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I recently found out about the URM status and I was curious whether or not I qualify. I come from a mixed background (S/O to the mixed kids out there) where my father is Chinese Jamaican and my mother is from Thailand.
Thanks in advance!
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6 comments
@tristandesinor505 said:
It seems like it’d be a stretch and when you have your interview and/or anyone from the school looks into it, it may come across as dishonest.
I agree ... if you were to mark it and then show up for an interview it probably would seem like you were coming across as dishonest. :(
@tristandesinor505 Thank you for your reply! Just curious, not sure how all of this worked until last night.
It seems like it’d be a stretch and when you have your interview and/or anyone from the school looks into it, it may come across as dishonest.
@tristandesinor505 Thank you!
@jasminejudge480 Yeah I was looking into it and some things were kinda gray so I figured I asked. His mom is from China and his dad was also Chinese Jamaican. Both my dad and grandpa were born and raised in Jamaica. And omg yes it really is! The key to finding an authentic Thai place is simple.... look if they have pictures of the King of Thailand on the wall. No joke. That always gives it away!
My hunch is that a large part (if not all) of it depends on how "Jamaican" your father is (Asians are by no means underrepresented; I don't think we see that many Thai folks in law schools, but that's how things are). Were his parents Chinese?
And since you mentioned it, Thailand has some quality food. I have no idea how Americanized the Thai food I had were, but Thai fried rice can be quite rich and lovely.
This link should help http://www.top-law-schools.com/urm-applicant-faq.html