PrepWell Podcast with Phil Black

A podcast by Phil Black

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282 Episodes

  1. Ep. 21 | How Involved Should You Be as a Parent?

    Published: 2/23/2020
  2. Ep. 20 | How To Help Your Child Develop a Theme

    Published: 2/14/2020
  3. Ep. 19 | How To Help Your Child With Their Summer Plans

    Published: 2/9/2020
  4. Ep. 18 | How Is Your Child Wired?

    Published: 2/2/2020
  5. Ep. 17 | Is Your Child Apathetic About The College Admission Process?

    Published: 1/26/2020
  6. Ep. 16 | When (Or If) Your Child Should Specialize In Their Sport?

    Published: 1/19/2020
  7. Ep. 15 | Why Colleges Love Leaders and How Your Child Can Become One

    Published: 1/12/2020
  8. Ep. 14 | Top 10 Things Your High Schooler Should Have done This Year

    Published: 12/29/2019
  9. Ep. 13 | How to Keep Track of your Child’s Extracurricular Activities

    Published: 12/22/2019
  10. Ep. 12 | Should my child take the SAT or ACT?

    Published: 12/15/2019
  11. Ep. 11 | Everything you Need to Know About College Affordability

    Published: 12/8/2019
  12. Ep. 10 | What to Expect of Your Freshman

    Published: 12/1/2019
  13. Ep. 9 | Phil Black Answers Most Popular FAQs

    Published: 11/24/2019
  14. Ep. 8 | Should I Seek College Admissions Advice for my Freshman or Sophomore?

    Published: 11/17/2019
  15. Ep. 7 | Myths and Realities of the Ever-Elusive Full-Ride Athletic Scholarship

    Published: 11/10/2019
  16. Ep. 6 | How Extracurriculars Turn a Ho-Hum Application into a Home Run Application

    Published: 11/3/2019
  17. Ep. 5 | Tips & Strategies for Writing the College Essay

    Published: 10/27/2019
  18. Ep. 4 | How Extracurricular Activities Impact the Strength of Your Child’s College Application

    Published: 10/20/2019
  19. Ep. 3 | 10 Life Skills Teens Must Learn During The College Admissions Process

    Published: 10/13/2019
  20. Ep. 2 | Why Highly-Selective Colleges Seem To Prefer Specialists vs. Well-Rounded Students

    Published: 10/6/2019

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The PrepWell Podcast helps parents prepare their children for the admissions process for highly-selective college programs like the Ivy League, military service academies (e.g. USNA and West Point), ROTC and athletic scholarships.