Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand. You would mark "black" for her race, but your not satisfied with that, you would also like to mark an African country for citizenship. Is that right?
OP here. Yep.
Why? She can talk about her heritage in the essay, if relevant. Why are you trying to game the system? She'll be unique enough as it is, from colleges' standpoint, if she's black and from a European country.
Anonymous wrote:I think that a black European would add much more diversity to the college than a black African.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand. You would mark "black" for her race, but your not satisfied with that, you would also like to mark an African country for citizenship. Is that right?
OP here. Yep.
Why? She can talk about her heritage in the essay, if relevant. Why are you trying to game the system? She'll be unique enough as it is, from colleges' standpoint, if she's black and from a European country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand. You would mark "black" for her race, but your not satisfied with that, you would also like to mark an African country for citizenship. Is that right?
OP here. Yep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand. You would mark "black" for her race, but your not satisfied with that, you would also like to mark an African country for citizenship. Is that right?
OP here. Yep.
Anonymous wrote:First and most relevant question is how your daughter identifies. If she identifies as Black or mixed, then that is how SHE should fill in the question.
Also there are absolutely Black Europeans. There have been for centuries.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand. You would mark "black" for her race, but your not satisfied with that, you would also like to mark an African country for citizenship. Is that right?