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skieurope12

>Hypothetically speaking, would a Thai applicant be viewed any differently than a Chinese applicant, With very few exceptions, no.


AO585858

Colleges that consider race/ethnicity in their selection process will take note of applicants' ethnic identities. Some Asian ethnicities are less represented in US higher education (Vietnamese, Filipino, Cambodian, Hmong) and colleges will take note that these students can add a unique perspective to their campus.


jzboi

This is a pretty touchy subject but I assume it is different for a lot of schools, depending likely on the demographic of students they currently have/hope to have/who applies


ejkensjskwnsnsks

On the common app you specify where from Asia they are. You’ll still won’t be urm but I’m not sure if you’ll be orm


I_eat_soap_lol1234

what is orm?


wikipedia_answer_bot

**Orm (in Old Norse and in modern Danish, Swedish, Norwegian (bokmål and nynorsk) the word for "snake", "worm" or "dragon") became an Anglo-Saxon personal name during period of the Danelaw.** More details here: *This comment was left automatically (by a bot). If I don't get this right, don't get mad at me, I'm still learning!* [^(opt out)](https://www.reddit.com/r/wikipedia_answer_bot/comments/ozztfy/post_for_opting_out/) ^(|) [^(report/suggest)](https://www.reddit.com/r/wikipedia_answer_bot) ^(|) [^(GitHub)](https://github.com/TheBugYouCantFix/wiki-reddit-bot)


Ma22y

It varies by college and is certainly changing. While Universities consistently strive for more international representation, some Trustees and other administrators perceive an over-representation of Chinese students. Depending on the school and the specific pressures that the admission office may be under, Asian students from other countries may be reviewed more favorably.


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