LIVE TRAINING (FREE)
The 5 Gaps Your “Excellent” Middle School Isn’t Closing
for High‑Achieving Black Kids of Senior Directors & Senior Managers Headed to Selective Colleges
Live parent-only training:
Sunday, May 31, 2026 - 7:00–8:30 pm EST (with Q&A)
You already know:
Your child is in a top‑tier, highly competitive school.
Strong grades and rich activities should be enough to keep selective doors open.
The real game now is strategy, not just more hustle.
Here’s what you’re missing
You haven’t been given a four‑year, merit‑aware playbook that starts in 8th grade, integrates your child’s inner operating system with a coherent leadership identity, and protects their well‑being while positioning them to be both elite‑admissible and merit‑magnetic.
What You’re Already Getting Right
You are not a 101 parent, and this is not a 101 conversation. You’re already seeing what many around you are just waking up to:
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You’ve already secured what most families only dream of: a rigorous, well‑resourced independent or magnet school where your child is seen, stretched, and surrounded by high‑achieving peers
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You know the college game has shifted since you applied, and that brand‑name networks still quietly shape career opportunity and social capital for Black professionals.
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You’re appropriately skeptical of overloaded résumés, “do everything” summers, and pay‑to‑play programs that feel more like status than substance—especially when your child already has a real love (arts, STEM, leadership) that deserves focus.
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You understand that as high‑earning Black parents, need‑based aid is unlikely; the lever has to be merit, negotiation, and strategic positioning, not just “pay whatever the school asks.”
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You are planners by nature—you manage complex teams and portfolios—yet this is the one arena where you refuse to wing it or overfunction; you want a playbook and a partner, not another project on your plate.
This webinar honors what you already see and simply gives you a sharper, earlier, and more precise playbook.
Where the Current Model Breaks Down
The problem isn’t that you’re not doing enough—it’s that the standard model you see around you is mis‑calibrated for how merit and selectivity actually work now.
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Middle schools—even “excellent” ones—are optimized to get everyone ready for high school, not to build a merit‑maximizing profile for one specific Black student with both privilege and purpose…
That means critical decisions about math tracks, world language, and arts pathways often go unframed in terms of future selective admissions and scholarships. -
There is a quiet but critical difference between being “elite‑admissible” (strong enough to be admitted somewhere selective) and “merit‑maximizing” (positioned so multiple selective and honors programs are competing to discount the bill).
Schools rarely teach families how merit is priced, or how 7th–10th grade choices affect that pricing. -
Guidance often shows up late (formal college advising begins in 10th or 11th), just as course pathways have already locked in and summers have been spent on generic camps, leaving money and options on the table.
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Many high‑earning Black parents are still trying to solve this with more research and more doing. The result?
You become the unpaid project manager, your child’s anxiety rises, and your household revolves around a process no one actually feels confident about.
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Meanwhile, your child’s natural gifts—like a deep, self‑driven love of musical theatre or science—either don’t get translated into a coherent leadership arc, or they’re treated as “extras” instead of the backbone of a scholarship‑worthy story.
“This was a godsend.
Everything felt like a scam until WE found you.”
Inside this training, we’ll address the questions you are already asking in the back of your mind:
Find the 5 Most Expensive Middle School Gaps
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Am I actually seeing the five most expensive gaps in my child’s middle school experience—or just assuming their “great” school has it covered?
How Merit Is Priced
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How are merit‑rich colleges really pricing a kid like mine, and what should 7th–10th grade be doing differently if we care about discounts, not just admits?
Focusing “Good at Everything”
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If my child is “good at everything,” how do we narrow that into a focused leadership and impact story that selective schools and scholarship committees will pay for?
Purposeful 6th–10th YEARS (COURSES + SUMMERS)
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What should middle‑ and early‑high‑school years be doing on purpose—courses, summers, test prep—so we’re not leaving money and options on the table by the time advising finally shows up?
From PM to Board ChaiR
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How do I step out of the project‑manager role without abdicating stewardship, so my child builds an internal operating system that can actually sustain elite‑level performance?
Inside This Live Training, You’ll Learn…
By the end of this session, you will not have more noise—you will have a sharper lens and concrete next steps tailored to families like yours. You’ll walk away knowing exactly:
Middle school Gaps
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How to see the five costliest gaps in your child’s middle school experience—and what concrete moves close each one.
Moving Into Merit Tier
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How to understand the way merit is really priced for kids like yours, so 6th–10th grade decisions actively increase their discounts, not just their odds of admission.
Designing Flagship Leadership
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How to turn “good at everything” into a paid‑for story by building a focused leadership and impact arc scholarship committees recognize and reward.
Strategizing Courses & Summers
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How to design middle‑ and early‑high‑school years on purpose—courses, summers, and test prep that compound into leverage instead of leaving money and options on the table.
Becoming the Board Chair
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How to move from project manager to board chair by installing an internal operating system in your child that sustains elite‑level performance without burning out the family.
You’ll leave with an outline of what the next 12–24 months should look like, so you can stop guessing and start guiding.
