Independent Educational Consultants/Admissions Advisors: Dr. Paul Lowe Is Everywhere

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Over the past 23 years, Dr. Lowe and his team of admissions advisors have worked with U.S. and international clients gain admissions to Ivy League and highly selective colleges and universities as well as top BS/MD programs. Our clients’ proven success speaks to our unmatched admissions advisory services! Parents who hire us know that they want RESULTS, not just help! Parents understand that they need INDEPENDENT professional help (private educational consultants/admissions advisors) to navigate the uncertainties and unexpected challenges of the constantly changing admissions landscape): College Admissions Advisors Complement/Augment High School Counselors | High School Guidance Counselors/College Admissions: Big Caseloads and Little Time | The Need for a BS/MD Admissions Advisor Even When You Have a High School Counselor.

Our clients hail from public and private U.S. high schools as well as international schools and homeschools. Obviously, we won’t tell you the names of our clients, but we can tell you which high schools they attend or from which they graduated.

U.S. Private/Boarding Schools (partial list)

  • American Heritage Schools (FL)
  • Avenues The World School (NY)
  • Brookfield Academy (WI)
  • Brunswick School (CT)
  • Buckingham Browne & Nichols School (MA)
  • Cate School (CA)
  • Cheshire Academy (CT)
  • Choate Rosemary Hall (CT)
  • Collegiate School (NY)
  • Dana Hall School (MA)
  • Deerfield Academy (MA)
  • Durham Academy (NC)
  • Dwight School (NY)
  • Dwight-Englewood School (NJ)
  • Garrison Forest School (MD)
  • Georgetown Day School (DC)
  • Germantown Friends School (PA)
  • Greenwich Academy (CT)
  • Hackley School (NY)
  • Hamden Hall Country Day School (CT)
  • Harvard-Westlake School (CA)
  • Hawai’i Preparatory Academy (HI)
  • Hopkins School (CT)
  • Horace Mann School (NY)
  • Hotchkiss School (CT)
  • Iolani School (HI)
  • Lake Forest Academy (IL)
  • Lawrenceville School (NJ)
  • Middlesex School (MA)
  • Noble and Greenough School (MA)
  • Northfield Mount Hermon (MA)
  • Pingry School (NJ)
  • Phillips Andover (MA)
  • Phillips Exeter (NH)
  • Ransome Everglades School (FL)
  • Rye Country Day School (NY)
  • Sidwell Friends School (DC)
  • St. Marks School of Texas (TX)
  • St. Paul’s School (NH)
  • Taft School (CT)
  • TASIS Dorado (PR)
  • Trevor Day School (NY)
  • The Awty International School (TX)
  • The Brearley School (NY)
  • The Chapin School (NY)
  • The Dalton School (NY)
  • The Ethel Walker School (CT)
  • The Frederick Gunn School (CT)
  • The Hewitt School (NY)
  • The Hill School (PA)
  • The Hockaday School (TX)
  • The Masters School (NY)
  • The Madeira School (VA)
  • The Overlake School (WA)
  • The Shipley School (PA)
  • The Spence School (NY)
  • The Thacher School (CA)
  • The University of Chicago Laboratory Schools (IL)
  • The Westminster Schools (GA)
  • Trinity School (NY)
  • University School of Milwaukee (WI)
  • Westminster School (CT)
  • Wichita Collegiate School (KS)
  • Wilmington Friends School (DE)

U.S. Public High Schools (partial list)

