Anonymous wrote:Wow. I did not know that Emory takes 70% of its freshmen class from early decision. This is very out of the norm for most colleges. Why does it do this?
2023-2024
Total number of freshmen 1,426
Total number taken Early Decision 945
This is really odd and I am not sure if this is the correct figures???
Anonymous wrote:The backdoor way into Emory isn't much different than what NYU or BU do with their spring admits or Northeastern does with its study abroad for the first semester. Emory/Oxford gets enough qualified applicants that it should be looked at as a positive that more students get in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't get the Emory, Vanderbilt, and Rice comparisons. They are all T25 schools with great students. But they are very distinct, particularly Rice and Vanderbilt. I get they are all in the South, but there's not a lot of commonality. US News jumped the shark a couple of years ago, so it's not a useful metric anymore. Emory, Vanderbilt, and Rice are all swimming in the same sea as Cornell, Dartmouth, Brown, Chicago, Columbia, Northwestern, Michigan, WashU, Georgetown, and Notre Dame.
Judging from other rankings, Rice is clearly the top academic school. And Vanderbilt is Vanderbilt. But Emory more than holds their own these days. But when it comes to "prestige," the Oxford thing is not helpful for Emory. It's a very Northeastern thing to do.
Yes they are peer schools but Rice is the lowest asked if you combine all the rankings. Its ranked #223 in the global rankings vs 63 for the other 2.
https://www.usnews.com/education/best-global-universities/rice-university-227757
Also Vandy has a 4.3 reputation score for the undergrad ranking, while Emory and Rice have a 4.2. So Emory more than holds its own. Also, Oxford was Emory’s first campus, they moved to Atlanta in 1911. What should they have done with their original campus? Oxford is the most selective 2 year school on earth. That speaks for something.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get the Emory, Vanderbilt, and Rice comparisons. They are all T25 schools with great students. But they are very distinct, particularly Rice and Vanderbilt. I get they are all in the South, but there's not a lot of commonality. US News jumped the shark a couple of years ago, so it's not a useful metric anymore. Emory, Vanderbilt, and Rice are all swimming in the same sea as Cornell, Dartmouth, Brown, Chicago, Columbia, Northwestern, Michigan, WashU, Georgetown, and Notre Dame.
Judging from other rankings, Rice is clearly the top academic school. And Vanderbilt is Vanderbilt. But Emory more than holds their own these days. But when it comes to "prestige," the Oxford thing is not helpful for Emory. It's a very Northeastern thing to do.
Anonymous wrote:Based on the 2023 Common Data Ser, half of Emory's freshmen are test optional. Worse, the CDS DOESN'T include Oxford. So a whole bunch of Emory students are test optional.
I am not sure why the Emory mom is so perturbed by that. There is no stigma in being test optional.
Anonymous wrote:Based on the 2023 Common Data Ser, half of Emory's freshmen are test optional. Worse, the CDS DOESN'T include Oxford. So a whole bunch of Emory students are test optional.
I am not sure why the Emory mom is so perturbed by that. There is no stigma in being test optional.