<p>-Why?
-If so, what do people mean by easier? Less standards?</p>
<p>No it’s not.</p>
<p>why don’t you apply and find out in March, if it’s easier or not :)</p>
<p>30,000 apps for 2,000 seats. Being one of the big dawgs in your hs is not what makes you valuable to any competitive college. </p>
<p>Easiest in terms of just raw admissions difficulty are:</p>
<ol>
<li> Cornell</li>
<li> Dartmouth
3… Penn</li>
</ol>
<p>But – I know kids who were Reilly Scholars at Notre Dame and Trustee Scholars at USC (essentially full rides and top 1% of those schools applicants) who did not get in to these three. Ivies are really just crazy difficult – any of them!</p>
<p>You’re asking the wrong questions. </p>
<p>The easiest admissions and best colleges for you will be the ones whose resources, needs and culture mesh well with your interests, talents and personality. You should start your college search with that mindset, lest you end it in disappointment and missed opportunities. </p>
<p>This is like asking which of the Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders it’s easiest to get a date with.</p>
<p>To expand on the “Dallas Cheerleaders” analogy:</p>
<p>Each Ivy has its own “personality”. They each value different things and take different things into account for people applying (or trying to get a date). That’s why you rarely ever see someone get into all the Ivies. They might get into one or two, but never much more than that.</p>
<p>That being said, Brown is known as the Ivy that is very laid back and may not care about very high standardized test scores, compared to some other Ivies.</p>
<p>Then again, no one really knows exactly what each Ivy looks for. The only real way to know if you’ll be accepted is to apply. </p>