  • Acton-Boxborough Regional High School (MA)
  • Advanced Math & Science Academy Charter School (MA)
  • Amity Regional High School (CT)
  • Bronx High School of Science (NY)
  • Bronxville High School (NY)
  • Chantilly High School (VA)
  • Darien High School (CT)
  • Dougherty Valley High School (CA)
  • Fairfax High School (VA)
  • Grassfield High School-Governor’s STEM Academy (VA)
  • Great Neck South High School (NY)
  • Great Valley High School (PA)
  • Greenwich High School (CT)
  • Guilford High School (CT)
  • Horace Greeley High School (NY)
  • Interlake High School (WA)
  • Jericho High School (NY)
  • Joel Barlow High School (CT)
  • Lawrence E. Elkins High School (TX) 
  • Lexington High School (MA)
  • Longmeadow High School (MA)
  • Lovejoy High School (TX)
  • Mamaroneck High School (NY)
  • Manhasset Secondary School (NY)
  • New Canaan High School (CT)
  • Newport High School (WA)
  • New Providence High School (NJ)
  • New Rochelle High School (NY)
  • North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics (NC)
  • Northside College Preparatory High School (IL)
  • Obra D. Tompkins High School (TX)
  • Plano East Senior High School (TX)
  • Princeton High School (NJ)
  • Rye High School (NY)
  • Roslyn High School (NY)
  • Scarsdale High School (NY)
  • School of Science and Engineering Magnet School (TX)
  • Seven Lakes High School (TX)
  • Shelton High School (CT)
  • Signature School (IN)
  • Staples High School (CT)
  • Syossett Senior High School (NY)
  • The Charter School of Wilmington (DE)
  • Thousand Oaks High School (CA)
  • Trumbull High School (CT)
  • Walter Johnson High School (MD)
  • Walter Payton College Preparatory High School (IL)
  • Walt Whitman High School (MD)
  • Westfield High School (NJ)
  • Westhampton Beach High School (NY)
  • Weston High School (CT)
  • Weston High School (MA)
  • West Windsor-Plainsboro High School North (NJ)
  • West Windsor-Plainsboro High School South (NJ)
  • Wilton High School (CT)
  • Union County Magnet High School (NJ)
  • University High School of Indiana (IN)

International High Schools (partial list)

  • Aiglon College (CH) – Switzerland
  • Akosombo International School (GH)
  • Ashbury College (ON) – Canada
  • Collège Alpin International Beau Soleil (CH) – Switzerland
  • Collège du Léman International School (CH) – Switzerland
  • Escola Graduada de Sao Paulo (BR)
  • École Jeannine Manuel (FR)
  • École Jeannine Manuel (UK)
  • Eton College (UK)
  • Ghana International School (GH)
  • Institut Auf Dem Rosenberg (CH) – Switzerland
  • Institut Le Rosey (CH) – Switzerland
  • Lincoln Community School (GH)
  • Notre-Dame International High School (FR)
  • Opoku Ware Senior High School (GH)
  • Ridley College (ON) Canada
  • St. George’s International School (CH) – Switzerland
  • St. Paul’s Girls’ School (UK)
  • TASIS England (UK)
  • TASIS The American School Switzerland (CH)
  • The Latymer School (UK)
  • Westminster School (UK)
  • Wilson’s School, Sutton (UK)
  • Wolmers Girls’ School (JM)
  • Wycombe Abbey School (UK)

Homeschool (Throughout the U.S.)

Consider Dr. Paul Lowe an additional team member, as other parents do, in your child’s journey for successful admissions to an Ivy League and highly selective college or university or BS/MD program!

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Visit: Ivy League Admissions Advisors
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Visit: BS/MD Admissions Guru

Dr. Paul Reginald Lowe, founder and managing director of Pinnacle Educational Center Admissions Advisors Group, provides comprehensive counseling advice, exclusively for admissions to top private schools; Ivy League and highly-selective colleges/universities; BS/MD programs; graduate and medical schools and top visual and performing arts programs. 

Rising Seniors: Now Is the Time to Start the College Application Process

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It’s August and for some rising seniors, school starts in approximately 30 days.  For many students, school will be closed and taught in an online fashion.  That in and of itself will be an additional disruption in the dynamics of the college admissions process. You can use this time to continue to vacation, relax and enjoy the summer or take full advantage of all this free time!

For rising seniors, now is the best time to commence working on your college applications. Why so soon?  The 2020-2021 Common Application is now ready!  The senior year of high school is extremely busy with students taking difficult courses, working on activities, preparing for college applications and just trying to enjoy the last year of high school!

We believe that you should enjoy the summer, HOWEVER, at this point, you need to start putting some work in to your college applications.  It will make your senior year more pleasant AND your college admissions application and journey smoother.

