
Hosted by Steve · EN
Equipping you to successfully pursue the college of your dreams. I believe that the world needs every student to reach their full potential. College admittance shouldn't hold you back. I'm an educator and Harvard grad who has been in your shoes. I designed this podcast to accompany the Ivy League Challenge (my online course) to support my listeners. I've met with graduates, admissions officers, and professors to identify the criteria used to select candidates. I've crafted a road map for success and can share it with you.

Lizzie Shacklett had every reason to choose Notre Dame.Her parents went there. She grew up loving the school. She was admitted early. For most students, that would have been the dream ending.But then Stanford and Yale said yes.In this episode, Steve sits down with Lizzie to unpack how she went from dreaming about Notre Dame to choosing between some of the most selective universities in the world—and ultimately choosing Stanford over Yale and Notre Dame.But this is not just a “college results” story.Lizzie shares how a simple seventh-grade book donation turned into Literacy is Lit, an organization that has collected and distributed more than 75,000 books to children in underserved communities. She explains how she stepped outside the usual high school achievement game—clubs, titles, competitions, and résumé padding—and started building real impact with nonprofits, educators, legislators, and community leaders.This conversation is a masterclass in what elite colleges actually notice: not just perfect grades or impressive activities, but clarity, values, courage, initiative, and evidence that a student is already making the world better.You’ll hear how Lizzie built confidence, created momentum, handled the grind of senior year, and learned to trust her gut when making one of the biggest decisions of her life.For any student hoping to stand out—and any parent wondering what “standing out” actually means—this episode is a must-listen.What You’ll LearnHow admitted-student weekends helped her make the final decision.How one small book donation became a 75,000-book impact project.Why real-world impact matters more than another club title.How Lizzie got adults, nonprofits, schools, and policymakers to take her seriously while she was still in high school.Why “common sense is not common practice” became one of her most important success principles.How students can escape the “high school bubble” and start doing work that actually matters.-----To register for the Ivy League Challenge, visit our websiteTo follow on Instagram: @TheIvyLeagueChallengeTo join us on our Facebook group for parents

Summer can either become a missed opportunity, or a powerful season of growth.In this episode, I share a clip from a class for students who have already completed the Ivy League Challenge. After students finish the ILC, they continue meeting weekly to stay connected, keep building, and grow inside a positive community.In this class, Wes shares his simple summer planning system: choose the areas of your life you want to develop, set a few meaningful goals, and create small routines that keep you moving without over-scheduling every hour.You’ll hear how students are thinking about research, writing, podcasts, fitness, impact projects, friendships, and even fried chicken.The goal isn’t to have the busiest summer.The goal is to design a summer that helps you grow-----To register for the Ivy League Challenge, visit our websiteTo follow on Instagram: @TheIvyLeagueChallengeTo join us on our Facebook group for parents

Most students start their personal statement by asking, “What should I write about?”That’s the wrong starting point.In this episode, Steve explains why the topic is not the essay-- and why strong essays usually reveal three layers: the external problem the internal journey the deeper reason the story matters Before students begin drafting, they need to understand what their essay is actually trying to reveal: who they are, what they value, and why it matters.For students who have been through the Ivy League Challenge, this is the moment to connect the dots between core values, meaningful impact, personal growth, and application strategy.Register for the workshop at TILC.to/essay-----To register for the Ivy League Challenge, visit our websiteTo follow on Instagram: @TheIvyLeagueChallengeTo join us on our Facebook group for parents

Most students believe the way to stand out in college admissions is simple:Do more.Achieve more.Be more impressive.But at the highest levels, that strategy is exactly what makes applications blend in.In this episode, we break down how admissions officers actually evaluate students, and why trying to be “impressive” often works against you.You’ll learn:Why the “Impressiveness Trap” causes strong students to get overlookedThe two questions admissions officers are really askingHow context and expectations shape how your achievements are viewedWhy doing more doesn’t make you stand outHow clarity of values leads to a more compelling applicationWhat separates students who get into top schools from those who don’t-----To register for the Ivy League Challenge, visit our websiteTo follow on Instagram: @TheIvyLeagueChallengeTo join us on our Facebook group for parents

