Converting a 90 ATAR: Are You Competitive for the Ivy League?
The 90 ATAR Reality Check
You worked incredibly hard in your final year of Australian high school and secured a 90.00 ATAR. You are in the top 10% of the country. You are an academic powerhouse in Sydney.
You decide you want to apply to Harvard, Yale, and Princeton in the United States. You figure that since you are in the top 10% of Australia, you must be competitive.
You are about to hit a massive wall of international admissions statistics.
The International Quota
Ivy League universities are American institutions. They exist primarily to educate American citizens. Typically, only 10% to 15% of an Ivy League freshman class is composed of international students.If Harvard accepts 2,000 freshmen, only 200 to 300 spots are available for the entire planet. Out of those 300 spots, they must distribute them across China, India, the UK, Europe, Africa, and South America. Ultimately, Harvard might only accept 5 to 10 students from Australia per year.
The 99.95 Bloodbath
If you want one of those 5 spots, a 90 ATAR is mathematically irrelevant.To even survive the first round of the Ivy League international filter, you generally need an ATAR of 98.00 or higher. Most of the Australian students admitted to Harvard or MIT are scoring 99.90 or 99.95 (the literal top 0.1% of the country) AND they have won international medals in Math or Science Olympiads.
A 90 ATAR translates roughly to a 3.5 or 3.6 American GPA. At Harvard, the average admitted American student has a 3.95 Unweighted GPA. You are statistically too far behind the curve.
Where a 90 ATAR Actually Wins
Do not despair. While the Ivy League might be out of reach, a 90 ATAR is highly respected at massive, excellent American public universities.The Strategy: If you have a 90 ATAR, do not waste $500 applying to 6 Ivy League schools. Target Top 50 American state universities where your top 10% ranking will actually be rewarded with admission and potential international merit scholarships.
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