It’s August and for some rising seniors, school starts in approximately 30 days.  For many students, school will be closed and taught in an online fashion.  That in and of itself will be an additional disruption in the dynamics of the college admissions process. You can use this time to continue to vacation, relax and enjoy the summer or take full advantage of all this free time!

For rising seniors, now is the best time to commence working on your college applications. Why so soon?  The 2020-2021 Common Application is now ready!  The senior year of high school is extremely busy with students taking difficult courses, working on activities, preparing for college applications and just trying to enjoy the last year of high school!

We believe that you should enjoy the summer, HOWEVER, at this point, you need to start putting some work in to your college applications.  It will make your senior year more pleasant AND your college admissions application and journey smoother.

The Common App is more than just the main essay! Every section is devised so that the admissions officers get to know (or find ways to reject) a student.  When reading an application, admissions officers strive to gain a reasonably complete picture of a student – strengths, achievements and aspirations as well as any particular challenges they may have overcome. Statistically, it takes top colleges approximately 8 minutes to review an entire application!

We spend countless hours reviewing our clients’ entire Common Application to help them successfully navigate and avoid the unnecessary and devastating landmines that cause rejections!

  • Biographical Section (Profile, Family, Educational & Testing): The admissions committees or your regional admissions officers assess who you are.  It’s important to answer the questions honestly and with precision!
  • Personal Statement:We ensure that our clients’ Common App 650-word main essay accurately reflects the information that they want to convey to the majority of colleges to which they are applying.
  • College-Specific Questions: Academic interest, program(s) applying to.  Some colleges may also ask additional questions about your family, state of residence, activities, and general interests.  Admissions officers/committees use this as a way further understand a student’s past and their academic goals and objectives and how they are all interrelated and interconnected.
  • Short Answers: Then there are the school-specific (short answer essays)!  Although short, these little essays (50-250 words) can play a meaningful role in your application.  They provide a small window into your passions and personality, and because of this, they are important “decision-breakers”, especially with selective colleges that use the holistic admissions approach.  We spend just as much time brainstorming and helping our clients to revise these, seemingly simple essays, as we do with their personal statements because we know how admissions committees use them to determine acceptance or rejections.  Types of supplemental short essays include but are not limited to:

                 The ‘why us’ essay

Tell us more about an extracurricular

Design a class/a major

Tell us about your major

Diversity-in-community essay

Specialty small essays (list, words or one sentence or a phrase)

  • Activities Section: Whereas the personal statement will show college admissions committees who your child is, the Common Application Activities section will allow colleges to understand what your child has done and is doing outside of the classroom, offering one of the best opportunities to stand out among other applicants.  The activities section has a limit of ten extracurricular activities. The restrictions mean you will need to be selective in reporting your activities, limiting you to the most important ones or those that are most meaningful to you. In our experience, students can make costly mistakes in this section!

Without college essays and extracurricular activities lists, colleges would be limited to grades, class rank, and ACT and SAT scores to make their admissions decisions. Given that so many students with strong numbers apply to college each year, it’s important for your child to use the Activities section to develop an application theme, that is, their “WOW FACTOR” and specialties.  We leave no stone unturned in this section!

  • Courses & Grades (Self-Reporting Transcripts). In this section, you have an opportunity to self-report your grades.  In reviewing our clients’ answers, we find errors.  It’s important to review this section.  A discrepancy with what you report and your transcript raises a red flag!  These flags translate into a rejection letter.

The Common Application is not just an application.  It’s a puzzle filled with landmines that if not reviewed, interpreted and completed correctly will result in students being rejected from schools.  The most frequent form of self-inflicted damage is careless preparation of the application.  A poorly presented application can, in fact, have a negative affect on an admissions decision.

When assisting our clients with the completion of their Common Applications, we take into consideration their student admissions profile and character as well as the specific admissions policies and missions of their target schools that we gather from our research by visiting schools and professional relationships.  Our proprietary knowledge and experience help our clients to WIN (not lose) in the college competitive admissions game!

