What Does a Pathways Peer Advisor Consult Look Like?

“Talking to Someone Who’d Been Through It Changed Everything”

By Emma S., Student from Columbus, Ohio

I was the oldest in my family, so we didn’t really know what applying to college should look like. My school counselor was helpful but overloaded—hundreds of students per advisor. I needed more than general advice. I needed someone who had actually gotten into the types of schools I was aiming for—and who had come from a similar background.

That’s when I tried Pathways.

No commitments, no expensive packages—just one consultation at a time. You pay per consult, talk to someone who's already done what you’re trying to do, and get direct answers.


Step 1: Input What You Need—and Who You Want to Talk To

The first step was straightforward. I picked the area where I wanted help—narrowing my college list and figuring out how to talk about my community service work in essays.

Then I told Pathways what kind of advisor I wanted:

  • Schools they got into: ideally ones like Northwestern, Emory, or UVA
  • Where they’re currently enrolled
  • Cultural background (I was looking for someone who also grew up in a Midwestern suburb and had no family legacy advantage)
  • SAT score range (within 1350–1450, like me)
  • Career path: public health or psychology
  • Bonus: if they were first-gen or came from a public school background

Step 2: Get Matched With Up to 10 Advisors

Based on that, Pathways showed me 10 potential advisors who fit my criteria. Each profile came with:

  • Their current college and major
  • Where else they got in
  • Scores, APs, clubs, and outside-of-school stuff
  • Languages spoken (English was fine for me)
  • Hourly consult rate

I ended up choosing Jalen, a sophomore at Emory who had also been accepted to UNC-Chapel Hill and Boston College. He went to a public high school and was super involved in community health work—just like me.


Step 3: Select, Pay, and Schedule the Consult

I booked a 30-minute session with Jalen. I bought credits (no subscription, just the session I needed), and within a day, Pathways confirmed a time that worked for both of us.


Step 4: The Actual Consult

We met over video and it was exactly what I needed.

I asked him:

  • Why did you rank Emory above UNC?
  • How did you frame your community impact work?
  • What would you have done differently in your essays?
  • What “don’t miss” tips would you give for someone with a 3.8 GPA and a 1380 SAT?

He didn’t give generic answers. He shared screenshots of his own essay outlines and explained how he structured his school-specific supplements. It was a conversation—not a lecture.


Step 5: Rate, Favorite, and Keep Going

After the call, I rated the session and gave feedback. Jalen’s insights were gold, so I marked him as a favorite.

From there, I had options:

  • Buy a package of 3 more consults with Jalen (at a discount)
  • Use another single consult with him—maybe for essay reviews
  • Or try a different advisor for another area like financial aid or college interviews

What It Meant for Me

What started as one call became my go-to strategy. I talked to two more advisors after Jalen—one helped me refine my essay for Northeastern, another helped me prep for a WashU alumni interview.

Pathways didn’t try to sell me a plan. It gave me agency. I picked who I wanted, asked exactly what I needed, and paid only for what I used.

And when I got my first acceptance email, I sent Jalen a message: “You were right about how to close that essay.”