Ignoring the impartiality aspect, I would say no on the grounds that there are better people to ask for LOR (assuming you have professors or bosses you can ask).
No, don't ask them. It's not the right kind of relationship for an LOR. I get that your parents are well-meaning, but you may want to send them an admissions article on choosing recommenders to help them understand.
... :
Don't submit the LOR unless you have a chance ... can't get a decent LOR from a professor, you should ... better to have no academic LOR than a weak one.
... thing I did with my LOR’s is I told my ... candidate. All three of my LOR writers thanked me for this ... I got three really good LOR’s and one was from ...
I'd send an email now asking to arrange a meeting (at the professors convenience) to discuss the LOR. In the mean time, keep a hold of whatever you can from the class
... to give you a weak LOR and she is not confident ... . I still think having a LOR from at least one professor ... is extremely important, but getting LOR from the professional world isn ...
... to give you a weak LOR and she is not confident ... . I still think having a LOR from at least one professor ... is extremely important, but getting LOR from the professional world isn ...
I would try calling LSAC just to be sure. But that "updated report" is the same notification I got when I submitted an additional LOR (in other words, they resent my whole CAS report including the new LOR)