ADLC and FGLI are hooks. Not skin color, FFS. |
So? Georgetown also has 100% freshman class reporting scores. Emory has less than 70% admitted students that reported their standardized test scores. Georgetown for the win! |
And legacy kids are generally well-qualified. So you get some athletes and some FGLI but that’s nowhere near 30%. |
Only 17% submitted a rank at Emory versus 49% at Georgetown. LOL |
Yall are trying to gaslight, its a poor attempt. URM has and always will be a hook, are all URMs TO of course not, but they are much more likely to be than others. |
100% of Georgetown's freshman class reported their standardized test scores. Lest than 70% of Emory's freshman class reported their standardized test scores. LOL |
Emorys Test scores were higher than Georgetowns in 2019/2020. Emory has always had higher test scores, TO isnt changing that. |
you going back 7 years. lol. means nothing. Again, 100% of Georgetown's freshman class reported their standardized test scores. 68% or less of Emory's freshman class reported their standardized test scores |
| Emory Atlanta is on par or even better than Georgetown for SAT scores. Emory Oxford like most junior colleges aren't going to be as good, but Emory Oxford isn't included in the common data set that you all are getting numbers from. |
"Emory University offers four undergraduate schools. In your first two years, you'll complete foundational classes at either Emory College in Atlanta or Oxford College in Oxford, Georgia. In your third and fourth year, you can pursue your major at either Emory College, Goizueta Business School, or the Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing." "In your first two years, you'll complete foundational classes at either Emory College in Atlanta or Oxford College in Oxford, Georgia. In your third and fourth year, you can pursue your major at either Emory College, Goizueta Business School, or the Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing." |
TO is definitely changing that. Students with higher scores submit; those with lower scores don't. |
Yep |
| I’m participating in this silly discussion so I’m no better. I went to one of these schools and I’m familiar with the other. Both are excellent but not Ivies. Whatever. Relative school prestige differences are nonsense and won’t pay for a cup of coffee. Doing well and being fully engaged is what it’s all about. Go where you believe that’ll happen. From my experience, the school and my success there, opened every door in terms of job opportunities and top grad schools. I can’t prove it but I felt I was on the same level as if I attended an Ivy-which I did for grad and professional schools. My classmates and friends aLL enjoyed similar success. Either school will offer fantastic opportunities if you fully engage and take advantage. |