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I declare flame war.
this might be a really ******ed question, but..
do asian people count as disadvantaged?
we apparently didn't count when CA had affirmative action..
i don't know about now
Well, I define the disadvantaged as those who have experienced starvation to the point of dead. So you are not disadvantaged.
thanks, but that does not answer the question.
I'm sure that you have no desire to start a war. If you are truly economically disadvantaged, then you are the same footing as URMs, because it is assumed that you will go back to where you came from, and provide healthcare. You might even have more of an advantage.Not to start a war, but, does it help as much to be disadvantaged (economically) as it does to be conidered a minority? thanks
Not to start a war, but, does it help as much to be disadvantaged (economically) as it does to be conidered a minority? thanks
this might be a really ******ed question, but..
do asian people count as disadvantaged?
we apparently didn't count when CA had affirmative action..
i don't know about now
Not to start a war, but, does it help as much to be disadvantaged (economically) as it does to be conidered a minority? thanks
Yup....the knowledge speaker.👍It may depend on the school and their goals.
Showing that you have done well despite economic hardships in childhood does get an adcom's respect.
While it doesnt' require a fatal case of malnutrition, economic disadvantage might be something along the lines of living in government subsidized housing or a homeless shelter, and/or qualifying for free or reduced price school lunch and/or Medicaid (government health care payments for the poor and disabled), working to help support your family while in high school (actually paying household bills, not just spending money for clothes & entertainment). If you were raised by a single parent, and if your parent worked for minimum wage or had health issues that greatly reduced the income available to the household then you might be justified in identifying as "disadvantaged".
These applicants often don't have the advantage of taking MCAT classes, tutors, private music & dance lessons (for well-roundedness), foreign travel, parents & neighbors with connections to shadowing and summer employment in health care settings.
Another question, as I couldn't find it on the AMCAS website.
To what level of income does AMCAS begin to classify one as economically disadvantaged, or disadvantaged in any regard??
They don't. You decide. You decide if you want to apply as disadvantaged and you write an essay explaining why you think you are. They draw no lines. I grew up in a family of 4 with an income of about 25k and I chose not to apply as disadvantaged, because I had good public schools and didn't live in some ghetto.
Its a very personal decision whether or not to apply as disadvantaged. I'd say the key is to look at yourself and decide whether or not your life caused significant problems in your youth to the point that you did not get the same opportunities as a normal HS student.
These applicants often don't have the advantage of taking MCAT classes, tutors, private music & dance lessons (for well-roundedness), foreign travel, parents & neighbors with connections to shadowing and summer employment in health care settings.
Saying you are not advantaged is not the same as being disadvantaged.
Are you kidding? What kid actually has access to all that? MCAT tutors and parents who will pay for your trips to Spain and Thailand while you're not volunteering in your uncle's clinic? What I think people are forgetting here is that some people are always going to have "advantaged" backgrounds. There isn't anything you can do about that; and one person's advantages do not inversely affect your own.
If you want foreign travel, work for it wherever you can. If you want to shadow an anesthesiologist, make some cold calls or ask your PCP if he/she knows someone. If you want a good MCAT score, study for it like you would if you were in medical school. And if you want to learn to speak spanish or play guitar, you don't need to come from an affluent family. Saying you are not advantaged is not the same as being disadvantaged.
Should I have been disadvantaged if my mother has psychological problems and my father is a drug addict? He was a great father. We played catch and went fishing. My mom acts crazy about every 10 days, but is still the greatest mother in the entire world. I had a job when I was 16. My sister died when I was 10, and my mom has never been the same.
I didn't even consider applying as a disadvantaged student and wouldn't do it if I had another chance either.
One who grew up disadvantaged can choose to self-identify. Mostly it is about economic disadvantage: the dollar amount of household income during your formative years, use of government subsidies and services (school lunch, housing projects or Section 8 housing, Medicaid/Medi-Cal), the need to work while in HS and whether that money paid the household bills or was your own "spending money", and whether you think that your community was under-served with regard to access to physicians.
Its a moot point if you've already been admitted but drugs, mental illness and a siblings death does not necessarily make you economically disadvantaged. There are more than a few offspring of rockstars who would fit that discription.
One who grew up disadvantaged can choose to self-identify. Mostly it is about economic disadvantage: the dollar amount of household income during your formative years, use of government subsidies and services (school lunch, housing projects or Section 8 housing, Medicaid/Medi-Cal), the need to work while in HS and whether that money paid the household bills or was your own "spending money", and whether you think that your community was under-served with regard to access to physicians.
Its a moot point if you've already been admitted but drugs, mental illness and a siblings death does not necessarily make you economically disadvantaged. There are more than a few offspring of rockstars who would fit that discription.
I gotta refute your view of disadvantaged. I personally believe that economically poor families do not affect child's academic performance in any way. I don't see any evidence that money = brilliance. In US we have pretty good public school systems and government pretty much pays everything for kids and teenagers' education.
What country do you live in?
I was thinking the same thing. Our public school system SUCKS. And the poorer you are the more likely it is you live in an area with a TERRIBLE school system.Should I have been disadvantaged if my mother has psychological problems and my father is a drug addict? He was a great father. We played catch and went fishing. My mom acts crazy about every 10 days, but is still the greatest mother in the entire world. I had a job when I was 16. My sister died when I was 10, and my mom has never been the same.
I didn't even consider applying as a disadvantaged student and wouldn't do it if I had another chance either.
How does growing up in an underserved area come into the picture? I know that factors into "disadvantaged" status, but didn't think that was enough for me to put it down on my app.
I gotta refute your view of disadvantaged. I personally believe that economically poor families do not affect child's academic performance in any way. I don't see any evidence that money = brilliance. In US we have pretty good public school systems and government pretty much pays everything for kids and teenagers' education.
How does growing up in an underserved area come into the picture? I know that factors into "disadvantaged" status, but didn't think that was enough for me to put it down on my app.
I want you to walk into any inner city public school and you tell me whether those kids are academically challenged. There is a perpetual cycle: young kids drop out of HIGH/JUNIOR HIGHschool and have kids --> due to lack of education the parents can't secure a decent job --> their kids grow up, go to school, but due to lack of example anywhere in their immediate vicinity, they drop out too --> these drop outs have more kids and the cycle continues. The lucky ones actually play sports or get into the music industry; and its almost silly to think that these kids will one day become doctors (not impossible, but almost silly).I gotta refute your view of disadvantaged. I personally believe that economically poor families do not affect child's academic performance in any way. I don't see any evidence that money = brilliance. In US we have pretty good public school systems and government pretty much pays everything for kids and teenagers' education.
Am I disadvantaged, or does that not count since it didn't happen in my childhood?
The lucky ones actually play sports or get into the music industry; and its almost silly to think that these kids will one day become doctors (not impossible, but almost silly).
Quite true.The military is a way up & out for some kids -- far more than can make it in professional sports or the music industry.
You can't be asian and disadvantaged. Asians are already overrepresented.
You have to be careful that you don't come off sounding like someone trying to gain the sympathy of the adcom while merely annoying them.
If you were one of the few white kids in a school that was predominately minority and if your parents were well educated and employed such that you didn't need government entitlements and you managed to graduate h.s. and get into college with a full scholarship then it sounds like you did pretty well.
An example of economic disadvantage that leads to educational disadvantage is having to drop out of school every spring to help pick strawberries with your migrant worker family.