9 things that are harder to get into than Stanford
Linda A Cicero/Stanford University/Facebook
Stanford University's acceptance rate remained extremely low for the class of 2021, with 4.7% of applicants accepted into the prestigious California-based school.
That means Stanford is the most selective college in the US, beating out all Ivy League institutions.
But while getting into Stanford might seem like a nearly impossible task, many other achievements in life — like acceptance into some elementary schools — are more difficult than earning a spot within the school's prestigious walls.
Read below to see nine things that are harder to get into than Stanford.
A spot at one of New York City's top elementary schools
Bmackenty / Wikimedia CommonsThe elementary admissions process in New York City is utterly grueling. Among exemplary schools, one stands out as the gold-standard: Hunter College Elementary School.
Each year, Hunter chooses 25 girls and 25 boys from all of Manhattan to be admitted to its incoming kindergarten class.
They're hand-selected from a pool of about 2,200 applicants, according to the website Inside Schools. That makes the acceptance rate for Hunter about 2%.
A job as an NBC page
NBCLanding an internship-like role in the National Broadcasting Company's page program is competitive to say the least. Famously, the character Kenneth Parcel was a page on the TV show '30 Rock.'
For example, in 2016 there were 2,600 applicants for 120 positions, for a 4.6% acceptance rate.
The NBC page role is a year-long entry-level role where employees perform PR responsibilities among other tasks depending on their department.
A spot at an innovative startup college
Ike Edeani / The AtlanticCollege startup Minerva Schools has received 16,000 applications for 306 available places in 2016, the Financial Times reported.
Its model vastly differs from what four years of school at other prestigious colleges resemble. Students don't stay in one place during their four-year education.
They spend time in up to seven residence houses in San Francisco, California; Berlin, Germany; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Seoul, South Korea; Bangalore, India; Istanbul, Turkey; and London, England.
At 1.9%, the acceptance rate for the unconventional college is far lower than at Stanford.
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