The Ivy League is an athletic union of American educational institutes based in the northeastern United States, including Harvard, Yale, and Columbia University. Many people mistakenly believe that MIT and Stanford are members of this union. While we refer to these institutes in this article, they are not.

There are a number of factors that will determine your acceptance into the Ivy League or other elite institutes. Here we will discuss the best approach. Let’s start with your GPA.

GPA Requirements

Of course, your GPA is a pillar of your application. But is your app a house of cards without it? Not necessarily. Why are some students with a GPA of 4.0 rejected, while others with a GPA of less than 3 are accepted? Because the value of the courses you took often has the same value as your result. Because your application must demonstrate an extracurricular pedigree.

Your school record should show academic rigor, don’t go for the easier courses. A prescribed high school pathway featuring 4 years of the core subjects, English, math and science, is best complemented by 4 years dedicated to history and foreign language learning.

That brings us to Extra-Curriculars.

Those fucking extracurriculars

Meet John. John has a 2.7 GPA and equally normal SAT scores. Although John was never the valedictorian, he excelled in sports, serving as captain of his baseball, basketball, and soccer teams, winning awards for his sportsmanship. It is these strengths that secured his place at Harvard. Meanwhile, many thousands of students are rejected each year with outstanding academic achievement.

Stories of a sub-3 GPA graduating from Harvard are the exception, but there is a moral to this story. If two students are equal academically, universities, like employers, will go with the candidate who has held leadership roles or shown extracurricular peak. Without these features, your app will be lost.

Financial help

Unfortunately, you will have to consider the cost to attend the school of your dreams. Fortunately, however, the world’s most prestigious schools often have the largest financial aid endowments. Consider Harvard, which has a financial aid budget of $172,000,000. This aid is reserved for students whose parents earn less than $60,000 per year. The net result means that the cost of attending actually matches or exceeds 90% of other universities. Before you prepare your FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid) application, you’ll need to know where you stand.

What about Reach schools?

Universities with low admission rates, including Harvard and Yale, are considered ‘Reach Schools’. A ‘Match School’ is one that has a high probability of acceptance. Identifying reach schools and compatible schools is smart forward planning.

Maybe her heart is set on attending Yale. You may dream of being published in the Yale Law Review before you run for Congress. Students negotiate a path to their dreams each year. Likewise, there are students who don’t make it to the school of their dreams without Plan B. Identify other schools with a prestigious track record of graduating the best minds in their field.

graduate success

When creating a shortlist of schools, it is wise to assess the postgraduate success students are likely to experience. Let’s take MIT. While the US economy is struggling and jobs are scarce, MIT bucks the trend. Studies show that only 20% of students find employment upon graduation. Yet MIT students are doing better than the national average, and on-campus hiring still prevails.

However, the idea that your graduate success depends purely on your education is wrong. History is made up of those who defy the rules and define their own path. Whether they are a Harvard reject, Warren Buffet, or a Princeton reject, Ted Turner. So, you don’t need to graduate from the Ivy League to be successful… But it helps.

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