bonluvdan
Apr 9 2006, 08:10 AM
as titled
These are my dreame/ideal universities! haha...
but the probability for me entering either on of them is extremely low = ="
mipadi
Apr 9 2006, 10:38 AM
No, not really. I've never had an interest.
voguelove
Apr 9 2006, 12:47 PM
^^me too.
i dont care about ivy league schools. as long as i get into my state university, im fine.
illumineering
Apr 9 2006, 02:15 PM
While it is a worthy accomplishment for some, I'm not enamored by the thought.
ecargnmyst
Apr 9 2006, 02:33 PM
i didnt really dream..but frshmn yr when asked what schools i was aiming for i put down princeton..yale..lol
but now im a senior..its not that easy getting into yale..so im just going to some other school..but alot of the ppl from my school got into the ivys..=\ makes me feel so ashamed
BOOGERSHAHA
Apr 9 2006, 02:38 PM
yeah of course, but i didn't apply to any of those top ivies like harvard/yale/princeton. when i visited, i didn't really like the campus and i would have felt bad if the main reason i liked the school was the prestige that went with it.
ecargnmyst
Apr 9 2006, 02:52 PM
^haha i think thats how my parents r ...they want me to go to harvard/yale b/c its world famous...and from what theyve heard..u get a good job once u graduate ..but thats how they screwed me over for H.S. -_- they made me go to this H.s. b/c it was famous and they didnt even care that i didnt like math/sci ><
innovation
Apr 9 2006, 06:37 PM
I'm thinking about the London School of Economics, which is rather prestigious, too...
silver-rain
Apr 9 2006, 06:58 PM
Actually, when I was younger, I really wanted to go to Oxford. I was entertaining thoughts of applying there too this year, but I figured my grades wouldn't admit me.
anoniez
Apr 9 2006, 07:41 PM
If you want to go to Oxford, the best thing to do would be to apply there for graduate school because they take hardly any undergrads from the U.S., but a lot of grads from the U.S.
I don't know anything about Cambridge, though..
Rachel
Apr 9 2006, 08:30 PM
I never actually wanted to go to an Ivy school. It's not that I was lazy, I just never wanted to go to one. Name and prestige don't appeal to me. The quality of life and education do, as well as the feeling I get from it.
swtcherriipie
Apr 9 2006, 08:48 PM
No but i have dreamed of entering NYU....
I guess it was so PRETTY when i was 12 and to this day its still an aspitration.
Edit.// I got accepted YES! transferring 2007 w00pw00p GO ME!
mipadi
Apr 10 2006, 02:16 PM
QUOTE(Rachel is love @ Apr 9 2006, 9:30 PM)

I never actually wanted to go to an Ivy school. It's not that I was lazy, I just never wanted to go to one. Name and prestige don't appeal to me. The quality of life and education do, as well as the feeling I get from it.
Amen to that.
hi-C
Apr 10 2006, 05:47 PM
Ditto what Rachel said. There's nothing I could get from an Ivy that I'm getting right now from NYU (ha, although it wants to be an Ivy sooooooooo bad).
I did want to go to Oxford though, I thought that would be cool. But I looked up their application process a little to late to go through with it. I'll have to do with studying abroad in London next Spring.
jennyjenny
Apr 10 2006, 09:02 PM
At one point, when I was little. But now it seems like a dream to me. You have to consider costs too, unless you get in on a scholarship, then that would be amazing. But right now I'm aiming at things a little less.
jenniez618
Apr 21 2006, 08:02 PM
hmm, yes i did dream about getting into Harvard, but it was my parent's dream, but since my sister goes to Harvard, they kind of gave up on me, but I would like to go to Cornell or Columbia :).
misoshiru
Apr 22 2006, 01:02 AM
Rachel's said what I wanted to say :D
I'd previously wanted to go to Tufts University, not for the name, but because the campus is gorgeous. But, I don't want to go there anymore, and I'm not going there.
Schools like Harvard is all about money and your intelligence. A lot of people who're the valedictorians may go to an Ivy, and realize that no, they're not really that smart anymore. And they have a hard time in college because they spend all their time trying to stay on top of things.
QUOTE(swtcherriipie @ Apr 10 2006, 9:48 AM)

No but i have dreamed of entering NYU....
I guess it was so PRETTY when i was 12 and to this day its still an aspitration.
Edit.// I got accepted YES! transferring 2007 w00pw00p GO ME! Wait..you got accepted, and then you're transferring out? Why?
BOOGERSHAHA
Apr 22 2006, 01:38 PM
^ transferring into nyu. it doesn't make sense to transfer out...
silver-rain
Apr 22 2006, 02:18 PM
QUOTE(je like french @ Apr 22 2006, 2:38 PM)

