Joke joke joke, juusttt spicing up college confidential (question)

<p>ok so heres my question. If i were to apply to MIT with realllllllllllllllllllllllllly low math scores, would I be considered a URM????:D:D:D</p>

<p>Please, if your going to answer, try to be funny/witty.</p>

<p>Yes, if you were like the Korean boy in the movie 21 at MIT who had one leg.</p>

<p>One of my friends got accepted to Wellesley early, probably because he would be a very underrepresented minority there.</p>

<p>hahahh @ cafesimone!</p>

<p>and byyyyyyyyyy the way. I love the movie “21”.</p>

<p>I seriously think you would! If you showed somehow that you’re a genius and the low math scores were a product (or nonproduct) of your tragic persona, of which happened to experience an epiphany for mathematics before college applications!</p>

<p>But seriously, they might consider…</p>

<p>You never know WHAT goes on behind adcom doors. People with perfect SATs, amazing extracirriculars, and 5.0gpas are rejected regularly without much surprise.</p>

<p>goldenratiophi, Wellesley is a women’s college…</p>

<p>…
that’s why it’s funny</p>

<p>That was the joke…
He would be… the minority…</p>

<p>hahaha yeah. Guess your right BigBrthrWatchesU. haha come on keep the jokes coming. APRIL FIRST IS NEAR!</p>

<p>The sad thing is that I actually know someone who was originally rejected from MIT, but proved that he was part Native American, then got accepted.</p>

<p>Sad. yeah.
Maybe you can become a janitor at MIT … and then … u never know</p>

<p>You can tell them that you purposely chose the wrong answers so that you could prove that it was possible to show your intelligence in alternate ways. It can be a statement against standardized tests and show your independency and original thinking.</p>

<p>I mean, chosing all the wrong answers has to mean that you actually DID know the right answers.</p>