Friday, August 21, 2020
Why You Shouldnt Apply to all the Ivy League Schools TKG
Why You Shouldnât Apply to all the Ivy League Schools By: Caroline KoppelmanâIf I apply to eleven schools, chances are Iâll get into one of them!â says almost everyone applying to college. If youâre talking about eleven reach schools, youâre probably wrong. But we get it. Youâve been taught probabilities and you understand how they work. As weâve said before, the college process defies conventional knowledge in more ways than one, and this is one of those times. Applying to all of the Ivy League plus schools (Stanford, UChicago, Duke, MIT, etc.) does not in any way increase your chances of getting into one. We would actually argue it decreases your chance. As eye-roll inducing as it may sound, colleges have distinct personalities. A typical Dartmouth student is very different from a typical MIT student. It goes without saying that that student will not excel in both schools. And these schools know what theyâre looking for. While they like diversity, they know the type of person who does best at their school. As such, your personality, preferences, and dreams will not match every top school. If youâre a gifted writer you may be able to contort yourself and manipulate your essays into sounding like the school youâre applying to, but that seems like a waste of time. Before applying to any school, you have to do your research. You shouldnât apply to a school just because of its brand name recognition. Weâve had students who have wanted to apply to six Ivy League schools because they liked individual aspects of each school. All of these schools have somewhat lengthy supplements that take time, and to get into one of these schools youâll have to do substantial research and put a lot of effort into the application. So, we like to tell our students to really consider the opportunity cost of applying to every reach school. No matter how early you start the college application process, there always seems to be an anxiety fueled time crunch towards the end. And while you CAN apply anywhere you want, applying to all of these schools will take time away from the ones you actually want to attend. If you take these schools off of the pedestal, youâll realize there are things you donât like about them, which will make them easier to eliminate. The bottom line is that we understand these schools are prestigious and have global name-brand recognition. But itâs much better to follow Ron Swansonâs advice and put a concentrated effort into one or two instead of half-assing five or six.
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