I was born into a traditional Hispanic family in Puerto Rico, a territory of the United States. This conventional family pattern follows a patriarchal hierarchy in which the father is the head of the household and responsible for all major decisions for the family. My father served the US Army where I had the opportunity to study in several schools during my early childhood. This allowed me to become fully bilingual. In elementary school, I studied in three different schools: Kindergarten in my home town, Naranjito, Puerto Rico; first grade in Fort Bragg, North Carolina; second grade in Fort Buchanan, Puerto Rico; and I returned to my local town of Naranjito to finish fourth to sixth grades. Later, my family settled in Naranjito, which provided me with an opportunity to continue my studies in middle and high school. I graduated from high school with a GPA of 3.30 and with 2,789 in the College Board. I completed my associate degree studies while attending full time. I completed my baccalaureate degree in Secretarial Sciences in 1996 while attending part-time at night at the University of Puerto Rico in Bayamon. As education has been a major goal in my life, I continued my pursuit for personal development by obtaining Master’s in Business Administration with a major in Human Resources while working full-time and raising a family as a single parent. I completed this two-year program within 18 months achieving a GPA of 3.71. The demanding requirements of military life, adapting to different cultural values and various issues facing a single parent raising a family forged in intrinsic desire to seek after additional education, stability, and own development. These experiences continue to inspire me and provide the momentum toward... ... middle of paper ... ...nality, talents, training, organization, attention to detail, attributes, and love of helping others. It would be a pleasure and honor to have the opportunity to be accepted into your law school. ADDENDUM I would like to make a clarification regarding my GPA difference on my Bachelor’s Degree versus my Master’s Degree in Business Administration. When I was pursuing my Bachelor’s Degree, I was very young and naïve to understand the importance of the GPA for additional education in the future. Once I matured, I decided to forge ahead academically and pursue a Master’s Degree. Although the evening program was for two years, I could complete it in 18 months with a GPA of 3.71 due to my educational commitment and the continual desire to further my education, which will continue throughout the remainder of my scholastic career. Thank you for your consideration.
Attending the University of Houston Law Center would afford me the opportunity to gain an education I know only they could offer. The University of Houston is a first-tier institution that constantly produces superior talent that continuously excels in all fields of law. Earning my degree of jurisprudence would be the crowning achievement in my life, but knowing that I couldn’t be able to use it effectively would be as equally disappointing. Coming full circle, I’d use my degree to make a difference for those privileged and those who aren’t alike. The realm of law is where I feel I belong and I’m eager to prove myself.
Family is the most important social unit of Hispanic life. It is a close-knit entity that includes immediate and extended family members. Typically, the father is the head of the family and the mother rules the house (Clutter, n.d.). Vacations are usually taken to relatives’ houses to promote togetherness in celebration of birthdays, anniversaries, weddings, graduations, and communions. In times of need, the family is the first line of aid, and Hispanics typically live with their parents until marriage. While this deviates from American ideals for individuals aged 18-35, it actually provides young adults the opportunity for future success because so much money is saved from greatly reduced housing costs (Williams, 2009).
In both cultures, grandparents and elders are highly respected, the father holds most of the power and is the decision maker of the household, the mother is the caretaker of the household, and the children’s only responsibility is to go to school and receive an education. This is the case in almost every Hispanic family because they tend to keep traditional values. This hierarchy also occurs in traditional American families. It was always thought that the “absence of a father is destructive to children, particularly boys, because it means that children will lack the economic resources, role model, discipline, structure, and guidance that a father provides.” (Biblarz & Raftery, 1999) However, this is no longer the case. The differences between American family structures can be most clearly seen when separated by socioeconomic class. Now, studies have shown that “children from single-mother families do approximately as well as children from two-biological-parent families.” (Biblarz & Raftery, 1999) This encourages mothers to believe that a single-mother household is still successful. Therefore, the mother becomes the decision maker and caretaker. This concept also applies for opposite genders. In single-father households, the father is not only the decision maker but the caretaker as well. These family structural differences make way for another similarity in Hispanic and American cultures. Faith
Child rearing and family structure within the Hispanic culture is noticeably different than what is present in the mainstream Western culture of today. One apparent difference is in gender roles. There exists a vastly different expectation in Hispanic culture for males and females. The male is considered to be the independent breadwinner, and the head of the household. Accordingly, the female role is one of submission and provider of childcare. In contrast, it is more than acceptable in Western culture for a female to maintain a non-traditional role. Hispanic culture additionally differs from Western culture in the traditional makeup of the family. Within Hispanic culture the extended family plays a huge role
Many children are born into families that are a part of a branch of the military. Parents may wonder if the constant moving and deployment will bring negative effects on a child’s development. The rigorous lifestyle of the military can have negative effects on the children’s development growing up, but the opportunity of living as a military child is a culturally diverse, socially strong, and mature development of characteristics. The military life offers many benefits for raising a child. Have a family in the military lifestyle can greatly help the children’s development of positives characteristics.