The ‘why us’ essay

Tell us more about an extracurricular

Design a class/a major

Tell us about your major

Diversity-in-community essay

Specialty small essays (list, words or one sentence or a phrase)

  • Activities Section: Whereas the personal statement will show college admissions committees who your child is, the Common Application Activities section will allow colleges to understand what your child has done and is doing outside of the classroom, offering one of the best opportunities to stand out among other applicants.  The activities section has a limit of ten extracurricular activities. The restrictions mean you will need to be selective in reporting your activities, limiting you to the most important ones or those that are most meaningful to you. In our experience, students can make costly mistakes in this section!

Without college essays and extracurricular activities lists, colleges would be limited to grades, class rank, and ACT and SAT scores to make their admissions decisions. Given that so many students with strong numbers apply to college each year, it’s important for your child to use the Activities section to develop an application theme, that is, their “WOW FACTOR” and specialties.  We leave no stone unturned in this section!

  • Courses & Grades (Self-Reporting Transcripts). In this section, you have an opportunity to self-report your grades.  In reviewing our clients’ answers, we find errors.  It’s important to review this section.  A discrepancy with what you report and your transcript raises a red flag!  These flags translate into a rejection letter.

The Common Application is not just an application.  It’s a puzzle filled with landmines that if not reviewed, interpreted and completed correctly will result in students being rejected from schools.  The most frequent form of self-inflicted damage is careless preparation of the application.  A poorly presented application can, in fact, have a negative affect on an admissions decision.

When assisting our clients with the completion of their Common Applications, we take into consideration their student admissions profile and character as well as the specific admissions policies and missions of their target schools that we gather from our research by visiting schools and professional relationships.  Our proprietary knowledge and experience help our clients to WIN (not lose) in the college competitive admissions game!

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“Admissions is a competitive sport!  Why gamble with uncertainty?” – Dr. Paul Lowe

“Parents hire us because they choose to pay an admissions expert who will help them avoid making mistakes.” – Dr. Paul Lowe

Dr. Paul Reginald Lowe, founder and managing director of Pinnacle Educational Center Admissions Advisors Group, provides comprehensive counseling advice, exclusively for admissions to top private schools; Ivy League and highly-selective colleges/universities; BS/MD programs; graduate and medical schools and top visual and performing arts programs.   The admissions affiliate: Ivy League Admissions Advisors specializes in admissions to Ivy League and highly selective colleges,  Dr. Lowe also specializes in helping students who have been wait-listed, deferred or rejected gain admission into their top-choice schools: College Application Rejected. and student who wish to transfer to another college: College Transfer Admissions Advisors.

2018 Summer Checklist for Rising Seniors

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Summer started a week ago.  For rising seniors, this should not really be a summer break.  There is lots to during the college admissions process.

Here is a concise list of my recommendations:

  1. Work, volunteer, attend programs—your choice. What you do matters less than how your activities fit into the bigger picture of who you are.
  2. Continue to explore colleges and to fine-tune your college list.
  3. Review the admissions requirements for each college on your list.
  4. If you are applying to BS/MD programs, you should be planning to visit your target schools for a second time.
  5. Consider seeking interviews at colleges that offer them.
  6. Fill out the Common Application and begin drafting your main Common App essay.
  7. Review your Common App short answer essays.
  8. Decide whom you will ask for letters of recommendation.
  9. Review your social media profile to ensure that it is admission-ready.
  10. Make a list of fall deadlines and refer back to it often.

If you are applying to Ivy League and highly selective colleges be aware that “It’s Getting Tougher To Get Into the Ivies” and you need to develop a “Personal WOW-Factor” so that you can stand out amongst the thousands of other qualified and admissible applicants.

Just note as you are preparing for the last rung of your college admissions journey: A recent study showed 26% of high-achieving students used a private college admissions consultant to assist them with their college admissions process.  Additional research has indicated that many international students, who applied to Ivy League and top-tier colleges and who were accepted, hired admissions advisors.

