宾夕法尼亚大学(University of Pennsylvania ),简称“宾大(UPenn)”,是一所全球顶尖的私立研究型大学,著名的八所常春藤盟校之一,美国大学协会14所创始成员之一。坐落于美国第四大城市费城。宾大由本杰明·富兰克林创建于1740年,是美国第四古老的高等教育机构,也是美国第一所从事科学技术和人文教育的现代高等学校。根据《福布斯》最新发布2021年全球亿万富豪排行榜中,这所学校培养出19位亿万富豪,数量位居全美第一!这所历史悠久的美国大学同样是中国很多名人的摇篮。著名的建筑大师、清华大学建筑系的奠造者梁思成,他的太太才女林徽因,也同样毕业于宾夕法尼亚大学的美术系。与此同时,这所大学也拥有全世界最强大的校友网络,包括数十位在各自领域的最高奖项获得者(如诺贝尔奖、图灵奖等)以及许多美国国家院士。学院相关排名:
J to the Z | What I learned in the ups and downs after college admission decisions
Credit: Alice ChoiDear high school seniors,A lot of you will be opening your college decision letters soon. To start, congratulations on arriving here without losing your mind in the college application process (or maybe you did) — which is a feat in itself. The next few weeks and months could be a time filled with excitement, congratulations, and a sense of satisfaction for the hard work you’ve put in throughout high school, which I sincerely hope to be the case for you. Or it could be dominated by confusion, frustration, and anger. Having been in your shoes two years ago, I want to share some of the things I learned and emotions I felt along the way as you begin your college matriculation journey.Though it feels like an eternity ago, I distinctly remember what transpired on March 27, 2020, that year’s Ivy Day. An aspiring journalist, my dream school at the time was Northwestern University, which released its decision on Ivy Day as well. As the hands on my clock inched toward 7 p.m., I popped my knuckles nervously, teeming with a bit of hope. As the emails began to come in, I opened them one by one in my bedroom. My parents waited eagerly in the living room, hoping to hear me cheer or scream out in excitement.I didn’t cheer or scream. In fact, the whole experience was utterly anticlimactic. I was rejected by every single Ivy League university other than Penn, which had waitlisted me. I was also waitlisted by Northwestern, a decision that flattened me and left me dazed. Otherwise, I was accepted to one other top-20 college and waitlisted by another.Other than sending follow-up letters to the three schools by whom I was waitlisted, there was not a lot to do in the following days. The COVID-19 pandemic was at its height globally, and I flew back to China as my high school in southern Pennsylvania was closed due to COVID-19. Without much opportunity to go outside, questions perfused my mind: What happened? Was my GPA not good enough, or did I not do enough extracurricular activities? Were my essays not convincing? Was I not good enough?A lot of my focus was also spent getting to know the college that accepted me. Don’t get me wrong — it is a great college, I was very lucky to get accepted, and I looked forward to going there more and more as I got to know the school. Retrospectively, it was conceited to assume that things would go the way I wanted them to because let’s face it — the college admission process is hardly a formulaic math equation. There is a lot at play: luck, timing, and more factors excluding those on paper. All we can do is be our best and let things unfurl, knowing that acceptances and rejections are in no way holistic judgements of our character.About one month later, I got off the waitlist at one university and received the same message from Penn three weeks after that. I ended up choosing to enroll at Penn. In many ways, I am glad I went through two waitlists to get to Penn: It showed me that neither Penn nor any other university is everything. As I got to know the other two universities along the process, I realized they have so much to offer: programs, classes, friends, and more. Though no two colleges have the exact same opportunities, at the end of the day, every one of them has plenty for us to explore and thrive in.When I shared my story in the past, some have said, “It is easy for you to say that everything will work out for the best, you got into Penn!” They are right in that I was very lucky. Though in all honesty, I didn’t like Penn when I first visited — and I chose it very much under the sway of the fact that three of my best friends would be coming with me. Admittedly, the community and the school has grown on me in the last few months, and I could not imagine a college experience without the friends I have come to be so close with. I didn’t think Penn was the school for me, and though I will never find out whether I would have thrived more at other schools, I now firmly believe this is the community that is best for me. It is almost strange how puzzle pieces I thought wouldn’t fit together did at last.The questions I asked about my own eligibility on paper and in life were never answered, nor will they ever be. However, I now know that the judge of those questions should not be college admissions officers or any outside players but myself. Moreover, just because we didn’t get accepted to our dream college doesn’t mean the process has failed; it takes unexpected routes to foster unexpected growth and discoveries. Through all of it, we can only trust that everything happens for a reason, and that regardless of where those decision letters take us, we will grow and discover, to our own surprises, new aspects of ourselves.Best of luck on your next adventure,JesseJESSE ZHANG is a College and Wharton sophomore studying Marketing and Communication from Shenzhen, China. 原文链接:https://www.thedp.com/article/2022/03/college-admissions-decisions 【往期精选】 重磅官宣!留学生国内上网课不能学历认证 重磅!爆料美国藤校留学申请内幕,招生流程、细节揭秘中考取消?高中登记入学?北京率先试点!尚属首例 一封妈妈写给即将出国孩子的书信:深切而温暖 突发!哥大、NYU、康奈尔、罗彻斯特或将取消ED政策… 哥大教授自爆:哥大涉嫌提供虚假数据,“刷”排名... 中国哪些中学出国人数最多? 留学生“天价”机票套路满满,谁是幕后推手? 95后留学生震惊老外:中国人太厉害了!