The structure of a Mexican American family is one of which originally was “traditional” where the mother was at home and the father went to work. However, this has undergone a drastic change within the last thirty or so years as both parents have begun to be the head of the household.
I am the second son of a two child family. My brother, Chandler, and I received our Hispanic heritage from our mother and are bilingual. My father is an orthodontist,
But for me scoring good in the exam was but a sliver of the full picture, and the only way to comprehend the beauty of this sight was by sharing my vision, by enabling others to see what I had glimpsed at. I knew what I truly wanted, I wanted everyone to understand that law is the ultimate path which can lead us to a better world where everyone has discovered their true sense of justice, within them.
I was hoping I could take this opportunity to explain my Bachelors GPA. I am quite happy with the GPA that I obtained during my Master’s degree. On the other hand, I wish I could have earned a better GPA with the Bachelor’s degree. I wanted to offer an explanation as to why it was lower than what I would like it to be.
There will be a lot of obstacles I face while trying to make it all the way to law school such as money problems, time efficiency, and those who will try to cloud my head with doubts that I won’t make it. Nevertheless, I will move past all that and raise my law degree up high knowing I am about to change life’s in a positive way and watch how
All of my life I have lived in a very small town of under 700 people. My school holds students from pre-school to twelfth grade all in the same building. My graduating class is thirty- eight students with most of us being in the same classes since pre-school. I love my small hometown, but I’m ready for some place bigger than 700 people. The University of Wisconsin La Crosse gives me this opportunity by getting to meet new people around campus. It’s also exciting to me that in every class there are new people, and I’m ready for a challenge of going to a larger school with thousands of students not just hundreds.
My mother and I decided my current high school would be the best choice as I’ve had the privilege to be a part of a very demanding medical program. While maintaining my GPA and completing all high school diploma requirements by my junior year, I’ve also managed to conquer the requirements for the LPN Program in which I have been successful thus far. During my sophomore and junior years, I was also dual enrolled at Broward College where I earned 13 credits towards my college
My family, in my eyes, is perfectly normal. I was blessed to have been born into a family with strong Latina and American influence. My mother came from a completely different atmosphere and strongly held onto her culture. Being from Chile in South America, my mother tried to maintain a strong Latin influence in my brother and my lives despite the fact that my dad knew nothing about her culture. From speaking the language, to celebrating holidays and traditions, and eating the food, my mother made sure we knew our heritage as well as hers in order to pass this heritage down from generations to generations.
The purpose of this letter is to apply for admission to the International Relations program of the [INSERT UNIVERSITY HERE] for the Fall 2011 session. I had begun my undergraduate degree at Virginia Commonwealth University in 2005 pursuing a Bachelor of Science degree. During these times, I had taken courses focusing on various subjects. After having completed 100 credits, I gained admission to the VCU Dental School but I had decided to leave the dental school to pursue my true passion in international politics. My first encounter with politics happened in 2005 when I took part in a rally for Kuwaiti women’s right to vote in the parliamentary elections. I have always believed strongly in women's right to vote, and I even joined a national committee to advocate this worthwhile case. The results of our advocacy had been substantial and Kuwaiti women had received their right to vote in May 2005. Aside from this, I also joined various committees which have been fighting against the political money corruption during Kuwaiti parliamentary elections. Thus, these involvements have whetted my appetite to be a part of the political arena.
n life failure is synonymous with death. We do not know when failure and death will happen, how either will happen, but, death and failure will happen. This was the first thought that rushed throughout my mind when I processed the news of my dismissal from law school. My greatest accomplishment being admitted into law school. My greatest failure (was not reaching my goal and ) being dismissed from law school. I consider my first year, failure due to not academically succeeding my first year. Furthermore, I have accepted responsibility for my past academic performance and I admit it was due to my lack of effective study habits. However, with this failure, there are lessons that I’ve learned that have outweighed my failure my first year of law school. Since my dismissal from law