Los Angeles Times

Another obstacle

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Re “For Eastside students, college scandal hits hard,” column, March 17

As a citizen and former educator, I am angered by the distorted sense of familial love that the parents accused of bribing their children into elite colleges demonstrat­e. I am disturbed that this scandal might cause worthy low-income students to lose faith in their own life struggle to make it into the college of their choice.

They already must overcome complex life challenges along the way just to knock on the door. When applying for college, they also must deal with a very complex admissions process that they now understand can tilt in favor of the privileged.

As these young, hardworkin­g students deal with this scandal, I hope they will have an epiphany about their self-worth and their right and privilege to attend the college of their choice. They should know that the rest of us depend on their honorable struggle and life experience to keep defining our democratic way of life.

Those who bribe and cheat to get their kids into college commit a crime against our entire society because they use their abundant blessings to dishonor their families, weaken our democracy and stain the American dream. Maria Casillas Sherman Oaks

I graduated from college at age 30.

I was married at 19 and had less than two years of work completed at UCLA. I had two babies very quickly and could see that getting that degree was essential to all of our futures.

I went to Los Angeles Valley College at night and later, when my kids were in elementary school, I attended Cal State Northridge. My husband had the opportunit­y to work in San Francisco, so I transferre­d to San Francisco State and earned my degree and my teaching credential. When I returned to Los Angeles, I enrolled in graduate studies and earned by master’s degree.

That 15-year journey is probably my biggest source of personal pride. I cannot imagine a parent stealing that opportunit­y from his or her child. Phyllis Molloff

Fallbrook

For those wondering why our kids face so much pressure to get into a fancy college, all they have to do is read Steve Lopez’s March 15 column on the values we are teaching our children.

Lopez waxes on about morals, life and meaning, and then goes on for much of the article quoting an educationa­l advocate and his informatio­n from Stanford University’s Center on Adolescenc­e — not Arizona State University, not Cal State Fullerton, not even my alma mater UC Santa Barbara, but Stanford.

Although I had one heck of a good time at UCSB. Tim Marshall

Corona del Mar

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? STUDENTS at Roosevelt High in Boyle Heights discuss the college admissions scandal last week.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times STUDENTS at Roosevelt High in Boyle Heights discuss the college admissions scandal last week.

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