Hey everyone,
We just jumped off a long call reviewing our upcoming summer onboarding for rising seniors. It’s absolutely beautiful outside right now, but inside our offices, the pressure is ramping up.
Students are starting to brainstorm their Common App essays, parents are panicking about the transition to college, and the marketing engines of elite universities are officially kicking into high gear.
Today, we wanted to pull back the curtain on three things every family of a high school junior or senior needs to hear right now: the incredible value of small/medium schools, the myth of the “Yale letter,” and why you need to have a formal family financial meeting before the essays get written.
1. Don’t Let “Graduation Rates” Scare You Away from Small Schools
As college consultants, we find it incredibly easy to fall into the trap of filtering out schools based strictly on benchmarks. Many advisors won’t even consider a school unless its baseline graduation rate on College Navigator is above 50 percent.
But our colleague Peter—an expert on small and mid-sized institutions—has been challenging us to rethink that math.
There are incredible schools out there with student populations under 1,000 that offer life-changing opportunities. For example, did you know that Kenyon College in Ohio has boasted a near-100-percent acceptance rate into medical school for its pre-med graduates over recent years? Or look at Colorado College, which runs a unique “block schedule” in which students dive into a single subject intensely for a month, followed by a 4.5-day weekend to explore the Rockies. It’s essentially an incredible bridge to adulting.
From Centre College in Kentucky to the hidden gems of the South, there is a massive world outside of the U.S. News & World Report rankings. Don’t let rigid database filters cheat your kid out of a perfect fit.
2. That Letter from Yale? It’s an Ad, Not an Invitation.
Right about now, rising seniors are opening their mailboxes to find glamorous, personalized letters from Ivy League and highly selective universities saying: “We want you. Apply to us.”
The Reality Check: It’s a marketing funnel. Some will tell you, “We saw your SAT scores” but others won’t mention how they got your name.
Colleges pay millions of dollars for predictive modeling and data lists. They buy student information from test agencies just to generate leads. They need thousands of students to apply so they can reject 97% of them, keeping their enrollment percentages artificially low to protect their “highly selective” rankings.
If a school has a 3% acceptance rate, that does not mean your student has a 3% chance of admission. The math is not cumulative. Families must do the math on the 97% chance of not getting in. If you simply pile your list high with these lottery-ticket schools, the statistical math doesn’t work in your favor.
Enjoy the dopamine hit of the letter, take it to your guidance counselor with a smile, but treat it exactly like what it is: a business advertisement.
3. The “Step Three” Family Financial Audit
ESSAY CURE has a strict 10-step process for onboarding rising seniors. Steps 1 and 2 allow the students to dream a bit, explore their lists, and find their reach schools. Step Three is where the rubber meets the road.
Before a student falls deeply in love with a campus or spends 20 hours drafting bespoke supplemental essays, they are handed a mandatory homework assignment: A formal, one-hour financial conversation with their parents.
Families must sit down and answer a checklist of tough questions:
What is our bottom-line application budget? (At $60 to $90 per submission, applying to 12+ schools adds up fast).
What is our actual buying power for the next four years?
If your student is in the middle-income bracket (e.g., a dual-income family making $200k/year), you may not qualify for need-based aid, but still can’t comfortably write a check for full tuition. What is the plan for merit aid?
We require students to return a signed PDF confirming they’ve reviewed every bullet point on the financial sheet. It feels heavy early on, but it protects everyone from devastating heartbreaks come April of senior year.
What’s Next: Hit the Road with Us!
Christine just returned from an intensive, 5-day, 10-college tour organized by SACAC (Southern Association of College Admissions Counselors) where she toured a fascinating mix of institutions: Rhodes College, LeMoyne-Owen, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, Philander Smith, Hendrix, University of the Ozarks, University of Arkansas, University of Central Arkansas, and University of Memphis.
The goal? To learn about these colleges so that she can help steer students to a good academic, social, and financial fit. Her personal project was to capture black-and-white photography to document sides of these campuses that nobody usually sees on the glossy brochures—and to look past the marketing to find out what the real student experience feels like.
We hope to have Peter join us in a future post — stay tuned!


Are you currently building a college list or freaking out about the upcoming application cycle? Let us know your biggest roadblock in the comments below!







