What are the Ivy League colleges in the United States?

What are the Ivy League colleges in the US? Below and take a look! Welcome to read.

List of Ivy League Universities in the United States

First, Harvard University

Harvard University was founded in 1636, and its Graduate School of Arts and Sciences was organized in 1872, one of the oldest universities in the United States, which has produced six U.S. presidents, 33 Nobel laureates and 32 Pulitzer Prize winners. The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences was organized in 1872 and is one of the oldest universities in the United States. Harvard University harvard University is not only the U.S. government to develop domestic and foreign political, military, foreign policy think tank, and in the school, a variety of academic schools and political ideas are very active. Whether from the school's reputation, equipment, professor lineup, student quality, Harvard University harvard University is called the world's first-class.

Second, Yale University

Yale University was founded in 1701, is a private university. It and Harvard University, Princeton University, the same name, over the years *** with the competition in the United States universities and graduate schools in the top three positions. The university's professorial lineup, academic innovation, curriculum, and field facilities are top-notch. The campus architecture is dominated by Goethean and Georgian style buildings, most of which are more than 100 years old. Classical buildings and a few modern-style buildings are intertwined, making the entire campus very classical and beautiful. In the fall, the campus boulevard is covered with deep yellow, light red, orange-red leaves, the sun shines diagonally on the antique buildings built of yellowish-brown square stone, making the whole campus look extraordinarily beautiful and romantic. Yale University's free academic atmosphere, deep cultural atmosphere, solemn and solemn sense of history attracts outstanding students from all over the world.

Third, Princeton University

Princeton University (Princeton University), referred to as Princeton, is a world-renowned private research university, located in Princeton, New Jersey, the United States, is one of the eight Ivy League schools. Princeton University and the nearby Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton (IAS)*** with the world-renowned theoretical research centers, the development of basic mathematics, theoretical physics, economics and other disciplines have a profound impact.

The school was founded in 1746 in Elizabethtown, New Jersey, as the fourth college of higher education in colonial America, and was called the "College of New Jersey" at the time. In 1896, it was officially renamed Princeton University. Although its old name was "The College of New Jersey," it is not related to the "College of New Jersey" located in neighboring Ewing Township today. It was originally a Presbyterian educational institution, but the school has never been directly affiliated with any religious institution.

Columbia University

Columbia University, located in the heart of New York City, was founded in 1754 and celebrated its 250th anniversary in 2004. In its early days, it had only one classroom, one professor and eight students. Now, it is one of the top eight Ivy League schools with 23,650 students. Because of its location in New York City, many students come to Columbia. Now Columbia University has 16 colleges and universities, and has always been ranked in the top of the general academic rankings, its medical, law and MBA are also outstanding, in the natural science disciplines such as chemistry, biology, computers, geography and other subjects also enjoy an international reputation.

Fifth, the University of Pennsylvania

The University of Pennsylvania (University of Pennsylvania) is the first modern university in the United States, in the back of the Ivy's label, the University of Pennsylvania can be said to live up to expectations. Not only the United States, North America's first medical school, the first business school, the first media school and the first student government organization were all born at the University of Pennsylvania. Its finance and nursing majors ranked first in the United States, education, economics, health care, history, law, English and other business majors are ranked in the United States top ten.

Six, Dartmouth College

Founded in 1769, Dartmouth College (also translated as "Darmouth University") is the ninth oldest college in the United States, is also known as one of the Ivy League colleges, is located in Hanover, New Hampshire (Hanover) town. The Reverend Elizaveloque originally founded the school to train young men from local Indian tribes as well as young whites. For the first two hundred years it was exclusively for boys, and it was not until 1972 that it became coeducational, one of the last of the Ivy League colleges to admit girls. Nonetheless, it is one of the most successful colleges for educating boys, and in today's boy-crisis-ridden United States, 2/3 of its students are still male.

The school's research and teaching equipment is advanced, well-equipped, strong in research and teaching, and is a modern, comprehensive private university with a long history and a fine cultural tradition. There are nearly 6,000 students enrolled in the university, including nearly 1,500 graduate students. Students come from all 50 states and more than 100 countries around the world, of which Asian students account for 10%, black students account for 7%, Hispanic students account for 5%, white students account for 75%.

Seven, Brown University

Brown University (Brown University) is located in Providence, Rhode Island, the United States, is one of the Ivy League schools. Brown University is also the first college in the United States to accept students of any religious background for enrollment. Admission to Brown is extremely competitive, with an undergraduate enrollment rate of 8%, the 6th lowest acceptance rate of any doctoral-granting university in the nation. Students come from all 50 states and 65 different countries around the world. Brown's financial aid program provides approximately $700 million annually to students in the form of scholarships, grants, and loans, which makes financial aid available to more than 50% of the student body. Brown University was the first of all Ivy League schools to establish an engineering department for undergraduates in 1847, and it was also the first to begin emphasizing media education, with students being able to study a variety of critical theories, such as film appreciation and criticism, in the Department of Modern Culture and Media. Although Brown is considered a small university, the university has 689 full-time faculty members and 2,000 graduate students, and two alumni are Nobel Prize winners.

VIII. Cornell University

Cornell University (English: Cornell University) is a private research university located in Ithaca, New York, United States, with two other campuses located in New York City and Education City, Qatar, and is a member of the prestigious Ivy League.

Cornell University was founded by Ezra K. Cornell and Andrew K. Cornell, and is a member of the prestigious Ivy League. Cornell and Andrew? Cornell University is co-educational and open to students of all faiths and races. From the beginning of the school's existence, its founders expected to make UConn a new, all-encompassing university, teaching everything from literature to the natural sciences, from theoretical research to practical applications. This idea eventually became Cornell's motto: "I would found an institution where any person can find instruction in any study).

Cornell has seven undergraduate colleges and seven graduate colleges, each of which develops its own academic program, and in 2001, Cornell established a new medical school in Qatar with the mission "to serve society by educating the leaders of tomorrow and expanding new frontiers of knowledge." (to serve society by educating the leaders of tomorrow and extending the frontiers of knowledge.) There are now more than 2.4 million Cornell alumni, and more than 40 faculty members and students have been awarded the Nobel Prize. Scientific research is the cornerstone of Cornell's approach, and in the fiscal year between July 2004 and June 2005, $561.3 million was spent on research in a variety of fields.