There are different stories as to how the Ivy League name originated. Some believe it is a mispronunciation of IV League (the Roman numeral of four, referring to the first four schools in the athletic league: Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Dartmouth.)
Others speculate it is because their tony campuses are covered in Ivy. Either way, the Ivy League is made up of eight prestigious schools: Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Cornell, Columbia University, Dartmouth College, Brown University and The University of Pennsylvania.
It is a group of top the top eight performing school in the US. They are considered Ivy League because the are good in athletics and academics
Not just any ivy league school. Eli is a nickname for a Yale University student or graduate, after Yale benefactor Elihu Yale
California, Missouri
There are no members of the Ivy League in Ohio. The eight schools that make up the Ivy League are Brown, Yale, Harvard, Cornell, Princeton, University of Pennsylvania, Dartmouth, and Columbia.
6 out of 8 ivy league schools have hockey teams in Division one. The Ivy League schools that include hockey teams are: Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Cornell and Brown.
No. Schools do not get "offered" to be an Ivy League School. This is an unofficial term applied to certain schools. There is no unified organization that oversees these schools.
political science, engineering, biology
Vanderbilt University, all of the Ivy League Schools and there are many, many more!
They do not hold their students to the same academic level as the Ivy League schools do.
NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
No, Emory University is not an Ivy. The Ivy League is a coalition of eight schools (Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton, University of Pennsylvania, and Yale). Technically, the Ivy League is an athletic coalition. However, Ivies are now known as some of the world's best academic schools. When people refer to "New Ivies", they are referring to schools that are of the caliber of those in the Ivy League. Emory would probably fall in this category, but there are only eight true Ivy League schools.
no.
Harvard
Yes, because when pronouncing the numerals IV (4) you would say, "i vee" which over time became known as "ivy." Hence the name Ivy League.