Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10.6 is not greater than 12. Here's a tip that might work if you're struggling with greater than/less than signs: remember, the alligator eats the bigger number.
In this instance lower is better, you understood what I meant.
Lower isn’t better. It just means more applicants.
Emory also has shady admissions practices to falsely lower their acceptance rate, namely in regards to Oxford College. They also have an insanely high Early Decision acceptance rate… I believe it was close to 40% this year.
I’ve heard about the Emory’s Oxford college. What is it exactly? It seems to be a 2 year liberal arts college within the university. Is that all there is to it?
Lots of SLACs also heavily tilt the ED game in their favor. Many fill a majority of the class ED. Look at Haverford (46% acceptance ED and filling up 60% of a class), Hamilton (45%/58%), Wesleyan (41%/64%), Davidson (48%/59%), W&L (52%/59%), Colgate (50%/62%), Claremont-McKenna (35%/70%), Williams (40%/51%), Bucknell (55%/47.5%), Middlebury (47%/65%). Are these “insanely high”, because I don’t hear a lot people snubbing these schools. By limiting your competition to those who can commit to pay $80,000 a year without any promise of FA, you do increase your odds quite a bit.
Some bigger colleges do the same thing. Wake Forest (34%/53%), Villanova (58%/36%), Richmond (48%/44%), Northwestern (25%/58%), NYU (28%/58%)
Look at the percentage of student athletes at those SLACs and the ED numbers will make more sense.
Anonymous wrote:No schools that use ED pass or are more prestigious than schools that use EA. G'Town in addition does not use common application...
Anonymous wrote:Meaningless, the colleges go down and up in the USNews ranking.
Emory is strong in medical sciences and located in a growing city, so that's an advantage for Emory. But Georgetown will continue being stronger in undergraduate humanities and IR education for a good amount of time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10.6 is not greater than 12. Here's a tip that might work if you're struggling with greater than/less than signs: remember, the alligator eats the bigger number.
In this instance lower is better, you understood what I meant.
Lower isn’t better. It just means more applicants.
Emory also has shady admissions practices to falsely lower their acceptance rate, namely in regards to Oxford College. They also have an insanely high Early Decision acceptance rate… I believe it was close to 40% this year.
Anonymous wrote:Georgetown doesn’t take the common app so gets fewer , but more serious applicants than other schools. Georgetown doesn’t play the rankings game.
Anonymous wrote:No. Never heard of Emory.
Anonymous wrote:Stop trying to make fetch happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10.6 is not greater than 12. Here's a tip that might work if you're struggling with greater than/less than signs: remember, the alligator eats the bigger number.
In this instance lower is better, you understood what I meant.
Lower isn’t better. It just means more applicants.
Emory also has shady admissions practices to falsely lower their acceptance rate, namely in regards to Oxford College. They also have an insanely high Early Decision acceptance rate… I believe it was close to 40% this year.
This.
It's playing games to appeal to people desperate to say things like 'it has officially passed X university" etc.