
Scoring 675 on the national exam was a proud moment, and I left Kallamino with
knowledge and with better hope for my future.
How I secured admission to Harvard, Columbia, and Amherst
My journey to being admitted to three prestigious U.S. institutions - Harvard, Columbia,
and Amherst - was anything but smooth. It was filled with ups and downs, moments of
doubt, and unexpected triumphs.
It all began when I took the SAT in October and scored 1470, with a 770 in Evidence-
Based Reading and Writing (EBRW) and 700 in Math. While I was proud of this score, I
knew it wouldn’t be competitive enough for the most selective schools. Still, I decided to
apply to Williams College through Early Decision (ED). On December 13, I received my
decision—it was a deferral. That news was disappointing, but it motivated me to try
again.
In December, I retook the SAT and improved my score to 1540 (740 EBRW / 800 Math).
My super score ended up being 1570, which gave me a real shot at top schools. I
expanded my list and ended up applying to 20 colleges.
I submitted an Early Decision II application to NYU Abu Dhabi (NYUAD), and on January
21, I was invited to attend their in-person Candidate Weekend. Unfortunately, due to
passport issues, I couldn’t attend. That felt like a major missed opportunity, and for a
while, I worried it would cost me my chance of studying abroad.
But things started to shift. In February, I began receiving interview invitations from
schools like Harvard, Dartmouth, and Colby, and my hope slowly returned. Still, the
rejections came - 11 in a row - and each one made me question if I’d get into any of the
colleges I had worked so hard to apply to.
Then came my first big breakthrough: an acceptance from Amherst College, the second-
best liberal arts college in the U.S. That alone felt like a huge accomplishment and gave
me renewed confidence.
Finally, Ivy Day arrived—the day when Ivy League schools released their decisions. I had
applied to five Ivies: Yale, UPenn, Dartmouth, Columbia, and Harvard. The day unfolded
like an emotional rollercoaster: first, a rejection from Yale… then a waitlist from UPenn…
another rejection from Dartmouth… but then - an acceptance from Columbia! That alone
was more than I had dared to hope for.
And then came the final decision: Harvard. I opened the portal, and to my absolute
disbelief, I had been accepted. I was over the moon. I couldn’t believe that after
everything—the uncertainty, the setbacks, the waiting—I had made it.