IvyWise explained

IvyWise
Type:Educational Counseling
Foundation:1998
Location:New York City, USA
Industry:Education, Counseling
Key People:Dr. Katherine Cohen: Founder & CEO
Homepage:www.ivywise.com

IvyWise is a for-profit New York-based firm of educational consultants that assists students pursuing admission to college. IvyWise counselors also work with students applying to nursery school, elementary school, high school/boarding school, and graduate or professional schools.

Their services range from primary and secondary school admissions to college counseling for high school students and even graduate, law, and medical school admissions.[1] They also provide tutoring, standardized test prep, and boast a wide range of free resources.

The company was founded in 1998 by Dr. Katherine L. Cohen after she saw firsthand, "how students were presenting themselves and the mistakes they were making, and I kept thinking, well, I could help these kids from the other side…"[2] Cohen then went on to found IvyWise. It has been named as a leading College consultancy firm.[3]

Founder

Dr. Katherine L. Cohen graduated magna cum laude from Brown University and received two master's degrees and a Ph.D. in Spanish Literature from Yale University. Dr. Cohen wrote The Truth About Getting In (Hyperion, 2002) and Rock Hard Apps (Hyperion, 2003). She received certification in College Admission Counseling from U.C.L.A. Extension. Prior to founding IvyWise, she was as an intern college counselor at Palisades Charter High School and a reader in the Yale University Office of Admissions. She also taught SAT test prep classes for The Princeton Review, an SAT prep company.

After graduating university, she decided to start her own tutoring business, which soon evolved into IvyWise as it's known today.

Counselors

IvyWise hosts academic counselors whose backgrounds range from former admissions officers at MIT and Harvard to former Deans of Admissions[4]

The company has received a coverage in a variety of news media, such as 'Forbes' and 'The New York Times',[5] [6] as well as school papers.[7] [8]

Professional Affiliations

All IvyWise counselors adhere to the National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC) Statement of Principles of Good Practice and the Independent Educational Consultants Association Principles of Good Practice.[9] Dr. Katherine Cohen is a member of both NACAC and the Independent Educational Consultants Association. According to the New York Times, fewer than one of every five admissions consultants can claim to be an association member of the Independent Educational Consultants Association.[10]

History

IvyWise was founded in 1998 by Dr. Katherine L. Cohen. She started the business in her apartment with $5,000.[11]

In early 2002, Dr. Katherine Cohen published a book, The Truth About Getting In, which covers the college admissions process according to the IvyWise methodology that Dr. Cohen developed. She published a second book entitled Rock Hard Apps: How to Write a Killer College Application in 2003.

In 2004, the parents of Kaavya Viswanathan reportedly engaged IvyWise for its assistance in college counseling services. Viswanathan applied to and was accepted at Harvard University. Viswanathan's novel, projected to be a bestseller by its publisher, described an academically oriented Indian American girl's efforts to become more "well-rounded" in hopes of boosting her chances of admission to Harvard. Cohen put her in touch with the William Morris Agency, which secured a book and movie deal.[12] The novel was published in 2006. It was later revealed that many of the book's passages had been directly plagiarized from other fiction sources.[13] The furor over this incident inadvertently raised IvyWise's profile and increased the controversy surrounding the hiring of high-priced consultants.

Controversies

IvyWise is a private educational consulting firm and thus, is often included in news stories about the controversy surrounding the use of private educational consultants and the issue of a level playing field for all students.[14]

The firm was also involved in the Kaavya Viswanathan plagiarism controversy, as the organization that referred Viswanathan to the William Morris Agency and 17th Street Productions.[15] [16]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Admissions Counseling. IvyWise.com.
  2. Web site: Entrepreneurs 101 - Dr Kat Cohen, IvyWise. theideamix.com.
  3. Web site: INDEPENDENT RANKING OF TOP COLLEGE ADMISSIONS CONSULTANTS . topcollegeadmissionsconsultants.com . 23 November 2023.
  4. Web site: The IvyWise Team . IvyWise.com.
  5. Web site: Farrington . Robert . Is It Time To Ignore College Rankings? Experts Weigh In . forbes.com . Forbes.
  6. Web site: Ashok . Arvind . The Persistent Grip of Social Class on College Admissions . nytimes.com . The New York Times.
  7. Web site: Blackwell-Lipkind . Xavier . FEATURE: ‘Gray Area’: College Admissions and the Private Counseling Machine . yaledailynews.com . Yale News.
  8. Web site: Mediratta . Aliana . Enrollment applications for class of 2026 passes 10,000 marking new record . lafayettestudentnews.com . The Lafayette.
  9. Web site: Ethical Guidelines for IECA Members Principles of Good Practice. www.iecaonline.com. 2017-06-21. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080731141710/http://www.iecaonline.com/pogp.html. 2008-07-31.
  10. News: Before College, Costly Advice Just on Getting In. Steinberg. Jacques. 2009-07-19. The New York Times. 2017-06-21. en-US. 0362-4331.
  11. Web site: BrownHEN / BrownHEN.org: Interview with Katherine Cohen, CEO & Founder of IvyWise and ApplyWise . 2010-02-26 . 2008-10-14 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081014112504/http://www.brownhen.org/2008/03/interview-with.html . dead .
  12. News: How Kaavya Got Packaged and Got Into Trouble. Hulbert. Ann. 2006-04-27. Slate. 2017-06-21. en-US. 1091-2339.
  13. News: Harvard Novelist Says Copying Was Unintentional. Smith. Dinitia. 2006-04-25. The New York Times. 2017-06-21. en-US. 0362-4331.
  14. Web site: Is a college planner really worth it?. Booth. Barbara. CNBC. 2014-11-12. 2017-06-21.
  15. Web site: A 'How to Get Into College by Really, Really Trying' Novel . Dinitia . Smith . The New York Times . April 6, 2006 . September 9, 2022.
  16. Web site: Harvard Novelist Says Copying Was Unintentional . Dinitia . Smith . The New York Times . April 25, 2006 . September 9, 2022.