Underrepresented minority |
| Hint: people who talk about "the Ivy's" are not the kind of people who get into the Ivies. |
So true. Learn basic grammar please. |
DP. No need to be rude. You could have just mentioned that "Ivies" is correct. |
| It helps to apply from flyover country. |
There's no merit aid at Ivy league colleges. There is only Financial Aid. |
So true. My friend's kid got into one, he was valedictorian at a large high school, state ranked athlete, captain of two sports teams, started a charity in 7th grade, the best grades and test scores it's possible to get, fluent in a difficult foreign language. Tons of volunteer time with food banks. Not one dime of scholarship money. His parents will pay the full 300k. |
| I’m not sure legacy gets you that much unless alum is a major donor or majorly active as an alum. |
| My son got into three. I went to a state school, we’re white, American, he’s not an athlete, we didn’t donate any money. |
Again, no, Ivies do not offer any scholarships beyond financial aid, so no list of accomplishments changes that. |
I don’t think PP meant merit aid, rather merit as in stellar academics. |
I realize that now, yes. I rarely see that word on the college forum when it isn't connected to *money* issues and assumed before I read it properly... |
Because they can. |
+1 Sufficient or NEAR sufficient grades- test scores optional - under the guise of "athlete" - from the ones I know. In many ways, it used to be much harder to get in to Ivy colleges/unis. |
e) family has extraordinary wealth. (Such that they are capable of 7- or 8-digit donations.) Plus good grades/test scores. |