^ transferring into nyu. it doesn't make sense to transfer out...
Eh, I'm thinking of transfering out of NYU if I get into the schools I'll apply for.
sprezzatura
Apr 22 2006, 05:07 PM
Yes, but my goal is towards UCLA or UC Berkeley. The UC system costs less but these two universities are good.
innovation
Apr 22 2006, 11:20 PM
QUOTE
Schools like Harvard is all about money and your intelligence. A lot of people who're the valedictorians may go to an Ivy, and realize that no, they're not really that smart anymore. And they have a hard time in college because they spend all their time trying to stay on top of things.
A. Prestigious institutions are not simply about "the money". Universities such as Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania have taken initiatives to increase aid for low-income families. For example, families that make less than $40,000 per year are not required to pay any tuition at Harvard University. Financial aid distribution within the Ivy League is completely need-based; even so, two-thirds of Harvard undergrad students qualify for some form of aid, the average grant being $24,000
per year.
B. According to Boston Magazine, Harvard is more likely to "select students who typically have shown some all-consuming passion, and will dedicate themselves to it even at the cost of their academics." During the admissions process, Harvard scrutinizes a candidate's character, for its admissions officers weight each of the applicants' teacher/counselor recommendations individually.
C. Of course, schools like Harvard value your intelligence. But a GPA or SAT score in no way predicts a candidate's
future success at the institution and beyond. Selective schools want students who demonstrate significant potential for leadership and excellence so that they can contribute to both academic and social life at the university.
D. Students work to find their "niche" at Ivies. Yes, the schools are competitive, but because interests and passions are so diverse, students grow through their interactions with classmates. Students go to Ivies to be challenged, and this is exactly what they get at the Ivies. Of course they're going to struggle at times to maintain balance in their lives. It's a skill that they need to develop for life.
Just because you don't feel that such an institution would appeal to you is no reason to stereotype like this. And I wouldn't say that applying to Tufts for its beautiful campus is any better than applying to it for its prestige.
jenniez618
Apr 22 2006, 11:26 PM
QUOTE(monde libre @ Apr 23 2006, 12:20 AM)

A. Prestigious institutions are not simply about "the money". Universities such as Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania have taken initiatives to increase aid for low-income families. For example, families that make less than $40,000 per year are not required to pay any tuition at Harvard University. Financial aid distribution within the Ivy League is completely need-based; even so, two-thirds of Harvard undergrad students qualify for some form of aid, the average grant being $24,000 per year.
B. According to Boston Magazine, Harvard is more likely to "select students who typically have shown some all-consuming passion, and will dedicate themselves to it even at the cost of their academics." During the admissions process, Harvard scrutinizes a candidate's character, for its admissions officers weight each of the applicants' teacher/counselor recommendations individually.
C. Of course, schools like Harvard value your intelligence. But a GPA or SAT score in no way predicts a candidate's future success at the institution and beyond. Selective schools want students who demonstrate significant potential for leadership and excellence so that they can contribute to both academic and social life at the university.
D. Students work to find their "niche" at Ivies. Yes, the schools are competitive, but because interests and passions are so diverse, students grow through their interactions with classmates. Students go to Ivies to be challenged, and this is exactly what they get at the Ivies. Of course they're going to struggle at times to maintain balance in their lives. It's a skill that they need to develop for life.
Just because you don't feel that such an institution would appeal to you is no reason to stereotype like this. And I wouldn't say that applying to Tufts for its beautiful campus is any better than applying to it for its prestige.
True, the tutition at Harvard is like around 56,000 dollars a year, but since my family's income is low, my parents only have to pay like 3,000-5,000 a year.
innovation
Apr 23 2006, 12:06 AM
^ And that's why need-based financial aid is good. It helps.
AngelinaTaylor
Apr 23 2006, 12:18 PM
Does Julliard count? I'm going there for my third year..
Taylor``
BOOGERSHAHA
Apr 23 2006, 05:11 PM
QUOTE(silver rain @ Apr 22 2006, 3:18 PM)

Eh, I'm thinking of transfering out of NYU if I get into the schools I'll apply for.
whoops sorry, i meant in the context of her post. she was really excited about nyu and it wouldn't have made sense for her to want to transfer out.
_sarcastic_
Apr 23 2006, 08:21 PM
i've dreamed of getting into Harvard when i was young, but now in H.S. i realized my grades aren't going to get me there anyways
so now i'm aiming for my state's college or UCLA
Looow
Apr 24 2006, 06:28 PM
i've never dreamed about getting into a college of that. i've never thought about it. i know i could never get the grades that i need to get there even if i tried. i'm not tripping though.
mipadi
Apr 25 2006, 09:45 AM
When I was younger, I really, really wanted to go to MIT, and I feel like I could've gotten in had I applied myself more in high school. (I was pretty lazy back then.) I mean, I like where I am now, but MIT has a really, really nice CS program...
kyttiekatt
Apr 25 2006, 04:28 PM
actually i'm more of a yale person, but cambridge sounds cool
mipadi
Apr 25 2006, 10:16 PM
QUOTE(kyttiekatt @ Apr 25 2006, 5:28 PM)

