Little Ivies

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Little Ivies
(Singular: Little Ivy)
File:New England Small College Athletic Conference logo.png
Most commonly associated with the NESCAC
US Northeastern states.png
The Little Ivies are restricted to the Northeastern United States
Named after Ivy League, Ivy plant
Region
New England, Northeastern United States
Membership
8 private liberal arts colleges

Little Ivies (or singular: Little Ivy) is an academic and descriptive term that has been used in the United States to characterize eight private liberal arts colleges in the Northeastern United States. These schools tend to exhibit academic excellence, selectivity in admissions, and social elitism similar to the Ivy League, but at smaller, often more rural, institutions.

Originally, it was informally used to describe members of the Ivy League that were in comparison to the Big Three, but has since been associated with schools that have smaller student bodies and exhibit traits comparable to the Ivy League in some way usually in academic prominence. The term is most often associated with select members of the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC). It also includes one school drawn from the Centennial Conference due to its social prestige, history and academic rigor. The Little Ivies are restricted to colleges and universities located in the Northeastern United States.

The grouping is also linked to various consortia that some of the associated schools are members of such as the Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Consortium and the former Triangular League known as the Little Three. The term was first used in 1955 but was subsequently popularized through various lists by publications and academic pundits. All of the Little Ivies place in the top 10% of the 2016 U.S. News & World Report, Forbes and among the top schools in the Washington Monthly college rankings.[1][2] U.S. News has named a member of the Little Ivies as the best liberal arts college in the country since it began ranking colleges, naming Williams College the top one in 2016. In reference to the Little Ivies, Greene's Hidden Ivies: Thirty Colleges of Excellence asserted that they have "scaled the heights of prestige and selectivity and also turn away thousands of our best and brightest young men and women."[3][4]

Members

Institution Location Hidden Ivies (2009) NESCAC (1971) Acceptance Rate
(2015)[5][6]
US News
LAC Rank (2016)[7]
Forbes
National Rank
(2015)[8]
Washington Monthly
LAC Rank (2015)[9]
Notes
Amherst College Amherst, Massachusetts Green check.png Green check.png 13.7% 2 9 18 NESCAC founding, and charter member.
Bates College Lewiston, Maine Green check.png Green check.png 21.4% 25 70 8 NESCAC Charter Member.
Bowdoin College Brunswick, Maine Green check.png Green check.png 14.9% 4 (tie) 21 35 NESCAC founding, and charter member.
Colby College Waterville, Maine Green check.png Green check.png 22.5% 19 (tie) 44 52 NESCAC Charter Member.
Middlebury College Middlebury, Vermont Green check.png Green check.png 17.0% 4 (tie) 34 78 NESCAC Charter Member.
Swarthmore College Swarthmore, Pennsylvania Green check.png 12.2% 3 7 4 Competes athletically in the Centennial Conference.
Wesleyan University Middletown, Connecticut Green check.png Green check.png 21.9% 14 (tie) 17 14 NESCAC founding, and charter member.
Williams College Williamstown, Massachusetts Green check.png Green check.png 16.8% 1 2 13 NESCAC founding, and charter member.

History

Bates College's 1932 Ivy Class Memorial Stone Work
Amherst College's Sabrina Staue, commemorating academic excellence
Many colleges on the American Northeast participate in "planting the ivy," a custom started in the early 1800s.[10] As Ivy naturally grows in the climate provided by the Northeast, schools in the New England Small College Athletic Conference incorporate the Ivy plant in their traditions and social gatherings.[11][12] Schools in the athletic conference often participate in an Ivy Day in which an Ivy Stone is placed on the sides of academic buildings to commemorate student achievement.[11] The term "Little Ivies," or singular, a "Little Ivy" first started being used to compare schools on the east coast that provided the student with an Ivy League caliber education in 1955. When denouncing and decrying the over-competitiveness and social snobbery of these schools, President of Swarthmore College, stated in The New York Times:
Bowdoin College's Honorary Class of 1875 Gate
Williams College's Haystack Monument

"We not only have the Ivy League, and pretty clearly understood though seldom mentioned gradations within the Ivy League, but we have the Little Ivy League, and the jockeying for position within that."[13]

The schools within the NESCAC, are often referred to as the "Little Ivies", or singularly referred to as a "Little Ivy." Schools within specific consortia of usually three are commonly referred to as "Little Three" alluding to the "Big Three" of the Ivy League. Amherst, Williams and Wesleyan compete in a football game that has drawn numerous comparisons to the Big Game of the Ivy League, sometimes referred to "The Biggiest Little Game." Bates, Bowdion, and Colby are often referred to as the Little Three of Maine, and participate in the Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Consortium, which has also drawn comparisons to the rivalry between Harvard, Yale and Princeton.[14][15] The schools within the NESCAC have also been referred to as "New Ivies" and Hidden Ivies for their gradual ascension in rankings and selectivity in admissions.[16][17] Member schools have gone on to surpass their Ivy League counterparts in national and regional rankings, with Williams College being named the best liberal arts college in the United States in the 2016 Forbes ranking.[18]
Institution Year Founded Founding religious affiliation 2015 Enrollment 2014 Endowment (billion USD) 2014 Endowment per student (USD)
Amherst College 1821 Congregationalist 1,795 $2.15 $1,204,000
Bates College 1855 Baptist 1,792 $0.264 $147,000
Bowdoin College 1794 Congregationalist 1,799 $1.27 $661,000
Colby College 1813 Baptist 1,825 $0.740 $406,000
Middlebury College 1800 Congregationalist 2,526 $1.08 $428,000
Swarthmore College 1864 Quaker 1,581 $1.88 $1,215,000
Wesleyan University 1831 Methodist 3,138 $0.839 $250,000
Williams College 1793 Congregationalist 2,052 $2.25 $1,098,000
Note Founding dates and religious affiliations are those stated by the institution itself. Many of them had complex histories in their early years and the stories of their origins are subject to interpretation. See footnotes for details where appropriate. "Religious affiliation" refers to financial sponsorship, formal association with, and promotion by, a religious denomination. All of the Little Ivies are private and not currently associated with any religion.

