Also, Cornell isn't better either. |
"appeal" to whom? The same Admissions Director that rejected him? It doesn't work like that, move on. |
It's worth a try, it's his dream. |
What a strange point of view. In my book, Amherst, Williams and Swarthmore are better than many of the Ivies. Emory is a different league altogether. |
No it's not. If there were a chance he would've been wait listed or deferred to regular decision (not sure if Emory does that though). Never heard of being able to appeal an admissions decision. Its a waste of time PP - the focus should be on learning to live with no and moving on in a healthy way. Life is cruel you know and kids need to learn this. |
Other than Cornell, I just don't see it. I know 2 students from last year receive Tying scholars from Williams but received no money from Emory. And that's just selectivity, I'm speaking to. I agree 30-50 years ago what you're saying may be the case, but not today. However, all of these schools are great. |
Well this is just wonderful considering DS was rejected GPA: 4.0/4.0 (unweighted) Tests: (35 ACT, 35 english, 35-math, 35-reading, 34-science, 9-essay) Varsity Tennis Captain Started a non-profit etc. But we're Indian from New Jersey so I'm sure that had a lot to do with it. |
No, it really isn't. If this were possible, you would see thousands of students, and their litigious parents, suing after appeal failures for spaces that exist in colleges that don't have room for them. You have NO idea why your child was not admitted, but the bottom line is, it could be for any reason from a B+ in freshman squash to 10 points on the SAT to a typo in one of the essays. It is nonsense and you kid should move on. |
I think the good things are the beauty of the campus and the quality of the professors in certain majors. The poli sci, philosophy and writing departments are stellar. There are almost no fine arts classes to speak of, which at a school the size of Emory was very surprising. The issues are it is often hard to get into the classes you want to take, the Greek system is way more important to student life than my son expected and the food halls are all closed by 8pm. The food at Emory is notoriously pretty bad. As a parent, I do appreciate that there are so many flights each day between DC and ATL...makes booking for holidays very easy. |
Has Emory always been this difficult, or is this a new thing? |
Cool story. Meanwhile the freshman profile at Williams is stronger. Higher test scores, greater percentage in top decile, on and on. |
A true story. And in my original post I was speaking on Amhearst and Swarthmore not being better than Emory, I concede that Williams is probably still a bit better, but not for long. 10 years from now if projections continue. But I consider Swarthmore, Amherst, and Emory at the same level; along with Georgetwn Wash U, and CMU. |
| If projections continue. Oh brother. |
| Emory is a fine school. It is not on the same level as the names being tossed about here. |
Hard to believe Emory is someone’e “dream”. Hey, my “dream” is to play shortstop for the New York Yankees. But hey... Good luck with the “appeal”. |