“Admissions is a competitive sport!  Why gamble with uncertainty?” – Dr. Paul Lowe

Dr. Paul Reginald Lowe, founder and managing director of Pinnacle Educational Center Admissions Advisors Group, provides comprehensive counseling advice, exclusively for admissions to top private schools; Ivy League and highly-selective colleges/universities; BS/MD programs; graduate and medical schools and top visual and performing arts programs.   The admissions affiliate: Ivy League Admissions Advisors specializes in admissions to Ivy League and highly selective colleges,  Dr. Lowe also specializes in helping students who have been wait-listed, deferred or rejected gain admission into their top-choice schools: College Application Rejected. and student who wish to transfer to another college:  College Transfer Admissions AdvisorsSummer Camps:  BS/MD Application Boot Camp and Ivy League Application Boot Camp.

 

Summer College Planning Checklist for Rising High School Juniors

college planning checklist
Happy August!  Are you busy enjoying the summer? Or are you preparing for college admissions as a rising junior?  Use your summer downtime to plan and organize your college admissions journey.
  1. Enroll in an ACT or SAT prep course during the summer while you still have time.
  2. Research and find out test dates for ACT or SAT.
  3. For international students, research and find out test dates for the TOEFL exam.
  4. Visit college campuses to see which types of schools appeal to you.
  5. Begin to develop a preliminary list of colleges.
  6. Continue your participation in internships, camps, research, community service and other activities and see how they fit in your college admissions journey.
  7. Review your online persona.  Examine your information on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, Twitter, etc.
  8. Begin to prepare for courses that you have enrolled in for the upcoming school year.

It’s never too early to start planning for college!

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Dr. Paul Reginald Lowe is the managing director and lead admissions expert at Pinnacle Educational Center Admissions Advisors Group.  Dr. Lowe specializes in providing exclusive concierge-type admissions advisory services for U.S. and international families and students who are interested in applying to Ivy League and highly selective colleges and combined BS/MD programs.  Dr. Lowe also helps students gain admissions into their top choice private schools and colleges after they have been deferred, wait-listed and rejected.

As an experienced and trusted admissions advisor for over 20 years, Dr. Paul R. Lowe is an active member of the following organizations that uphold the ethical and professional standards and principles of good admission practices in college and independent school counseling: Higher Education Consultants Association (HECA), National Association for College Admissions Counseling (NACAC), New Jersey Association for College Admission Counseling (NJACAC), New York State Association for College Admissions Counseling (NYSACAC) and International Association for College Admissions Counseling (IACAC).

Summer College Planning Checklist for Rising High School Seniors

college planning checklist

For high school seniors applying to colleges this fall, there are a lot of things to do during the summer.

  1. Start working on your Common Application; review the new essay prompts and new features.
  2. Start working on your college essays.
  3. Start visiting or re-visit colleges.
  4. Narrow down the colleges being considered.
  5. Make decisions regarding early action or early decision programs.
  6. Register for the SAT and/or ACT if you didn’t take a college entrance exam as a junior or want to take one again.
  7. For international students, register for the TOEFL or take one again.
  8. Get organized and start creating a checklist and calendar to keep track of standardized test dates, college application due dates, and financial aid deadlines.

College admissions continues to be competitive especially in Ivy League and highly selective college and universities.  My recommendation is that rising seniors should use their summers to start the college admissions process sooner than later.

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Dr. Paul Reginald Lowe is the managing director and lead admissions expert at Pinnacle Educational Center Admissions Advisors Group.  Dr. Lowe specializes in providing exclusive concierge-type admissions advisory services for U.S. and international families and students who are interested in applying to Ivy League and highly selective colleges and combined BS/MD programs.  Dr. Lowe also helps students gain admissions into their top choice private schools and colleges after they have been deferred, wait-listed and rejected.

As an experienced and trusted admissions advisor for over 20 years, Dr. Paul R. Lowe is an active member of the following organizations that uphold the ethical and professional standards and principles of good admission practices in college and independent school counseling: Higher Education Consultants Association (HECA), National Association for College Admissions Counseling (NACAC), New Jersey Association for College Admission Counseling (NJACAC), New York State Association for College Admissions Counseling (NYSACAC) and International Association for College Admissions Counseling (IACAC).