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Everything You Want to Know About Ivy League Schools

I felt unworthy when I thought about penning an article on Ivy League schools. I really was inadequate after I read up on them. Ivy League schools are prestigious. They're the best of the best in America and have been that way back in the American Revolution or earlier. Here are a few things I would hope to share about the academic and athletic prowess of the Ivy League, all seven universities and 1 college of it.

The ivy that thrives on the old buildings of Dartmouth College, University of Pennsylvania, and Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Columbia, Cornell, and Brown Universities is where the title Ivy League came from. The oldest university in the Ivy League is Harvard, founded in 1636, and the latest was Cornell, founded in 1865.

The name Ivy League wasn't official until 1954, though they have been named such for a long time. Since the foremost boating event between Yale and Harvard in 1852, these schools have been very competitive about sports. Baseball, water polo, football, lacrosse, fencing, squash, and rowing are a few of the many sports that's been included since.

The Ivy League extended their already laid down agreement for football to all intercollegiate sports in 1954. It stipulates that aid cannot be provided to applicants for athletic ability. Athletic scholarships aren't awarded by Ivy League schools. Scholarship aid is given to students for academic achievement instead. Other schools around the nation admit students of high athletic achievements with less than standard performances in academics. Ivy League schools don't do this.

Ivy League schools have a absolutely brutal admissions process. They are devoted to achievement in academics and only take in the best with an acceptance rate of nine per cent to twenty per cent. Because of the volume of applicants, the process isn't a sure thing and some students with high test scores are turned down for no real reason.

I was also stunned to find out that even students with above standard test scores are sometimes not admitted to Ivy League schools. Students are assessed as a complete package by the college admissions office. They assess grades and test scores, but they also factor in extracurricular activities, leadership positions, affiliations in clubs/societies, and the ever important "X" factor.

knowing everything about Ivy League schools, I have come to the conclusion that they are great places to get top notch education, but the key is getting in. You must know how to present yourself and catch the attention of the college admissions offices. Not the way Elle did on the movie Legally Blonde, but something more like organizing all your information in a place where any of the universities could know all about you in a quick stop.

Ivy League schools don't give out scholarships based on athletic ability, so you still have to get high grades and test scores even if you're the best squash player to be given a chance.



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About Greg Welling
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View all Articles by Greg Welling

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