Then you weren't first gen and made a duplicitous statement. Your mother was educated. |
| Unlikely. There is only one universal language, English. |
It's not strictly about navigating the system, it's about research and critical thinking skills. Any person with college experience should have developed them and been able to use them to guide their kid and navigate even in a different country. I used mine when I lived abroad. Sure, my US degree didn't translate in the other country, and my job options were limited, but I used what I had learned in higher ed to figure out a path. You see that with educated immigrants here too. That is not the first gen colleges mean. They mean first to go to college or child of parents who did not attend college anywhere. |
I wrote the above. In support of the bolded portion, read the second paragraph of the Chronicle of Higher Education article: https://www.chronicle.com/featured/student-success/student-centric-institution/who-is-a-first-generation-student |
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Look at the bios on Reddit/collegeresults and A2C of linguistics majors.
They do a ton of ECs with languages. A ton. Are you doing that? |
| If multi-language fluency is part of the "story," then it absolutely will help. |
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You realize for people that are multi-lingual; French and Spanish is not a big deal. Any combination of languages in Europe is normal in Europe. It comes of as: pulling a fast one.
Say you are Chinese and brag about being fluent in Chinese? Its normal - there was no additional effort on your part. |
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The combination that is of interest is
Chinese Arabic Russian especially for a kid looking at International Relations etc. |
like what? |
Please stop. I am a European. Very few people are fluent in one, much less several languages. Just because they can give you directions to the Eiffel Tower doesn't mean they are fluent. To say that "being fluent in Chinese requires no additional effort" for a child of Chinese immigrants (if that is what you are talking about) is laughable. As an immigrant I know a lot of immigrants and their kids (not many Chinese). Not a single child is fluent intheir parents' language. It is extremely difficult for an American born and educated child to be fluent in their parents' language. |
lol for someone so haughty, you're wrong on all counts. It is absolutely not common to be truly tri-lingual. First gen means that you or your siblings are the first to go to college anywhere. Not just in this country. |
+1 The only difference is that multilingualism is considered worthwhile in the rest of the world, aka outside of the USA where no one really cares. |
That’s kinda unfair though. For example, my kids have really high stats in DuoLingo and it’s recognized. |
Here’s a good one: https://www.reddit.com/r/collegeresults/s/exo45zJDHQ Other common ones are below. This isn’t rocket science people. Awards: National linguistics Olympiad ECs: 1. founder and president of school linguistics club & team, school honored club and national representative etc 2. co-founder of Tolkien club (literature, linguistics, arts and such) 3. Leiden Summer School in Language and Linguistics (rarely have high schoolers) 4. city-wide linguistics competition director 5. Translator/tutor for volunteering services |
Whoa. That link - crazy ECs |