actually i'm more of a yale person, but cambridge sounds cool
What does that mean?
chasingvictory
Apr 26 2006, 01:55 PM
at one point at my like ( i was around 8 or 10 ) i wanted to go to YALE. Now since I'm going to grad. next year I want to go to ODU here in Norfolk,VA.
EddieV
Apr 26 2006, 01:56 PM
No, I never really thought of Ivy League, my biggest dream is probably MIT. But that's about it, I'm not really the type of person to persue big careers, rather I want easy-going freelance jobs, or to own my own business.
mipadi
Apr 26 2006, 02:06 PM
MIT isn't an Ivy League school.
EddieV
Apr 26 2006, 02:08 PM
^ Yeah I know, I just realized that after I posted.
x__rilind
Apr 26 2006, 10:13 PM
as a child i always dreamed of going to oxford, mainly for reasons i don't even remember anymore.
after a time, i gave up on the idea. and now i'm not even going to school in england. yay united states university...
>rilind
Ambuletz
May 4 2006, 08:52 AM
Nope. I never have dreamed of that. As long as I go to a college and get a decent job afterwards.
Statues/Shadows
May 4 2006, 02:32 PM
QUOTE(mipadi @ Apr 25 2006, 11:16 PM)

What does that mean?
Assumedly it means that England is more appealing than a school in America.
mipadi
May 4 2006, 06:13 PM
QUOTE(Statues/Shadows @ May 4 2006, 3:32 PM)

Assumedly it means that England is more appealing than a school in America.
Yeah, but what does "I'm more of a Yale person" mean?
Statues/Shadows
May 4 2006, 09:29 PM
oh, I misread that. I guess Yale has some sort of impressive aura to it? I really don't know.
I Shot JFK
May 6 2006, 12:10 PM
QUOTE(monde libre @ Apr 10 2006, 12:37 AM)

I'm thinking about the London School of Economics, which is rather prestigious, too...
ooh, mindy that would be exciting!
i could come visit!
anyway, im applying for cambridge. and not because i want to go. but because my school has decided my life will not be worth living if i dont, and i cant be assed to fight them.
plus, it means i have to ge tmy apps in earlier, which is good, because it means i wont be so lazy with the schools i actually want to go to.
plus, i KINDA wanna be the kid turned down cambridge and went to nottingham
CarolineHsu
May 8 2006, 09:57 PM
QUOTE
No but i have dreamed of entering NYU.... smile.gif I guess it was so PRETTY when i was 12 and to this day its still an aspitration.
Edit.// I got accepted YES! transferring 2007 w00pw00p GO ME!
TRUE DAT TRUE DAT. I really want to go to NYU.
LOL WOW! Oxford is my dream school, if not undergrad, then grad's fine. Cambridge I'd like to go to, in case I major in Computer Sciences or something of the likes. Harvard...I used to want to go there..but not so much any more. It's respectable though. =)
Crich323
May 11 2006, 09:18 PM
I wouldn't want to but I seriously think that if I did, I could get in there when I graduate.
xPartyGrlDx
May 11 2006, 11:09 PM
Stanford for me. Yale & Harvard sound pretty cool too but it's just too far away. My grades are pretty good. & now that I'm graduating 8th grade, I'm starting fresh in high school. I have a good chance of keeping up my grades & maintaing straight A's. If not Stanford, any UC schools are pretty good too.
misoshiru
May 15 2006, 07:54 AM
QUOTE(mipadi @ Apr 26 2006, 11:16 AM)

What does that mean?
It means that they think they'd fit in better at Yale than at Cambridge.
FreeStickers
May 30 2006, 12:25 AM
When I was younger, I kind of wanted to go to Harvard, but due to the poor state of my grades, I've given up on that idea. I've dreamt of being able to afford them.
yoshie
May 30 2006, 06:27 PM
if you're aspiring to become a student at an ivy league school, it's not all about grades like most people believe. you must be a well-rounded person, meaning good grades, high academic position (high class rank), leadership roles (class president), athleticism (captain of basketball team), strong personality (expressed in essay), become involved (member of many school clubs), and an extensive list of extra-curricular activities such as community service and such.
i've known several people that had straight 4.0 GPA all of HS, or even higher because of weighted AP that were confident of their chances for acceptance into an ivy league and still were not accepted. i'm not being pessimistic, but with the overall number of people that apply to those schools, chances are highly unlikely (even if you deserve it) that one would get an acceptance letter. remember to always have an additional 4+ colleges that you can fall back on.
and ivy leagues do not matter much in terms of graduate school, since most job employers could care less where you received your MA, as long as you have one.
starlette
May 30 2006, 06:30 PM
no. college is the devil. at least for a person in my line of work.
31miracles
May 30 2006, 06:39 PM
yea my parents said i HAVE to make it to an Ivy League School
I'm aiming fo MIT, Princeton, Yale, or Standford at lowest
mipadi
May 30 2006, 10:21 PM
QUOTE(cvchango @ May 30 2006, 7:39 PM)

yea my parents said i HAVE to make it to an Ivy League School
I'm aiming fo MIT, Princeton, Yale, or Standford at lowest
MIT isn't an Ivy.
misoshiru
May 31 2006, 03:58 AM
ROFL. People just don't seem to realize that MIT may be in the top 10, but its not an Ivy. Stanford's not an Ivy either.
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