| Cornell. Not in red state. |
The only thing cornell would fo better is engineering/CS. There undergrad business schools are equally reputable. And doesn't matter much for prelaw. |
College transitions does not and still says Emory had better premed placement https://www.collegetransitions.com/blog/from-pre-med-to-md-understanding-the-pathways-to-medical-school/ |
| Emory has better weather, is closer to other colleges (GA Tech, UGA, Georgia State), and is an easy direct flight from most places. |
| Is CALs treated differently than the more selective colleges at Cornell? That would bother me. |
Yes. Pick Emory |
No. Not at all. Amazing opportunities- has been a phenomenal experience for my kid. Cornell is very social too…surprised. |
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i would 100% pick Emory. We visited Cornell and just found it to be super depressing. The city isn't charming (tons of vape shops, even obvious addicts wandering around etc) the campus is pretty poorly kept up, the kids looked unhappy and intense, the weather was crummy.
We really, really wanted to like Cornell as there was a major that my DC was interested in but it was just such a disappointment in these other ways. Your impression mileage may completely vary but we literally visited a second time to see if our impressions were wrong on trip number one. |
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This is what matters for a pre-med -
* easy access to support for pre-requisite classes, they are challenging and gpa is critical * plentiful places to fulfill clinical and volunteer hours, you’re going to be crazy busy and you don’t want to travel distances to do this. You want it to be very accessible. * strong pre-med advising, when does it and how accessible is it * mental health, it’s a long road of undergrad, potential gap year(s), med school, residency, and then maybe a fellowship, so where are they going to be equipped to find balance to stay on the path. * how accessible are professors for research, building relationships for strong LOR * class-sizes for some students, wouldn’t think they’d be vastly different at these two. |
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One isn't drastically better than the other. Nice problem to have. Congrats to your child.
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It depends on if your kid wants from a college campus experience or not Emory is great for Atlanta but doesn’t have the parties and collegiate atmosphere that most kids want. Most kids are used to dumpy downtown college towns. My Cornell freshman had a rocky start first semester but absolutely loves loves the school now. Has amazing friends, challenging classes, unreal activities and a very very active social life. Do an overnight in both places - if your kid is focused on social fit. Have kid reach out to kids they know on campus. |
| Should be an easy choice based on location & weather as both are excellent schools. |
Funny I found Emory depressing. Beautiful campus, but kids were mostly walking by themselves and not smiling. Very very quiet campus. At least Cornell has robust Ivy League sports. But neither of us or our kids are making this decision. Cornell wins in prestige, but schools are close enough that kid should pick which he/she likes best |
| Emory has a mixed social rep with this generation. |
| Atlanta is a giant blue dot in a sea of red, for those concerned about Emory being in a red state. |