From Business to Law: How Nigerian prodigy Ifeoluwa Aderonmu captivated ivy league
How one man’s story of ambition and hard work inspires a generation at the University of Pennsylvania.
It is a rare and exceptional achievement to be selected as a commencement speaker at an Ivy League university.
On May 18, Ifeoluwa Aderonmu, a Nigerian business professional, experienced this exceptional honor as he graduated at the top of his class from the University of Pennsylvania.
On the same day, Aderonmu earned not one but two prestigious degrees: an MBA from The Wharton School and a Master in Laws (M.L) from Penn Carey Law School. His achievement stands out, not only for graduating at the top of his class but also for the impressive duality of his academic focus—combining business, finance and law, two disciplines that are rarely pursued simultaneously at such a high level.
The Ivy League, consisting of eight elite universities—Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Columbia, University of Pennsylvania, Dartmouth, Brown, and Cornell—is renowned globally for its academic rigor and prestige. But getting a spot in an Ivy League is not a walk in the park. According to the Ivy Institute, only about 0.3 percent of applicants gain admission into an Ivy League school.
Because of their academic excellence and selective admission, Ivy League institutions attract extraordinary individuals.
Aderonmu is a highly sought-after talent who secured admission into the University of Pennsylvania to study not one or two but three master’s programmes, reflecting both his intellectual capacity and his diverse interests.
They include an MBA at the Wharton School, a Master in Law at Penn Carey Law School, and a Master in International Studies at the Joseph H. Lauder Institute of Management and International Studies. In addition, he also gained an MBA admission at the Darden Business School, University of Virginia, the best public university in America. He was able to secure over $220,000 in scholarships.
But the honor of delivering a commencement address is just as rare and competitive as gaining admission itself. At Penn Carey Law School, the selection process for commencement speakers is particularly rigorous. Top-performing students are invited to submit a statement of purpose and a draft of their speech.
After an extensive review by a selection committee, the finalists present their speeches, with the best chosen to speak at the graduation ceremony. According to Catharine Restrepo, Esq., L’93, Assistant Dean of the Master in Law Program at Penn Carey Law School, Ifeoluwa was selected because his speech “raised the themes of reinvention and our ethos that the law belongs to all of us, highlighting that the law’s power to shape justice is within everyone’s reach.”
Speaking before an audience of 2,600 people, including 422 members of the graduating class, Ifeoluwa reflected on how the University of Pennsylvania had provided him with the opportunity to reinvent himself.
Having spent much of his career in business and finance, he never imagined he would one day pursue dual degrees in law and business.
He encouraged his classmates to embrace reinvention, saying, “The universe wants us to be typical. It wants us to stick to the script, to play the role assigned. But as we’ve learned, the greatest breakthroughs come from those willing to reinvent themselves.”
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