Completely agree. Emory has so much to offer as PP stated. |
So basically since Emory takes such a huge percentage of their class ED, that's pretty much the only way to get in. This is what Tulane has done. |
Yes, they certainly are. |
Apps are up 21%. While other privates saw decreases.
Emory college accepted 805 Oxford College 400 And over 200 to both campuses https://news.emory.edu/stories/2024/12/er_ed_class_2029_12-12-2024/story.html |
On,y schools that went back to test required saw decreases, otherwise numbers are up pretty much everywhere. |
No they'll accept about 2k students RD |
When you take 70% of your class early decision that severely decreases the acceptance rate for regular decision. This is the exact M.O. of Tulane. |
Rice, like Dartmouth, doesn't really do grad school. It's very undergrad focused. So it will never do well on "global rankings." I think it's 18 in US News, and top ten in Niche and Forbes. All those rankings are significantly higher than Emory. Out of curiosity, I took a look at US News global rankings. The University of Washington is number 7. UC San Diego is 21, just above the National University of Singapore. I'm sure it's useful for PhD type comparisons. But not really for American undergrad comparisons. And "most selective 2 year school on earth" doesn't mean anything. As far as I know, Emory is not a community college. |
18 is not much higher than 24, especially when they have the same reputation score. You can't say Rice is better academically when the ranking based solely on academics ranks them out of the top 200. For undergrad Roce and Emory academically get the same score. |
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Oxford has a negative reputation on this forum but if it was that bad, kids wouldn’t be checking the Oxford box for ED1 or ED2. Lots of other options if they want a small exurban/suburban liberal arts campus. [/quote]
It has a negative reputation on this forum only in the mind of Emory mom who does all kind of mental gymnastics to lower the ED1 acceptance rate. The fact of the matter is Emory itself includes Oxford students in its acceptance rate, and those kids are identical in all respects to those who start in Atlanta. There is no real life basis for drawing a distinction between Oxford and Atlanta.[/quote] Emory mom here, the reason why is because another pp said Emory's ED2 rate is 12% which is only for Emory college. You guys use the combined rate for ED1 then separate them for ED2. The combined rate for ED2 is 16% at least last year. |
Emory is an oddball- a Northern school that happens to be in the South. Davidson, in comparison felt more Southern, culturally. I wonder if Rice and Wash U have as much of disconnect between their geographic locations and student bodies. For all the hate Emory gets on this board, it can be the perfect fit for a student who doesn’t mind the lack of a sports culture and would enjoy Atlanta. |
Tulane stopped taking such a large percentage of its class early decision. Its admissions policy started to get a little tarnished.
Since Emory is at the same position of almost 70% of the class being early decision, I wonder if they will start taking a fewer number going forward? |
Tulane was taking 99% of the class through ED/EA…I kid you not.
Not sure what their %age may be now. |
Where is the 70% figure coming? Each class has 1830 kids and they accepted 965 through ED1 = around 52%. Do they typically take another 18% in ED2? |
Emory's Atlanta campus does not have 1830 freshmen, but 1426 https://provost.emory.edu/planning-administration/_includes/documents/sections/institutional-data/Emory-Common-Data-Set-2023-2024.pdf |