Graduate school didn’t talk about a lot of what happens when you’re a school counselor. I’ve well documented the abhorrent lack of training in college counseling, something I’ve pointed out for 40 years which is still no better today. But there are other things.
Like 2 AM.
It doesn’t prepare you for the middle of the night, when you remember that last thing you forgot to do at the office, or remind yourself of the thing you nearly forgot to remember to do first thing tomorrow. Or the solution to a long-standing problem.
That’s what faced me at one particular 2 o’clock in the morning, a million years ago. After working in four public schools with ridiculous caseloads, where I was a school counselor for everything, I’d secured a job at a private school, where I only did college counseling, and had a caseload that was a different kind of ridiculous—so small, it would be impolite to mention it.
Having had the chance to make sure my students were truly making college choices that were great for them, I now knew what I should have done at my previous institutions. I should have written a book, in really short chapters, that explained the basics of a good college choice. I would have given it to all my students as entering ninth graders, then give them a reading assignment before seeing each of them individually. No more repeating how to register for the SAT. Truly tailored counseling, based on individual needs, strengths, and interests.
I wrote the book anyway, and promoted it to my counseling colleagues as a way to make their huge caseloads more manageable. The counselors who bought into the idea said it worked. Short chapters keep students’ attention, and let them cut to the chase when looking for an answer—as fast as AI, but better, since the advice didn’t come from Out There, but from a real counselor. Parents found it easy to read, and gave them a roadmap on how to talk to their student about college. It even helped answer teachers’ questions about how to talk to students about college.
It’s Spring 2026 now, the time when your students start thinking about college—and I’d like to help. The book is in its third iteration, still relevant, still short, still with the same goal—give them a general idea about what college could be about, then leaving it up to them—and you—to fill in the details.
But here’s something to help you even more. I can get the books at less than half of cost, including shipping, so you can give them to your students. Orders have to be a minimum of 100, but at this price, this is something you could ask the PTA to fund, or the Elks Club, or your local college access group. Students get some early ideas about what college is all about. You get a chance to talk to students about their plan, not a plan, making your caseload seem that much smaller.
And what do I get? At this price, nothing. I make no money from the sale of any book at this price.
OK, I do get something. I get to know I helped you help your students.
I’d welcome the chance for us to talk about this. Contact me here.