The Integrated College‑Readiness Ecosystem
Most families are either getting piecemeal academic support, or last‑minute essay help, or generic “enrichment”—but not an integrated ecosystem. Within the Black Founder’s Formula, we intentionally braid together three pillars:
OUR METHOD
We offer the only integrated college‑readiness ecosystem
Built specifically for high‑achieving middle and early high school students from Black Directors and Senior Leaders—families who want selective admissions, serious merit, and wholeness, not burnout or performative résumés.
Why This Reduces Stress: The harper Family
Before working with Lionheart, Jordan was thriving at Langston Academy for Girls—confident, beloved by teachers, deeply invested in musical theatre and dance—but her parents could feel the fog: they didn’t want her to become “busy for nothing,” or to have her confidence tethered only to relationships and natural gifts.
They were planners with tutors, enrichment, and an elite school, yet still lacked a coherent plan for how 6th–8th grade should set her up for selective colleges, honors tracks, and merit—especially in areas like math confidence and leadership structure.
Inside Black Founder’s Formula,
We built a strategic roadmap that honored who Jordan is and where she could go. Jordan named and mapped her identity as a reader, performer, and budding scholar, connecting her love of Greek‑mythology fantasy, musical theatre, and humor into a coherent story we can later translate into essays, recommendations, and auditions.
SHe is actively:
Names and tracks the difference between “visible reps” and “hidden reps,” and intentionally channels her playful theatre energy into math, science, and writing.
Applies the same process that made her a “veteran reader” to becoming a “math person,” actively reframing math from obligation to identity and walking out of sessions noticeably lighter.
Her parents use weekly, high‑signal updates and concrete at‑home language to decide when to push, when to pace, and how to protect bandwidth, operating as board chairs instead of project managers.
Future milestones include:
7th–8th grade academics: Secure placement on an advanced/honors‑track path in math and science while sustaining her strengths in humanities and world language.
7th–8th grade identity & habits: Fully internalize her “math person” and “budding scholar” identities by building consistent hidden reps in math, science, and writing—not just theatre.
Middle school leadership arc: Design and launch a performing‑arts–rooted leadership or impact project (e.g., theatre‑based outreach or storytelling initiative) that can grow with her into high school.
9th–10th grade positioning: Use course selection, summers, and her leadership project to position her for selective high school opportunities on campus (advanced seminars, capstones, arts leadership roles).
11th–12th grade and beyond: Enter formal college advising already with a coherent narrative, strong math identity, and multi‑year impact record, so she can competitively target selective, merit‑rich colleges and audition‑based programs.
Jordan’s leadership is already redefining what “talent” looks like—a bridge between the electricity of musical theatre and the disciplined confidence she’s building in math and science.
From Tonya’s perspective, the transformation is just as profound at home.
“Everything about college felt like a maze until
you gave us a roadmap
my daughter could truly own.”
If This Sounds Like You, You’re in the Right Room
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You are a high‑earning Black professional in law, consulting, or senior leadership, and you want a level of strategy for your child that matches the caliber of strategy you execute at work.
You have a 7th–10th grader in a rigorous environment (magnet, IB, honors, independent, or competitive public) who has real potential—but whose interests still feel scattered or “good at everything.”
You do not expect meaningful need‑based aid and care deeply about merit, stewardship, and not overpaying for a brand name that won’t invest in your child.
You want a multi‑year roadmap that starts now, not a last‑minute scramble; you are willing to align courses, summers, and leadership around a coherent vision.
You value your child’s mental and spiritual well‑being as much as their résumé and want a process that affirms their identity instead of grinding it down.
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You are looking for a quick‑fix webinar to “hack” junior year or write essays in a panic.
You want more activities at any cost and are not concerned about sleep, mental health, or the sustainability of your child’s pace.
You are unwilling to adjust your own patterns of over‑scheduling, over‑researching, or over‑functioning, and simply want someone to validate what you are already doing.
You are primarily seeking free‑or‑low‑cost last‑minute tips, rather than an honest conversation about multi‑year strategy and stewardship.
This training is designed to resonate most deeply with parents who already invest at a high level in every other area of life and are ready to do the same for their child’s future, with wisdom.
About your Host
This webinar is led by Nicole, co-founder of Lionheart Coaching Academy and co-creator of the Black Founder’s Formula, the #1 and only integrated college‑readiness ecosystem for high‑achieving Black students of Black lawyers, consultants, and senior leaders.
She has spent years helping families like yours translate early potential into selective admissions and competitive merit, with a track record of students stepping into honors programs, scholars cohorts, and leadership pathways that fit who they are.
Nicole brings a deep understanding of elite institutions, scholarship ecosystems, and equity dynamics—and pairs it with a faith‑adjacent, values‑driven lens that centers calling, purpose, and stewardship.
Under her leadership, Lionheart refuses to be “just another admissions consultancy”: we are a Black‑owned firm committed to transforming how our communities access elite‑level guidance, without burnout or parent over‑functioning.
8th or 9th grader feels “early” on paper but you can already feel the stakes?
This is your moment to get ahead of the curve with a clear, merit‑aware, values‑aligned strategy. This live training is for high‑earning Black parents who are done with guesswork and ready for an integrated playbook that protects both outcomes and wholeness.