| I think URM is picked up by essays and maybe clubs. Still is making a difference at our school, though maybe not as much as it was five years ago. |
College admissions is very much Big Data. There are datasets (Census, American Community Survey, & probably loads of privately collected ones), not difficult to link to zip code, with race or HHI (currently a proxy for race as there’s great disparity between, for example, whites & AA/black) or other demographic data that, taken together, can give someone a decent idea if someone is urm. I would be shocked if universities are not using data science in admissions |
| Zip code is pretty meaningless in urban areas. |
Illegal. |
It's not. These are private scholarships. |
This is your answer OP |
They use census tract via the College Board Landscape Tool for the applicant. |
| Unless they can get a full 4 year scholarship, college is becoming rich kids only. |
in urban areas, demographics are very different even on census tract |
Yes. And place of education. |
Exactly. We were told how to fill it out to be most advantageous (full pay) - C-suite title is desirable. |
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I think FG is easy to indicate on the apps
LI isn't as easy, unless you're quite poor (HHI under 50k) and get a fee waiver. Or if you're working class (HHI under 100k) and in tune enough to qualify for one of the scholarships mentioned above. URM only (not low income) isn't as transparent.. Name, sometimes. Or you have to indicate it in clubs and/or community essay. |
| There is also a large voluntary data disclosure section in College Board registration. I'm not sure if that data also gets disclosed via the College Board Landscape tool. |
Kid can ultimately get across LI through ECs (working jobs throughout has during school year); teacher and CC LOR and essays. Did you ever read the brown table essay? Wow. |
| My kid’s Common App essay alluded to their South Asian heritage without being all about it. |