Anonymous wrote:I'm a URM who attended HYSM and I'm friends with classmates who went on to become admissions officers. I also sat on admissions committees at my T14 law school. Merely checking those boxes isn't usually enough to get the applicant admitted. Their essays, ECs, zip code, LORs, parent info (including college) and so on will all be carefully examined at an Ivy. Unless the kid also faked things in those other components of their application package, they'd need to be able to get admitted as if they were not a URM.
Sure, people like that crazy young woman at Penn who was almost a Rhodes Scholar will slip through the cracks now and then. But that's much more likely to happen at a place like Penn State where a computer is doing all the decision making than at Penn, where a whole team is reading and scoring every bit of info they've collected. This is especially true for Native Americans. There are few enough Native American students nationally each year who meet the criteria for admission to an Ivy or Stanford or MIT that these schools are fighting over them. Some random dude applying from DC with zilch in his package to indicate that he's legit is not who they're looking for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sadly this happens every year. Some unqualified student checks a box under dubious circumstances and gets into a school they have no business attending. It's frustrating but a good sign that life isn't always fair and that this process has very little integrity to it. Better to carry yourself with dignity and only worry about yourself. Eventually your child will be better off. It's the school's loss.
If true, the college counselor should be on this.
Anonymous wrote:Claiming you’re Native American should be tied to membership of a sovereign indigenous nation or tribe, not 2% of your DNA.
Anonymous wrote:About their race. Put down Native American and mexican. Got into an Ivy. Apparently DC has known for a while. I am not shocked as i know many kids probably lie but this just shows how rigged the system itself is. The entire school was surprised that this kid got in ED and now we know. Wow! I am guessing thats how colleges achieve their diversity goal.. admitting fake native Americans and hispanics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sadly this happens every year. Some unqualified student checks a box under dubious circumstances and gets into a school they have no business attending. It's frustrating but a good sign that life isn't always fair and that this process has very little integrity to it. Better to carry yourself with dignity and only worry about yourself. Eventually your child will be better off. It's the school's loss.
Thank you! Finally someone with integrity who can see how wrong this is
Yeah. You two exude integrity…![]()
Listen, I’m diverse as are my children. And AA is a complete sham and clusterf$ck; I look forward to it being struck down. But you UMC suburban adults who obsess over college admissions are the absolute worst.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a URM who attended HYSM and I'm friends with classmates who went on to become admissions officers. I also sat on admissions committees at my T14 law school. Merely checking those boxes isn't usually enough to get the applicant admitted. Their essays, ECs, zip code, LORs, parent info (including college) and so on will all be carefully examined at an Ivy. Unless the kid also faked things in those other components of their application package, they'd need to be able to get admitted as if they were not a URM.
Sure, people like that crazy young woman at Penn who was almost a Rhodes Scholar will slip through the cracks now and then. But that's much more likely to happen at a place like Penn State where a computer is doing all the decision making than at Penn, where a whole team is reading and scoring every bit of info they've collected. This is especially true for Native Americans. There are few enough Native American students nationally each year who meet the criteria for admission to an Ivy or Stanford or MIT that these schools are fighting over them. Some random dude applying from DC with zilch in his package to indicate that he's legit is not who they're looking for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can OP please come back and share more details? Is this kid the child of someone who is Latino? Does one parent have a Spanish surname?
No, parents are not latino, grandparents are not latino and no does not have a Spanish name.
Anonymous wrote:Claiming you’re Native American should be tied to membership of a sovereign indigenous nation or tribe, not 2% of your DNA.