Ivy League


Ivy League colleges are often viewed as the gold standard of colleges in the US and worldwide.

The eight members are Brown University, Columbia University, Cornell University, Dartmouth College, Harvard University, the University of Pennsylvania, Princeton University, and Yale University. Ivy League has connotations of academic excellence, selectivity in admissions, and social elitism.


Locations :

  • Brown University – Providence, rhode Island

  • Columbia University – New York city, New York

  • Cornell University – Ithaca, New York

  • Dartmount College - Hanover, New Hampshire

  • Harvard University – Cambridge , Massachusetts.

  • Princeton University – Princeton, New Jersey

  • University of Pennsylvania – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

  • Yale University – New Haven, Connecticut


four factors to keep in mind as you research the Ivy League:

  • Setting – One of the biggest differences between Ivy League schools is their settings.-urban, suburban or rural.

  • The urban Ivy League schools include Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Brown, and the University of Pennsylvania. However, they’re all in cities of very different types and sizes.

  • In terms of urban environments, Columbia is in New York City—the most densely populated city in the US—while UPenn is situated in Philadelphia, another large city.

  • By contrast, Brown is in the small city of Providence, Rhode Island, offering a much more subdued environment. Similarly, Harvard is in a college town called Cambridge, which is located just outside of Boston. And Yale is located in New Haven, Connecticut, which has a population of just 130,000 compared with the roughly 8.4 million people in NYC.

  • Princeton is the only Ivy League school in a suburban setting. It's more self-contained and the surrounding area is quieter than those of other Ivies.

  • Cornell and Dartmouth offer students a rural environment, where students are surrounded by nature and there's not much going on in the town unrelated to the college.