<p>@masterkuni
While the UW does not take points away for people of different ethnic groups, their entire personal statement is geared to be more easily written by people of diverse ethnic origin.
While this may not be seen as inherently discriminating, because anyone from any race can write a killer personal statement, it is easier for students from a diverse background to write a good one.</p>
<p>We can argue about achievement gaps, differing avg SAT scores by race, ect. but when it comes down to it, UW-S does not give these areas much weight on applications and focuses more on the personal statement.</p>
<p>My own story is a little extreme but here it is.
I had a friend from south Seattle. He did very poorly in highschool and was not supposed to graduate. He got the remainder of his pre-reqs waived for highschool and was admitted to UWS.</p>
<p>Once his transcripts were sent to UW-S his reported GPA of 3.5 was found to be 1.7, and technically did not have the UW’s minimum highschool education requirements.
UW retracted their offer of admission thereafter. </p>
<p>He reapplied / appealed the decision and was granted entrance into UW. </p>
<p>He probably had one of the lowest highschool GPA’s for that freshmen class.</p>
<p>Now in my case, I applied the same quarter as him.
My highschool GPA was around 3.8 with all AP/honors.
I almost had enough credits from AP to be a sophomore, and a long list of extra curriculars including a national invite. </p>
<p>I was rejected from UW.</p>
<p>The difference between my friend and I were our personal statements.
I wrote about taking care of someone dieing, and my friend wrote about growing up without a dad and racial pressures in society. </p>
<p>For the longest time I felt UW racially discriminated against me, but ive grown to understand their values.</p>
<p>I re-applied for transfer for next quarter and find out in a couple of weeks. we will see.</p>