3 Young Nigerians Who Were Accepted Into All 8 Ivy League Universities Between 2015 & 2016




The eight institutions are Brown University, Columbia University, Cornell University, Dartmouth College, Harvard University, the University of Pennsylvania, Princeton University, and Yale University. The term Ivy League has connotations of academic excellence, selectivity in admissions, and social elitism.
Ivy League schools are generally viewed as some of the most prestigious, and are ranked among the best universities worldwide.
These 3 young Nigerian were all accepted in all the 8 Institutions, they were left to choose which of the Institutions to attend.

1.Victor Agbafe
Victor Agbafe
  
Victor Agbafe  was accepted to all eight Ivy League schools, as well as Stanford University. In the end, Agbafe decided to attend Harvard University, setting him on the path to his dream of becoming a neurosurgeon.

Agbafe, a student at Cape Fear Academy in Wilmington, North Carolina, is the son of Nigerian immigrants. The high school valedictorian says his mother and father raised him with a strong support system and always encouraged him to push himself to do his best.

Agbafe says that his parents never put limits on the amount of success he could achieve.
“My parents know that here in America, the educational opportunities and opportunities for social advancement are just unparalleled,” he says. “From the very beginning, they’ve always said, ‘You’re the only person who can limit yourself.’ 

From the sacrifices they made to come here and create a good life for me, to the sacrifices many social advocates here in the US made 50 years ago — [my parents] have always told me that there’s no excuse not to do well.”

2. Augusta Uwamanzu-Nna
Augusta Uwamanzu-Nna
  
A student at suburban New York's Elmont Memorial High School, Augusta Uwamanzu-Nna  has been accepted at all eight Ivy League universities. She has until May 1 to decide whether she'll attend one of the prestigious  universities.

The daughter of Nigerian immigrants also can choose from Johns Hopkins University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, New York University and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

'My recent accomplishments reflect the hardworking ideals of the town of Elmont, my supportive parents and my dedicated teachers. I am elated but most importantly I am thankful,' said the 17-year-old valedictorian with a 101.64 weighted grade-point average. 

'My family is so excited,' Augusta told News 12 Long Island. 'Sometimes I feel like they get so much more excited than me. They literally scream. When I called my mom and told her, she was screaming on the phone.' 

'Though I was born here in America, I visited Nigeria many times,' she told WABC. 'And I've seen that my cousins don't have the same opportunities that I have. So definitely, whatever I do, I want to make sure that it has an impact on Nigeria.' 

Augusta credits her success to her teachers, perseverance and her parents who taught her the importance of education. 

'I've struggled with numerous classes in the past,' she said. 'But I guess what allowed me to be successful, ultimately, in those classes, at the end, is my persistence and my tenacity.' 

I’m still quite unsure what school I’m going to attend, but I know attending any of them will be such a great honor. But for now, it’s just so amazing. I really can’t believe it, still.

The subject that most interests Augusta is science, and she was a finalist in an Intel competition for her research project on a cement that could prevent underwater oil rigs from rupturing. 

3. Harold Ekeh
Harold Ekeh

The New York high school senior who was accepted to all eight Ivy League colleges has made his decision. He’s heading to Yale.

Harold Ekeh actually got into all 13 schools he applied to, including MIT and Johns Hopkins.

Ekeh was born in Nigeria and came to the United States when he was eight. He wrote his main college essay about the struggle to adjust, including being clueless in U.S. history classes at school.

His parents had told him they moved to America for things like the educational opportunities, Ekeh told CNNMoney last month after he found out he was accepted to all the Ivies.

Even then, Ekeh was leaning towards Yale, where he competed for Model UN. Some of the students there became his friends and mentors and offered him advice on the admissions process.

He  graduated last spring from Elmont Memorial High School on Long Island as salutatorian. He wants to major in neurobiology or chemistry in college and later become a doctor — a neurosurgeon, specifically.

“Thank God and everyone who has helped me along the way to receive this amazing opportunity,” Ekeh said on Facebook.

“It has been both an incredibly exciting and humbling experience and I look forward to the opportunities that lie ahead!”

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