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Nigerian Student From New Jersey Gets Into All 8 Ivies

Seventeen-year-old Ifeoma White-Thorpe of New Jersey has joined the elite group of students who’ve been accepted into all eight schools in the storied Ivy League.

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Ifeoma attends Morris Hills

High School in Rockaway, New Jersey, but, as her first name may suggest, she is a first-generation American, whose family hails from Nigeria, according to news reports
.

Black Enterprise

has previously written about students who’ve made a splash in the media, after they were accepted into all eight Ivies; Brown University, Columbia University, Cornell University, Dartmouth College, Harvard
University, the University of Pennsylvania, Princeton University, and Yale University. You can read those posts here, here, and here.

Now, Ifeoma, who reportedly plans to study biology and pursue a career in global health, joins this rarefied group. Here’s an excerpt about Ifeoma’s exploits from an article published on CBS News’ website:

Many college-bound high school seniors will have difficult decisions to make as summer approaches, but few can compare to the choice facing New Jersey teen Ifeoma White-Thorpe–she was accepted to all eight Ivy League colleges.

That’s right, the 17-year-old from Morris Hills High School in Rockaway, New Jersey, was accepted into the elite eight: Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Cornell, Princeton, Brown, Dartmouth, and the University of Pennsylvania.

And that’s not all.

White-Thorpe was accepted into Stanford University, too.

At first, she was solely focused on Harvard–the first school to officially give her the green light. But acceptance letters from other prestigious schools across the country soon flooded her mailbox, and now she’s back to square one.

“I got into Harvard Early Action, so I was like I’ll just go there. And then I got into all the others and now I don’t know where I want to go,” White-Thorpe told CBS Philly on Tuesday.

The teenager already has quite an impressive “resumé.” She’s student government president, ranks high in her Advanced Placement courses, and is a talented poet and writer. She recently won first place in the National Liberty Museum’s Selma Speech & Essay Contest.

“Education is essential for change, and I aspire to be that change,” White-Thorpe said after winning a $5,000 prize in the national essay contest.

 

For more, visit CBS News.

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