Anonymous wrote:Didn’t work against my kid at all. Got into multiple top 10 SLACs and UVA/W&M. And stop fretting about things outside your control. If your kid works hard, gets good grades, and gets good recommendations for teachers, they will do just fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Asians are OVERREPRESENTED at Harvard by 4x. Despite what Asian parents want us to think, AOs are not discriminating against them. The real problem is that many/most of the high-scoring Asians want to go to the same small set of schools and major in the same subjects (engineering and CS).
I disagree and have been proven correct by race-blind admissions to other top schools, namely the California Universities. Merit alone without race has given Berkeley and UCLA student populations over 60%. Look at race-blind test only high schools like Sty and Bronx Science at 75% Asian. Merit alone would have Harvard at 80% Asian.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Asians are OVERREPRESENTED at Harvard by 4x. Despite what Asian parents want us to think, AOs are not discriminating against them. The real problem is that many/most of the high-scoring Asians want to go to the same small set of schools and major in the same subjects (engineering and CS).
Do you have problems with the NBA and NFL as well ? or is overrepresentation as a percentage of population and not as a percentage of the applicant pool a useful trope you like to their out there only for college admissions?
Anonymous wrote:Asians are OVERREPRESENTED at Harvard by 4x. Despite what Asian parents want us to think, AOs are not discriminating against them. The real problem is that many/most of the high-scoring Asians want to go to the same small set of schools and major in the same subjects (engineering and CS).
Anonymous wrote:My kids are half-White and half Indian. Can’t we just say white in applications?
Anonymous wrote:My kids are half-White and half Indian. Can’t we just say white in applications?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Half-Asian, half-White here. I researched each school and picked white or Asian based on which was underrepresented.
This.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn’t work against my kid at all. Got into multiple top 10 SLACs and UVA/W&M. And stop fretting about things outside your control. If your kid works hard, gets good grades, and gets good recommendations for teachers, they will do just fine.
What didn’t work against your kids? Being white, Asian or biracial?
Anonymous wrote:Didn’t work against my kid at all. Got into multiple top 10 SLACs and UVA/W&M. And stop fretting about things outside your control. If your kid works hard, gets good grades, and gets good recommendations for teachers, they will do just fine.
Anonymous wrote:This is such an aggrieved take it is shameful
Anonymous wrote:Asians are OVERREPRESENTED at Harvard by 4x. Despite what Asian parents want us to think, AOs are not discriminating against them. The real problem is that many/most of the high-scoring Asians want to go to the same small set of schools and major in the same subjects (engineering and CS).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's no multiracial box? And is the last name a giveaway for ethnicity?
NP here and most Indian names have been shortened and can pass for white.
Most Indian names don’t pass for white.