<p>I don't mean the easiest university out if all ivies, I mean like if the college of engineering in Princeton is the easiest college to get into out of all the colleges in all Ivies.</p>
<p>Brown PLME</p>
<p>Harvard Extension School</p>
<p>Ivy Tech Community College, Accepts everyone who applies.</p>
<p>Lol I wasn’t talking about community colleges. </p>
<p>DARNIT, @marvin100. I was going to say that.</p>
<p>And yes, Princeton engineering is the easiest. By far. Try for there.</p>
<p>I think people are trying to convey that your question is not a good one. It makes no sense. </p>
<p>Admission to any of the Ivy League colleges is highly competitive. Lets put your question to the test. </p>
<ol>
<li>Nancy has won international literary awards. She got the highest grade in all her classes. In her last two years of high school she Aced college English and History classes. She took a history and English SAT2 and got 800 in both. She applies to Penn Engineering program because she has now decided she wants to be an engineer. Will she get in. Probably not. Getting into Brown would have probably been easier for her. Does that make Brown an easier school to get into? Only for Nancy. </li>
</ol>
<p>2.Bobby is a straight A student who has taken a lot of math and science-got 800s on all his SAT2 in a ton of math and science classes. He has won many science awards. He has decided he wants a career in hotel management so he applies to Cornell’s hotel school (SHA) . Will he get in? probably not. Does that mean that SHA is hard to get into. Yes for Bobby. </p>
<ol>
<li>Peter started working for a bakery when he was 13. He subsequently worked for a string of different restaurants-one of which was in a hotel. He got to know the managers at the hotel and learned the hotel business from the inside. He had creative cost effective ideas for making the hotel more desirable to tourists. They implemented his ideas and vacancy rates were reduced significantly. His grades in school were fine but not great. He decided to apply to Yale to study history. Too bad because he was probably a shoe-in for Cornell-hotel. Does that mean that SHA is easier to get into than Yale? Not for everybody but yes for Peter.<br></li>
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<p>It is silly to think that engineering is easier to get into based on the idea that it may get fewer applications than other programs. The credentials of those applying are different. Applicants with outstanding math and science backgrounds self select the engineering program whereas the run of the mill student less informed about what they want is more likely to apply to U of Penn-along with loads of others who know exactly what they want but it is not engineering. So, engineering gets fewer applicants but a very strong pool. Just because fewer apply does not mean your odds go up if you don’t have credentials that align with those that are admitted.There is no easy Ivy.</p>
<p>If ur looking for Statistically which is the easiest it’s Cornell ED then penn ED. Both around ~30% but that’s a terrible metric the above post is very accurate and in those situations it’s still not guaranteed the kid would get into where he fit best</p>
<p>Also, NYS residents have an edge when applying to Cornell’s contract colleges.</p>