Harvard College is a highly selective school for a reason: those who earn their way into this Ivy enter a "dynamic universe" that is "academically alive" and teeming with possibility, as well as top-tier internship and employment opportunities, a strong alumni network, and a crimson pedigree for your résumé. Perhaps this is why one undergrad refers to his experience as "rewarding beyond anything else I've ever done." Academically, the breadth of courses astounds, with everything from the rise of machines and implications of AI to the relationship of Taylor Swift's lyrics to Romantic-era poets. Even better, at least once you're through some of the larger, less personable lectures of your underclass years (or you "go to office hours to get to know your big lecture class professors on a personal level"), you'll find them to be taught by some of "the brightest minds in the world." Indeed, "the level of achievement [of the faculty] is unbelievable." Even when students butt heads with a "reticent to change" administration, they acknowledge that the school "does a good job of watching over its freshmen through extensive advising programs," and students trust that their best interests are being kept in mind. The only thing that's impossible here, apparently, is the idea of "getting the most out of Harvard"-and that's "because Harvard offers so much."