Usage of the term

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Schools are considered Little Ivies exhibit academic excellence, selectivity in admissions, and social elitism similar to the Ivy League, but are set in smaller, often more rural, areas. Most common schools associated with the Little Ivies are:

Examples of use

  • The New York Times, February 10, 1955, p. 33 quotes the President of Swarthmore, describing and decrying social snobbery: "We not only have the Ivy League, and the pretty clearly understood though seldom mentioned gradations within the Ivy League, but we have the Little Ivy League, and the jockeying for position within that."
  • Harvard Magazine
  • Associate Justice Kennedy
  • Episcopal High School of Houston
  • Midwest Elite Hockey League
  • The Atlantic Monthly: "Swarthmore, Amherst, Williams"
  • A Small College in Maine, 1993, Calhoun, Charles mentioned "...Of the three top schools in Maine, the Bates, Bowdoin, Colby drew the most notation to what was informally characterized as a smaller Ivy League, one that provided an Ivy League education with a smaller student body."
  • General Catalogue of Bates College, 1980, (n.b. ref. Faith By Their Progressive Works) was referenced, "the group seemed to draw power from their comparisons to the Ivy League operating in such a group entitled, 'the Little Ivies."... Bowdoin often drawing the connection to Harvard, Bates to Princeton, and Colby to Yale."
  • The Observer of Case Western Reserve University equates the "Little Ivy League" with the NESCAC, "Mentoring program links faculty and student athletes", Matt Cannan September 22, 2006).

Other college groupings

References

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  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Greene, Howard and Matthew Greene (2000) Greenes' Guides to Educational Planning: The Hidden Ivies: Thirty Colleges of Excellence, HarperCollins, ISBN 0-06-095362-4, book description at HarperCollins.com
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  6. http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/grade-point/wp/2015/04/01/class-of-2019-admit-rates-from-selective-to-ultra-ultra-selective/
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  10. Penn website (accessed February 27, 2009)
  11. 11.0 11.1 Bates College website Archived April 14, 2009 at the Wayback Machine (accessed February 27, 2009)
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  26. Potts, David B. (1999) Wesleyan University, 1831-1910: Collegiate Enterprise in New England. Wesleyan University Press, ISBN 0-8195-6360-9. p. 183: "Wesleyan joined Amherst and Williams in early 1899 to form a new 'Triangular League.' Football, baseball and track competition in this league became something of a trial run for later contests in a wide range of sports under the rubric 'Little Three.'"
  27. United States Congress, Senate, Committee on Finance (1951): Revenue Act of 1951. p. 1768. Material by Stuart Hedden, president of Wesleyan University Press, inserted into the record: "Popularly known, together with Williams and Amherst, as one of the Little Three colleges of New England, [Wesleyan] has for nearly a century and a quarter served the public welfare by maintaining with traditional integrity the highest academic standards." Published by the U.S. Government Printing Office, 1951.
  28. Tyre, Peg & William Lee Adams (2005), "Prep Chic," Newsweek, May 4, 2005 "23 percent of Taft graduates attended one of the Ivies or little Ivies (Wesleyan, Williams and Amherst)."
  29. Union-News (Springfield, MA), December 5, 1988, p. 13 (quotes a Bryn Mawr official: "If the Seven Sisters were now Siblings, she asked, did that mean that Wesleyan, Williams and Amherst colleges, referred to as the 'Little Ivies,' were cousins?")
  30. The New York Times (1970): "Students decline Wesleyan offers," June 15, 1970, p. 28: "Amherst College, a member with Williams and Wesleyan in the Little Ivy League..."
  31. Kingston, Paul William and Lionel S. Lewis, "Introduction: Studying Elite Schools in America" (1990). In The High Status Track: Studies of Elite Schools and Stratification. SUNY Press, ISBN 0-7914-0010-7. p. xviii: "More widely recognized is the distinctive cachet of an Ivy League education—and possibly that at the 'Little Three' (Amherst, Wesleyan and Williams) and a small number of other private colleges and universities."
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  33. [1] Archived May 11, 2005 at the Wayback Machine
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  35. The Business Times of Singapore mentions Little Ivies as "elite liberal arts colleges" that are "small and selective." April 17, 2001.