Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory was always a school for tacky strivers. They are more brazen about it now.
It’s odd to say this when the school is so focused on premed/nursing and offers little in the way of engineering.
I guess premed kids can be strivers…though I thought most strivers were pre-professional.
Pre med is pre professional.
Why run your mouth on here when you don't even understand the basics?0
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory was always a school for tacky strivers. They are more brazen about it now.
It’s odd to say this when the school is so focused on premed/nursing and offers little in the way of engineering.
I guess premed kids can be strivers…though I thought most strivers were pre-professional.
Anonymous wrote:Emory was always a school for tacky strivers. They are more brazen about it now.
Anonymous wrote:Emory was always a school for tacky strivers. They are more brazen about it now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Int this good for DCUM families? If full pay or near it? So if you make over 200k you're chances increase and if you make less than 100k for a family of 4-5 then your also have a higher chance. Its the families between 100-200k that suffer.
Can a family making 200k pay 85K per year? I agree this benefits low income and full pay families I just question the income level where full pay is realistic
It’s not free tuition at $199k and full tuition at $201k. It’s just you will pay something towards tuition at $201k and then you gradually phase to full pay.
Anonymous wrote:I appreciate the transparency, I suspect others are doing the same but not disclosing it, maybe they are just "need curious?"
Here is a link https://www.emorywheel.com/article/2025/09/wzlrm6dz5bo7
Anonymous wrote:Int this good for DCUM families? If full pay or near it? So if you make over 200k you're chances increase and if you make less than 100k for a family of 4-5 then your also have a higher chance. Its the families between 100-200k that suffer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Int this good for DCUM families? If full pay or near it? So if you make over 200k you're chances increase and if you make less than 100k for a family of 4-5 then your also have a higher chance. Its the families between 100-200k that suffer.
Can a family making 200k pay 85K per year? I agree this benefits low income and full pay families I just question the income level where full pay is realistic
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Int this good for DCUM families? If full pay or near it? So if you make over 200k you're chances increase and if you make less than 100k for a family of 4-5 then your also have a higher chance. Its the families between 100-200k that suffer.
Can a family making 200k pay 85K per year? I agree this benefits low income and full pay families I just question the income level where full pay is realistic
Anonymous wrote:Int this good for DCUM families? If full pay or near it? So if you make over 200k you're chances increase and if you make less than 100k for a family of 4-5 then your also have a higher chance. Its the families between 100-200k that suffer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an interesting pairing with the news that Emory is tuition free for families making less than $200k (or something in that neighborhood.)
?????
Yes, the donut hole problem just got worse. They want the FGLI students, that helps diversity and their social mobility scoring but they need full pay students to enable that.
Or need blind will allow them to minimize the number of students getting free tuition.