Anonymous wrote:My DC is half Asian and half white (southern Europe that we have close ties to as well). But DH was born in Asia and DC has very close connections there as well, has visited every year since birth. DC applied last year and checked both boxes.
Keep in mind, the Common App asks questions about parents - where they went to college for example. DH went to college in his native country, so there is really no way to hide your heritage on these apps.
A good strategy, as a PP mentioned, was that my DC embraced the third culture kid heritage: strong ties to two countries/cultures, speaks multiple languages, has spent considerable amount of time in DH's home country. It seemed to have worked - DC is at a T20 school.
Good luck to everyone - this is a stressful process for kids and parents alike!
Anonymous wrote:
Understood, PP. I'm OP. If my children were more connected to their Asian heritage, I would advise them to do that. But I think my question is more about what IS heritage? My kids have no cultural link or particular loyalty to this particular Asian culture (and don't forget this is Vietnam - heavy history, immigrants are not in love with the current socialist regime after so much repression). They DO feel European. So is it unethical to not check the Asian box in those circumstances? I guess it depends on every person's understanding of ethnic vs. cultural affiliation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is discrimination against Asians and whites that different?
Yes. Being White is a net-neutral to slightly negative factor.
Being Asian is a materially negative factor.
+1.
It's also sad that mixed Asians feel the need to try and downplay their Asianness in order to get a leg up. Not judging those who do, just a sad indictment on our society.
My child chose to be honest rather than hide who she is because: she is proud of who she is, she does not want to go to a school that substracts points because of who she is.
It would also have been obvious on her interviews.
Really, I think this topic is exaggerated and mostly of concern to the status-obsessed.
(My child also benefitted from teachers who "assumed"--and one told me this to my face--that she would be among the strongest students in the class because of her race. You have to accept the cards you are dealt, and make the best of the opportunities before you. Which are legion for strong students of any race.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is discrimination against Asians and whites that different?
Yes. Being White is a net-neutral to slightly negative factor.
Being Asian is a materially negative factor.
+1.
It's also sad that mixed Asians feel the need to try and downplay their Asianness in order to get a leg up. Not judging those who do, just a sad indictment on our society.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Question: My children are part Asian, part white European. They have a passport from my European country as well as their American passport, since they were born in the US. They have very little cultural connection to their Asian heritage, have never been exposed to the language, but they DO have an Asian last name, because their father is Asian. First names are from their European country, we speak the language at home, have friends from that country, visit the home country often - the cultural connection is there. They will also take the AP in that European language, which will be really easy for them.
Do they check the Asian box?
Do they expand, in one of their essays, on their European identity?
What else can they do to ward off discrimination against Asians?
Thank you.
Which European country?
Germany.
Doesn't it matter more which Asian country they're from?
Like if it's not China or India isn't it better to claim that URM heritage than Germany (many white Americans can also claim to identify as German Americans too)?
Anonymous wrote:Mixed Asians actually get a significant AA boost, since they tick the "diversity" box without being full-on Asian. I thought this was pretty well-known.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Question: My children are part Asian, part white European. They have a passport from my European country as well as their American passport, since they were born in the US. They have very little cultural connection to their Asian heritage, have never been exposed to the language, but they DO have an Asian last name, because their father is Asian. First names are from their European country, we speak the language at home, have friends from that country, visit the home country often - the cultural connection is there. They will also take the AP in that European language, which will be really easy for them.
Do they check the Asian box?
Do they expand, in one of their essays, on their European identity?
What else can they do to ward off discrimination against Asians?
Thank you.
Which European country?
Germany.