In college admissions, summer serves a very important purpose.It’s one of the only times of year where your time is truly your own… and that makes it one of the clearest signals of who you are, what you value, and how you choose to operate when no one is telling you what to do.In this episode, we break down how to think about your summer the right way, and how to use it to actually differentiate yourself.What You’ll LearnWhy summers matter more than almost anything else in your applicationThe difference between “theme park” experiences and real responsibilityHow to evaluate opportunities (beyond job vs internship labels)Why “ordinary” work can be more impressive than prestigious programsHow to move from interest → experience → real contributionWhat admissions officers are actually looking for when they review your summer activities-----To register for the Ivy League Challenge, visit our websiteTo follow on Instagram: @TheIvyLeagueChallengeTo join us on our Facebook group for parents

Does playing a sport actually help you get into a top college?The answer is more nuanced than most families realize.In this episode, we break down when athletics is a powerful advantage, when it doesn’t matter at all, and how to think through one of the most difficult decisions student-athletes face.The 3 CategoriesRecruited → athletics can carry your application Want to quit → you can walk away without hurting your chances Messy middle → you must choose between time in your sport and building a more competitive profileSports only help if you use them the right way.The real question is not whether you play, it’s what you’re able to demonstrate because of it.-----To register for the Ivy League Challenge, visit our websiteTo follow on Instagram: @TheIvyLeagueChallengeTo join us on our Facebook group for parents

If your child spends hours practicing music each day, you may wonder: "is this actually helping with college admissions?"From a strategic perspective, music can feel like a poor return on investment, especially if your child isn't planning to pursue it professionally.And yet, every year I see a disproportionate number of musicians beat the odds and get admitted to the top schools like Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, and others. In this episode, we explore why. I hope this helps you decide how much effort to put into music training at different periods of your child's development.-----To register for the Ivy League Challenge, visit our websiteTo follow on Instagram: @TheIvyLeagueChallengeTo join us on our Facebook group for parents

Today is Ivy Day, and the results are in.This year:5 out of 6 of my 1:1 students who applied to Yale were admittedOthers were accepted to Cornell, Dartmouth, Princeton, and UPennOne student was admitted early to both Yale and CaltechThese outcomes are not random.In this episode, I’m sharing a full training I recently delivered to families, breaking down the strategy behind why some students consistently stand out, while others (who are just as capable) don’t.Inside this training, you’ll learn:Why strong students still get rejected from top schoolsThe mistake most families make when planning internships and summer activitiesWhat admissions officers are actually looking forHow to use this upcoming summer to build a compelling, differentiated applicationIf your teen is in 8th–11th grade, this is a critical window, and what they do next matters more than most families realize.-----To register for the Ivy League Challenge, visit our websiteTo follow on Instagram: @TheIvyLeagueChallengeTo join us on our Facebook group for parents

Internships. Summer programs. Camps.Most students assume these are the key to standing out in college admissions.But what if some of the hardest opportunities to get… are actually some of the least valuable?In this episode, I share a real clip from one of my Ivy League Challenge classes, where we break down a common question: Are internships actually worth it?You’ll learn:Why most students misunderstand the value of internships and summer programsThe difference between exposure and real leverageWhat actually makes an experience stand out on a college applicationHow to position yourself in rooms where people will mentor, support, and accelerate your growthIf you’ve been working hard but aren’t sure if you’re working on the right things, this episode will help you rethink your strategy.-----To register for the Ivy League Challenge, visit our websiteTo follow on Instagram: @TheIvyLeagueChallengeTo join us on our Facebook group for parents

If you’ve been following this podcast, you already know that college admissions isn’t about being the most impressive student.But what does a truly strong essay actually look like?In this episode, Steve shares a clip from a live essay workshop with a current Yale student who also works in admissions. Together, they break down a real supplemental essay from a student admitted to Yale, Harvard, Caltech, and other top schools.More importantly, they unpack the level of curiosity, depth, and engagement behind the essay, so you can understand what students need to develop before they ever start writing.In this episode, you’ll learn:Why strong essays reflect how a student thinks, not just what they’ve doneThe difference between average essays and those that stand out at top schoolsA simple framework for evaluating essay quality (Tier 1, 2, and 3)What level of engagement students need to reach in their activities-----To register for the Ivy League Challenge, visit our websiteTo follow on Instagram: @TheIvyLeagueChallengeTo join us on our Facebook group for parents