Anonymous wrote:my spouse wen tthere and is from here
Anonymous wrote:In regard to pregnant woman coming to NY to only deliver. I do not think that flight's allow pregnant women to travel after so many months? and in re: to people coming here just to attend TJ. You have to have a green card to come here, unless it's illegally. I do not think there are a lot of Koreans here illegally. I do not understand how this could be.
Anonymous wrote:In regard to pregnant woman coming to NY to only deliver. I do not think that flight's allow pregnant women to travel after so many months? and in re: to people coming here just to attend TJ. You have to have a green card to come here, unless it's illegally. I do not think there are a lot of Koreans here illegally. I do not understand how this could be.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure I'd be upset about the races of other children, but I would be upset about having my child attend with many children that would move overseas after graduation and who might not be very interested in American history and government. Would kids really stay friends with each other if they moved back overseas and come back to attend high school reunions? Some of my best friends from high school still live in this area.
Anonymous wrote:Now, interestingly, the University of California system went to a completely "race blind" admissions policy years ago and the result has been the predominance of Asian students at the state's flagship universities - 66% at UC Berkeley, for instance.
Anonymous wrote:Why are Americans living in Europe allowed to attend their schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In your educated opinion .... what percentage of the entering TJ kids would you say moved to the United States only within the last year or so? And, is this becoming more common?
Put another way, what percentage of successful applicants do most of their preparation in another country (their native country), then move to the US just before application season begins? ie, in enough time to get a legitimate written recommendation from that year's teacher, as is required, but having spent most of the first 13.5 years of life in _[name of foreign country here]___
I can read the published demographic stats just like you can, so I'm not asking to be pointed to mere numbers (such as, 'this year, 66% of the entering class is Asian.')
Many of the Korean students there aren't actually US citizens and are only here to attend TJ.
The mother is sent here with the kids while the father stays in Korea, and the family returns to Korea in the summer time.
This is shocking. I had no idea that my tax money was being used this way.
NPR did a segment about families in California who did this. There were apartment buildings in primo school districts who would cater to this crowd, even rent the apartment out for the school year