Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For now I think they're equally prestigious but I think Emory will pass WashU soon. WashUs apps seem to be stagnant or declining while Emory receives over 40k aps now. Emory already has a lower acceptance rate 10%vs 12% as pf 2 years ago, the gap should increase. And the SAT score gap should decrease with it.
Here is the Emory troll who would relentlessly prop up the school. The same arguments in every thread involving Emory.
My DD hasn't even applied yet. No clue what you're talking about. Sorry, facts hurt your feelings. If Emory's acceptance rate drops to 7%, then that puts it in the Vandy/Rice/ Northwestern / Cornell group. If WashU goes from 12% to 14% because apps declined, then suddenly, WashU is 2x easier to get into.
This recent analysis ranks WashU as the 25th most selective school nationally and Emory as the 35th most selective school nationally:
https://wallethub.com/edu/e/college-rankings/40750
Which means exactly nothing. Splitting hairs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For now I think they're equally prestigious but I think Emory will pass WashU soon. WashUs apps seem to be stagnant or declining while Emory receives over 40k aps now. Emory already has a lower acceptance rate 10%vs 12% as pf 2 years ago, the gap should increase. And the SAT score gap should decrease with it.
Here is the Emory troll who would relentlessly prop up the school. The same arguments in every thread involving Emory.
My DD hasn't even applied yet. No clue what you're talking about. Sorry, facts hurt your feelings. If Emory's acceptance rate drops to 7%, then that puts it in the Vandy/Rice/ Northwestern / Cornell group. If WashU goes from 12% to 14% because apps declined, then suddenly, WashU is 2x easier to get into.
Emory's acceptance rate last year was 14%. So a giant IF. But a desperate Emory mom can hope, can't she?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any Virginia resident who chooses either over UVA has lost their marbles unless they grow money on trees -- in which case it doesn't matter where they go to college at all.
Not always. A family making 150k would pay less to go to either (only 25k) than to UVA.
And just to be clear that’s most families. The PP is in such a bubble that she thinks her experience as a rich Virginian who hasn’t budgeted to allow her kid to have choices is the only one.
LOL I'm a rich Virginian not because I haven't budgeted but because I'm not stupid when it comes to spending money.
Both Wash U and Emory -- Wash U in particular -- have among the wealthiest student bodies in the country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any Virginia resident who chooses either over UVA has lost their marbles unless they grow money on trees -- in which case it doesn't matter where they go to college at all.
Not always. A family making 150k would pay less to go to either (only 25k) than to UVA.
And just to be clear that’s most families. The PP is in such a bubble that she thinks her experience as a rich Virginian who hasn’t budgeted to allow her kid to have choices is the only one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For now I think they're equally prestigious but I think Emory will pass WashU soon. WashUs apps seem to be stagnant or declining while Emory receives over 40k aps now. Emory already has a lower acceptance rate 10%vs 12% as pf 2 years ago, the gap should increase. And the SAT score gap should decrease with it.
Here is the Emory troll who would relentlessly prop up the school. The same arguments in every thread involving Emory.
My DD hasn't even applied yet. No clue what you're talking about. Sorry, facts hurt your feelings. If Emory's acceptance rate drops to 7%, then that puts it in the Vandy/Rice/ Northwestern / Cornell group. If WashU goes from 12% to 14% because apps declined, then suddenly, WashU is 2x easier to get into.
This recent analysis ranks WashU as the 25th most selective school nationally and Emory as the 35th most selective school nationally:
https://wallethub.com/edu/e/college-rankings/40750
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any Virginia resident who chooses either over UVA has lost their marbles unless they grow money on trees -- in which case it doesn't matter where they go to college at all.
Not always. A family making 150k would pay less to go to either (only 25k) than to UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any Virginia resident who chooses either over UVA has lost their marbles unless they grow money on trees -- in which case it doesn't matter where they go to college at all.
Not always. A family making 150k would pay less to go to either (only 25k) than to UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any Virginia resident who chooses either over UVA has lost their marbles unless they grow money on trees -- in which case it doesn't matter where they go to college at all.
Not always. A family making 150k would pay less to go to either (only 25k) than to UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For now I think they're equally prestigious but I think Emory will pass WashU soon. WashUs apps seem to be stagnant or declining while Emory receives over 40k aps now. Emory already has a lower acceptance rate 10%vs 12% as pf 2 years ago, the gap should increase. And the SAT score gap should decrease with it.
Here is the Emory troll who would relentlessly prop up the school. The same arguments in every thread involving Emory.
My DD hasn't even applied yet. No clue what you're talking about. Sorry, facts hurt your feelings. If Emory's acceptance rate drops to 7%, then that puts it in the Vandy/Rice/ Northwestern / Cornell group. If WashU goes from 12% to 14% because apps declined, then suddenly, WashU is 2x easier to get into.
Anonymous wrote:Any Virginia resident who chooses either over UVA has lost their marbles unless they grow money on trees -- in which case it doesn't matter where they go to college at all.
Anonymous wrote:Any Virginia resident who chooses either over UVA has lost their marbles unless they grow money on trees -- in which case it doesn't matter where they go to college at all.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t believe you could be choosing from among two programs that are more evenly regarded.