I know that Black and Mexican/Puerto African URMs get the most significant boost... But will applying as a URM Hispanic give me a boost? I'm 50/50 Italian/Venezuelan and my mothers a Venez immigrant and I have citizenship there. Goal schools are USC/UCLA.. Does anyone know if URM Hispanic gives a LSAT score boost, even if it's a point or two. Thanks.
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A gift to us all.
Also, from what I've been told by people who have worked in law school admissions offices, Blacks/AA receive the largest boost.
As I have said previously, anyone who isn't a Caucasian white person is a URM since the baseline is all law school students and lawyers and most of each of those groups are white Caucasians. While some schools may give a larger boost for certain URM groups over others, it is not consistently applied.
Regardless, you can't change your race/ethnicity so just check the correct boxes, do your best on the LSAT, write a diversity statement on something whether it's race/ethnicity or not and then let the chips fall where they may.
Some sources i have recently read now say that most schools will classify you as URM only if you are either Mexican, PR, or AA. This is because official census data tracks these groups and not how many Peruvian-Americans or Colombian-Americans are in the United States for example. So exactly which one is it??
My parents are from Peru, so I'm curious to see what my target schools could be if I fall under URM. If you could let me know any sources where I could find this info that would be great thanks.
Which schools do which? Which schools is it a serious advantage and which schools does it barely even matter? @Pacifico
URM status should not really change your target schools, it should just open the possibility of some additional reach schools. Just apply where you want to go and then aim a little higher with a few apps. Don't forget who you are and what your goals are just because you might be helped by a URM boost. Just apply as if you got no boost and then be presently surprised when you outperform your numbers. I'm applying to a lot of schools I have no business getting into, but if I get the right adcom reading my file then who knows what might help me outperform my numbers. I have a lot of strong softs but none of them make me unrealistic about what my safeties, targets, and reaches are. Stay true to yourself and the rest will work itself out. And if for some bizarre reason you can't check the box for URM status then just write about it in a DS and they'll get the message.
The U.S. Census would disagree lol
"If race were based on permanent, innate divisions of human beings, the American government wouldn't have to constantly scramble to change the definitions and qualifications for each category.
But it does. All the time. As political priorities change, American racial definitions adjust right along with them.
So, for example, people of Mexican birth or ancestry were "white" until the 1930 Census snatched that privilege back. Since then, their status — white or Hispanic — has flip-flopped several more times, all depending largely on whatever the current thinking was about their role in labor or immigration.
Similarly, courts went back and forth in the early 20th century about whether people from Japan were white, finally deciding in 1933 that they weren't, based on "the common understanding of the white man." (Sounds really official, huh?)
And what it took to be "black" once varied so wildly throughout the country (from one-quarter, to one-sixteenth, to the infamous one drop of African ancestry) that people could actually change races by crossing state lines.
Then, suddenly, in 2000, the government decided that Americans could be more than one race, adding options to express this to the Census. In other words, one day you could be a single race, and the next day you could be as many as you pleased.
With these constant changes, it's hard to make the case that the concept of race is anywhere near stable."
Sweet line of discussion. I'd be interested to hear where all the posters ended up. I just snagged this article off of power score that details the hard numbers of the URM boost. The quick take away is that higher ranked schools put more emphasis (to what degree?) on URM status. I suspected a causation / correlation issue at first, but the methodology states the information is based on the admission of a URM when two equally qualified applicants based on numbers alone are pitted against each other. I'm not sure if the article defines what a URM is or what "type" of URM it applies to. The data I'd like to see is what percentage of admitted students under the median LSAT scores are URM, and by how much. I think I'd also like to see if research could determine an actual "point" evaluation given to URM's by type. Don't mix Pacifico's with White Russians; only bad things can happen.
https://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/do-underrepresented-minority-urm-applicants-have-a-law-school-admissions-advantage
-Ari
Ari, this thread is 2 years old. I'm not sure how much has changed since then, but I do have one thing you might find interesting:
http://www.ceousa.org/attachments/article/651/VALaw.pdf
It's old and long, but I think it's still worth a read. It affirms that different URMs did get different boosts at least at some schools.
As for access to that data, I doubt it will happen until the boost is gone.