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Today at 5 p.m., top high school students from around the world found out whether they will attend one of the eight prestigious Ivy League universities next year. This year was extremely competitive for some of the Ivies, with Princeton University, University of Pennsylvania, and Cornell University all recording their most selective admissions classes ever.

Princeton admitted 7.28% of applicants, down slightly from 7.29% in 2013, and accepted 1,939 students out of 26,641 applicants

The University of Pennsylvania admitted 9.9% of applicants to the Class of 2018, down from 12.1% last year. The Philadelphia-based university accepted 3,551 of their 35,788 applicants.

Cornell University, which has the highest admissions rate in the Ivy League, dropped over a percentage point this year, with a 14% acceptance rate, taking 6,025 students from 43,041 applications. Cornell accepted 15.2% of applicants last year.

Brown University accepted 2,619 of 30,291 applicants, or an 8.6% acceptance rate. Last year, the university had a 9.2% acceptance rate. Other Ivies saw their acceptance rate rise from last year.

Dartmouth College took 11.5% of applicants to the Class of 2018, up from a 10% admissions rate last year. Dartmouth recieved 19,235 applications this year, and accepted 2,220 students.

Harvard University admitted 5.9% of applicants, according to The Harvard Crimson, up slightly from last year's 5.8% admissions rate. Harvard accepted 2,023 of their 34,295 applications.

Columbia University admitted 6.94% of applicants, up from a record low 6.89% acceptance rate for the Class of 2017. Columbia accepted 2,291 of their 32,952 applicants.

Other top colleges have also released their admissions data. MIT took 7.7% of applications, while Duke University accepted 10.7% of student applicants. The only Ivy that has yet to release their admissions data is Yale University. Yale had a 6.72% admissions rate last year. Probably the most interesting statistics released are for Dartmouth, which has posted consistently lower application numbers over the past two years. Dartmouth recieved 19,235 applications this year, down 14% from the year before.

Here's how many students applied to and were accepted to the Ivy League this year:

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2014.03.28
08:25:28
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List of Articles
번호 제목 날짜 조회 수sort
99 Columbia Spectator: "Columbia College, SEAS see record-low admit rate for class of 2017" 2013-04-04 16620
98 September Check List for Juniors 2013-09-16 15585
97 "They Loved Your G.P.A Then They Saw Your Tweets": A Reason to Be Careful to Post on Social Media 2013-11-11 15301
96 Approximate Dates of Early Application Notification 2013-12-06 14938
95 The Harvard Crimson: "Harvard College Accepts Record Low of 5.8 Percent to the Class of 2017" 2013-04-05 14423
94 From The Daily Princetonian: U Accepts 7.29 Percent of Applicants 2013-04-04 13768
93 Financial Aid Deadlines 2013-01-09 13660
» Ivy League General 2014-03-28 13499
91 Princeton offers early action admission to 785 students for Class of 2020 2016-02-17 12587
90 From Yale Admissions Office: Admit rate falls to all-time low 2013-04-04 12413
89 The Cornell Daily Sun: "Cornell Releases Class of 2017 Regular Decision Results" 2013-04-05 11875
88 Cornell University Receives Record Number of Early Decision Applications 2016-02-19 11758
87 Ivy League's and major universities' early application figures [Updated as of 12/6] 2013-12-04 11648
86 The Brown Daily Herald: "U. accepts second-lowest percentage of applicants ever" 2013-04-05 11637
85 September Checklist for Seniors (from NYT Blog) 2013-08-31 11456
84 Brown's Free Offer: "bridging the gap between college and high school with an open online course" 2013-04-27 11368
83 From "Guidance Office: Answers from Harvard's Dean, Part I" 2013-07-01 11186
82 The Daily Pennsylvanian: "Penn admit rate drops to record-low 12.1 percent" 2013-04-05 11158
81 Harvard University admission (Class of 2025) 2021-04-07 10582
80 The College Board Announces Redesigned SAT [from College Board] 2014-03-12 10498