Excellence. Strategy.
Legacy. Measurable.
“They guided us through everything—testing, classes, leadership projects, and a four-year plan that’s strategic and stress-free. Nothing is random anymore.”
— Parent of a rising 9th grader
EDUCATIONAL ACCESS THAT’S STRATEGIC — NOT SCRAMBLED
Our families don’t wait until junior year to start “figuring it out.”
They start early, build methodically, and execute with precision.
Every family who enters Black Founder’s Formula joins a proven system that transforms high-achieving students into purpose-driven innovators — and replaces uncertainty with clarity, peace, and measurable progress.
Our results are not just about admissions or achievements.
They are about infrastructure — the systems of thinking, leadership, and ownership that sustain Black excellence across generations.
THE STATISTICS
Across Lionheart and Black Founder’s Formula families:
92% of students report increased academic confidence and clarity within 90 days.
87% launch their first purpose-driven leadership project before 10th grade.
100% create a personalized 4-year roadmap that integrates academics, testing, and leadership strategy.
T20 STUDENT ACCEPTANCES
Our students have earned admission and scholarship offers from institutions including:
Princeton University
Stanford University
Duke University
Dartmouth College
Cornell University
University of Notre Dame
Bowdoin College
Kenyon College
Carnegie Mellon University
Vassar College
OUR STUDENTS ARE ALSO CHOOSING
Sometimes it’s not simply about prestige. Our students are also choosing these best-fit colleges and universities:
University of Southern California (USC)
Boston College (BC)
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)
Colgate University
Lehigh University
Virginia Tech
New York University (NYU)
Santa Clara University
Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI)
Stevens Institute of Technology
Syracuse University
Howard University
University of San Diego
“Under Nicole’s mentorship, my son gained the confidence and strategic direction to stand out—not just academically, but as a leader.”
— Parent of a rising 9th grader