Anonymous wrote:White privilege on steroids?
Anonymous wrote:If you are true descendant, perhaps you can work it into one of your essays and make it a reason why it's this uni and not any other. But you also need sufficiently high scores and grades.
Anonymous wrote:If you are true descendant, perhaps you can work it into one of your essays and make it a reason why it's this uni and not any other. But you also need sufficiently high scores and grades.
Anonymous wrote:Op back. It is not one of the three I used as examples. It is completely verifiable without much effort. DC has a 4.0 UW GPA and 35 ACT, etc, etc. Interest in the university is genuine and academic in nature, unrelated to being a descendant. The university will be DC's ED choice. DC's first thought was to not acknowledge but is that weird?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a space on the application form to list of any of your family members were alumni. Put it there.
Of course! Can you tell we are college app newbies?!
Anonymous wrote:What if you were otherwise a nobody but your last name was Harvard, Penn, or Jefferson and you were a descendant of that John Harvard, William Penn or Thomas Jefferson. Do you acknowledge in your application? Do you assume they know? If you don't say something and they do know, is that weird?
Anonymous wrote:There's a space on the application form to list of any of your family members were alumni. Put it there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IMO, if it even mattered, that relationship should have paid off even before you (your DC) having to tell the admissions officer of it.
OP here. You've kinda nailed how we are feeling. We don't live in the city where the university is and neither parent attended. We are not in any way part of the fabric of the school unlike how we are active members in our own college alumni associations. So we don't really have any connection other than this interesting factoid. So, rather than it being like a Kennedy applying to the Kennedy School of Government (no explanation necessary, everyone knows), it is more akin to having the last name Carnegie (but not the money). An unusual enough name that maybe an admissions officer at CMU would raise an eyebrow and do enough research to see that, hey, yes, this kid is related to our founder and, well, why didn't you say so? Trying to figure out how to navigate those waters.