Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's got to the point that people are strategizing how to win the admissions game by selecting or not selecting certain races. When it gets to this point, you know there is something wrong with the policy.
NP (I think) and I agree. Things are ridiculous at this point. And it's going to HURT the people that these policies are trying to help. People are going to start thinking that people of certain races only got entrance to certain colleges because of their race. That's unfair for the people of those races who would have achieved entry based on merit and hard work without "playing the race card".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's got to the point that people are strategizing how to win the admissions game by selecting or not selecting certain races. When it gets to this point, you know there is something wrong with the policy.
No one is gaming the system. There is no evidence of that. None. Just because some erroneously think that you can has no bearing on what is important to colleges as they build a class.
hahaha everyone knows what the colleges want, which is why everyone is trying to game the system in one way or another. If you want to increase your odds, you have to play the game. Don't hate the player, hate the sick, racist game.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The one drop rule does not apply. Your son is white.
OP here and in that case genuine question- what would you say defines when someone can/cannot claim a racial affiliation? Racial percentage (and if so what percent is acceptable ), skin tone? Cultural affinity?
I agree that it seems somehow wrong, given the goals of affirmative action, but I’m struggling with if/how I should tell my son not to claim a legitimate part of his heritage because the benefit is not meant for him, especially knowing that the college game is rigged in so many other ways.
What has he been selecting all along to register for school, medical forms, and census etc.? My kids are bi-racial and every form has checked both black and white. They aren’t white their whole lives on every form and suddenly two races for college applications.
OP here- up to this point we have been the ones filling out these forms for him and we have usually left it blank or checked the « decline to state » box.
Am I the only person who thinks this is a great topic for discussion but feels that more likely than not we are being trolled by someone opposed to affirmative action? This reminds me of the BIPOC thread.
OP and I guarantee that I’m not a troll. In answer to prior questions as to why we declined to state his race on past forms...it’s complicated. My own racial identity is something that I always struggled with when growing up given my background and upbringing (and this was back when we were told you could only pick one race when filling out forms, and other often wasn’t even an option). Under the circumstances, and especially when he was very young, I kind of wanted to wait until he was old enough to have a say in how he chooses to identify.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's got to the point that people are strategizing how to win the admissions game by selecting or not selecting certain races. When it gets to this point, you know there is something wrong with the policy.
No one is gaming the system. There is no evidence of that. None. Just because some erroneously think that you can has no bearing on what is important to colleges as they build a class.
hahaha everyone knows what the colleges want, which is why everyone is trying to game the system in one way or another. If you want to increase your odds, you have to play the game. Don't hate the player, hate the sick, racist game.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's got to the point that people are strategizing how to win the admissions game by selecting or not selecting certain races. When it gets to this point, you know there is something wrong with the policy.
No one is gaming the system. There is no evidence of that. None. Just because some erroneously think that you can has no bearing on what is important to colleges as they build a class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The one drop rule does not apply. Your son is white.
OP here and in that case genuine question- what would you say defines when someone can/cannot claim a racial affiliation? Racial percentage (and if so what percent is acceptable ), skin tone? Cultural affinity?
I agree that it seems somehow wrong, given the goals of affirmative action, but I’m struggling with if/how I should tell my son not to claim a legitimate part of his heritage because the benefit is not meant for him, especially knowing that the college game is rigged in so many other ways.
What has he been selecting all along to register for school, medical forms, and census etc.? My kids are bi-racial and every form has checked both black and white. They aren’t white their whole lives on every form and suddenly two races for college applications.
OP here- up to this point we have been the ones filling out these forms for him and we have usually left it blank or checked the « decline to state » box.
Am I the only person who thinks this is a great topic for discussion but feels that more likely than not we are being trolled by someone opposed to affirmative action? This reminds me of the BIPOC thread.
Anonymous wrote:It's got to the point that people are strategizing how to win the admissions game by selecting or not selecting certain races. When it gets to this point, you know there is something wrong with the policy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The one drop rule does not apply. Your son is white.
OP here and in that case genuine question- what would you say defines when someone can/cannot claim a racial affiliation? Racial percentage (and if so what percent is acceptable ), skin tone? Cultural affinity?
I agree that it seems somehow wrong, given the goals of affirmative action, but I’m struggling with if/how I should tell my son not to claim a legitimate part of his heritage because the benefit is not meant for him, especially knowing that the college game is rigged in so many other ways.
What has he been selecting all along to register for school, medical forms, and census etc.? My kids are bi-racial and every form has checked both black and white. They aren’t white their whole lives on every form and suddenly two races for college applications.
OP here- up to this point we have been the ones filling out these forms for him and we have usually left it blank or checked the « decline to state » box.
Anonymous wrote:It's got to the point that people are strategizing how to win the admissions game by selecting or not selecting certain races. When it gets to this point, you know there is something wrong with the policy.
Anonymous wrote:If Obama checks it, with absentee Kenyan father in Africa and his white mom and grandparents raising him in $50k private school in Hawaii for 23 years, you can check it.