College Essay Coaching
The 650-Word College Essay Coaching | 1:1
For rising seniors not enrolled in one of our full college planning packages, our one-on-one summer coaching offers focused, personalized support to craft a compelling 650-word personal statement — the centerpiece of the Common App. Through individualized guidance, students develop an essay that reflects their authentic voice while highlighting their growth, character, and individuality.
Our one-on-one coaching includes:
✔ One to two 30-minute virtual essay planning sessions to outline ideas
✔ Brainstorming meaningful and unique essay topics
✔ Personalized guidance to organize ideas and structure
✔ Content coaching to enhance depth and impact
✔ Support with tone, flow, voice, and theme for an authentic, polished final essay
✔ AI Detector to ensure originality and authenticity
✔ Ten-day completion timeline from start to finish, including up to three drafts
Why choose one-on-one coaching?
This option is ideal for students who want fully customized support, more individual interaction, and detailed, personalized feedback at every stage of the essay-writing process. With dedicated one-on-one guidance, students receive a deeper level of coaching tailored to their writing style, story, and goals.
⚠️ Spots are limited — secure your spot early!
📩 Email eric@academicadmissionsadvisors.com for registration details and pricing.
Summer Essay Virtual Workshop (Date TBD)
Our summer workshop is designed for rising seniors not enrolled in one of our full college planning packages who want focused, structured support in crafting a standout 650-word Common App personal statement. Students will participate in a live instructional group session, where they’ll learn the blueprint for writing a powerful and authentic college essay. Over the course of two weeks, students will develop their essay in Google Docs, receiving personalized guidance and feedback at each stage to ensure a polished, compelling final piece.
Workshop & Coaching Includes:
✔ One live 45-minute group instructional session on the essay blueprint
✔ Guided brainstorming to develop meaningful and unique topics
✔ Step-by-step support to outline and structure the essay
✔ Feedback on up to three drafts within the two-week workshop
✔ Coaching on tone, flow, voice, and theme to create an authentic, impactful final essay
Why choose the workshop?
Students get the best of both worlds — a live group class that teaches the full essay blueprint plus personalized 1:1 feedback and coaching throughout the drafting process. This option provides a more cost-effective way to receive expert guidance without the depth and customization of our full 1:1 coaching program.
⚠️ Spots are limited — secure your spot early!
📩 Email eric@academicadmissionsadvisors.com for registration details and pricing.
“Mallory just had her first essay meeting with Darcy, and we couldn’t be happier! We had her work independently, and although it was like pulling teeth at first, Darcy was incredible at guiding her through the process. What an outstanding asset to have on the team!”
— Mike Z., Father of a 12th-grade student
"We are so grateful for Darcy’s guidance with Gabe’s college essay. The final result was impressive, but more importantly, Gabe really enjoyed working with her. Her support made a significant difference, and we’re excited for her to continue helping with his supplemental essays."
— Carol V., Grandmother of a 12th-grade college essay client
“Thanks to Eric and Gabriella’s help and guidance, my daughter was accepted to her dream school. Four years later, I’m thrilled to say her experience exceeded expectations. Eric and Gabriella’s holistic approach to the process was invaluable.
They provided great insight and support well beyond admissions, including guidance through the financial components of the college journey. With their years of practical experience, they answered all our questions and offered perspectives we wouldn’t have accessed on our own. Additionally, they helped our daughter prepare a strong application to a highly competitive university.
I highly recommend their services—well worth the investment!”
— Al C., Father of a University of Michigan student
Why are first-rate college admission essays so hard to write?
There are a lot of reasons. Many students wait to start writing them until the last minute — and it’s hard to do anything well that way.
A bigger problem is that college essays seem to ask us to Be Remarkable,
to Be Amazing. We know that thousands of high school seniors are applying to the same schools we are, and to stand out in the crowd, being remarkable and amazing would seem to be called for. Yet most teenagers have been taught “Don’t brag about yourself.” And it’s a sound instinct that tell us not to brag.
Also, teenagers writing an essay for adults want to show they can use adult words. Applying to college is an “important” occasion, and so we feel solemnity is called for, and a fresh or quirky style just won’t do. We haul out the 4-syllable words to honor the occasion, just as we put on formal clothes on Graduation Day — it seems the thing to do.
Then too, a college essay is a one-sided conversation. You have no eye contact with the person reading your essay, no sense of who they are, and you get no cues from them about what aspects of you they’re most interested in. It’s no surprise, then, that so many college essays come off as stilted, the opposite of natural.
Finally, most teenagers — most people of all ages, really — secretly worry that they’ve underachieved in life. And so, in any account of ourselves, we tend to emphasize not just the deeds we’ve done but how good we are, and how much we want to improve the world at some later time.
If you think about it, politicians have much the same problem making a stump speech. They’re supposed to be remarkable — or else why are they asking for our vote? They’re having a one-sided conversation with us, trying to boast modestly, using rhetoric that seems tinny and forced,
and promising to improve the world once they’re elected. We sense there is a disconnect between who the Senator really is, and what he’s saying, and so we tune out the message.
And that’s the danger of writing a conventional college essay — that the bleary-eyed staffer in the Admissions Office, having read 41 other essays before yours, will just tune it out.
So what to do?
The first thing to do is to realize that you — the real you, under all the clichés and the posturing — are an amazing person. If you can find a way to show that real person to the Admissions Department, they will like you and want to admit you to their school.
The second thing to do is to throw away all the solemn platitudes in the first draft of your essay. See if you can write an essay which has no platitudes and not a single word in it longer than three syllables. Use active words, and quirky adjectives. Write something fresh and different. Most of all, write something which is honestly you, which could not possibly have been written by anyone else.
Now, I can hear you saying — ‘Without all those big words, and well-known platitudes, and with freshness creeping in, how will the Admissions Department know that I’m serious? How will they know that this isn’t just a lark for me, that I really want to go to their school?
The answer to that is that a serious writer shows his or her intent, and artistry, not by using big, long words but by getting to the heart of things and by using a carefully crafted structure, in which each paragraph serves a distinct and lovely function.
Your opening paragraph should be short and striking, expressing something essential about you, but not resolving this, only drawing the reader in.
The second paragraph builds on the first, making the theme grow and change in some compelling way.
The third paragraph is your dazzler, the paragraph you work on most and love best — the heart of the piece.
After your dazzling third paragraph, the fourth paragraph is a “breather” paragraph. This fourth paragraph can be shorter and quirkier. It can be a self-contained little gem, or it can reflect gravely or sweetly on what the third paragraph has told us.
The fifth paragraph returns to something expressed in the first paragraph but this time resolves it, perhaps with some kind of twist.
I promise if you do all this, you will be Remarkable in your essay — but not by promising vaguely to make the world much better. (The adults reading your essay know how hard that is to do.)
You will be remarkable by your honesty, by the breadth and freshness of your word choice, and by your mastery of the distinct function of each one of your paragraphs.
And you will be remarkable because you have figured out how to get to the heart of who you are, and to share that with a perfect stranger in a way that feels natural to both of you.
Date: January 7, 2021
Written by: Susan Santucci