<p>Which Ivy would be easiest to get in for math?</p>
<p>Definitely no for Princeton, and most likely Harvard, and Yale.</p>
<p>I would like your opinions. I think Columbia might be the easiest because it attracts so many literature and other majors centering around the core curriculum?</p>
<p>You thought wrong brah.</p>
<p>My sister just graduated from Dartmouth last June with a degree in math. She had to work very hard to get good grades in her math classes, and she went to Dartmouth rather well-prepared in math, having studied in the Texas Academy of Mathematics and Science (TAMS) taking university classes for 2 years. </p>
<p>It seems like you want to study math at an Ivy, any Ivy. Instead of asking which one is the easiest to get into, you might want to consider which one is the best for you. Would you like to live in NYC, Ithaca, Hanover, Philadelphia, or somewhere else for 4 years? There’s a HUGE difference among those cities. Dartmouth operates on the quarter system and is, as far as I know, the only Ivy that does. This means that your classes are far more compact, more intense, and you meet more often during the week. Take Yale’s semester-long class and shorten it a few weeks and you’ll get an idea. The good news is that you generally take fewer classes every quarter, usually 3, so that certainly helps. Hanover isn’t for everyone. It’s small, quiet, and you’d be about 2-2.5 hours from Boston, if you like big cities. Ithaca is also small, but Cornell is larger than Dartmouth, so if you like BIG, then that might be a better option for you. </p>
<p>The last thing you want is to attend a school where you end up miserable. The ease of admission should NOT be as important as how well the school fits you. Learn more about them and find the ones that you genuinely like and could live and study at for 4 years. Good luck!</p>