Answer:
Sorry I don't agree with your answer.

I have researched the internet and find that this "company" does sell your child's information to many other parties.

It also continues to send letters to people who have graduated, who are already in college, who are now teaching and/or who NEVER had a GPA above a C.

I find it interesting that my grandson, along with EVERYONE in his class got a letter with their name addressed in it.

In the second paragraph it states... "Because only a relative handful of students anywhere in the United States qualify for this honor, we at The Academy are pleased to propose your child's inclusion in the prized USSA National Yearbook." The handful seams to be quite BIG!

So it appears that anyone vain enough to want their child's name, address, phone number and email address (and picture for a fee if they don't want the book) , can fill out the form, send in their money and get their child published for anyone to see. AND they get to purchase the year book for just $59.95 if they want to. WHOOEEE! What an honor.

On the student bio form it asks for the estimated GPA, but I'm quite sure that no one verifies it after they get your money... Just as they continue to send out mailings to people who are no longer in school and to unqualified students to begin with!

Just another scam to get peoples hard earned money. You're better off saving it and looking into legitimate grants and scholarships.
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First answer by ID1195096847. Last edit by Jansjo. Contributor trust: 0 [recommend contributor recommended]. Question popularity: 156 [recommend question].