL-level instructor in almost every class.” Lakhani equated academic support with the highest level of organization and execution that exemplifies the training of SEALs, the special operations force representing sea, air and land forces.

Lakhani charges $1,600 an hour for his services, the highest rate at his company, but he said families nonetheless often choose to work with him rather than with lower-level coaches there, including Some coaches charge around $290 per hour.

That dynamic likely won’t change even if he charges more, he added.

Parents often say, “It’s a worthwhile investment,” he adds. “The word investing comes up over and over again.”

Christopher Rim, founder and CEO of command education, a college consulting firm.

Courtesy: Christopher Lin

At Command Education in New York, counselors meet with students every week starting in eighth or ninth grade. Families pay an annual fee of $120,000, which does not include test preparation costs for the Standard Admissions Test (SAT) or the American College Test (ACT). By the time they graduated, they had spent about half a million dollars.

Christopher Rim, founder and CEO of Command, said that Command’s clients are capped at 200 students worldwide, and most are on a first-come, first-served basis, but they will reject students if they feel they cannot achieve the expected results.

“At the end of the day, results are what matters,” he said.

“This is not the tutor next door”

“Imperfect meritocracy”

The traditional admissions debate: Why schools are ending the practice

“Higher education is an imperfect meritocracy,” Lakhani said.

However, the wealthiest students from the country’s top private schools are primarily competing against each other as schools look to build diverse classes.

“When you apply from wealthy families, your competition is similar people,” Lakhani said.

Ironically, most people are reluctant to admit that they have received personal help, even if they were lucky enough to receive it.

“Every parent wants to say their child did it,” Ream said.

Is an Ivy League degree worth it?

one study Opportunity Insights, a nonpartisan, nonprofit research organization at Harvard University, compared the future earnings of waitlisted students who ended up attending Ivy League schools with those who attended public universities.

Finally, a team of economists from Harvard and Brown universities found that the impact on earnings of attending an Ivy League school was “statistically insignificant.”

However, there are other advantages besides income.

For example, attending an “Ivy Plus” university According to Opportunity Insights, compared with highly selective public institutions, your chances of getting into elite graduate schools are nearly doubled and your chances of working at a prestigious company are tripled.

The Opportunity Insights report found that leadership positions are disproportionately held by graduates of some highly selective private universities.

Additionally, it increases the chances of students ultimately reaching their goals Top 1% 60% of income distribution.

“Highly selective private universities serve as gateways to the upper echelons of society,” the researchers said.

They added: “Because these universities currently enroll far higher proportions of students from higher-income families than students from lower-income families with equivalent academic qualifications, they perpetuate privilege.”

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