Anonymous wrote:Can't believe this went 3 pages without the usual "Southern" school bashing...refreshing.
Anonymous wrote:The top school in GA is Emory, those are the top public schools.Anonymous wrote:I grew up in Atlanta and would have rather died than go to UGA; it was the "hick school" My oh my have times have changed! It is very difficult OOS to get into and it quite hard in-state. The top schools in GA (UGA and GT) are the cream of the crop currently. I would never have predicted it! For reference I got into UNC CH OOS so things were definitely easier back "in the day"![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even though the University of Georgia's target enrollment is 80% resident/20% non-resident, this does not mean that non-resident admission will be exponentially harder than resident admission. Why ? Fewer non-resident apps and lower non-resident yield.
Not this year.
I find it hard to believe--but probably easy to research--that UGa receives more resident apps than non-resident apps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even though the University of Georgia's target enrollment is 80% resident/20% non-resident, this does not mean that non-resident admission will be exponentially harder than resident admission. Why ? Fewer non-resident apps and lower non-resident yield.
Not this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Easy.
W school lots of admits.
1 or two will go, the rest it was a safety
It's not a safety, ignore this poster OP. According to our private counselor, they do not do holistic admissions. They want to see a certain GPA, a set number APs, and a certain test score, but won't disclose what that is. Counselor said they have tried to appeal for kids with special circumstances, like went to a boarding school that didn't have tons of AP, etc. with no luck.
We also know an alum who makes ~ $10m a year, donates massive amounts of $$ annually, goes to every game, and their DC did not get in EA from an elite private.
Anonymous wrote:Even though the University of Georgia's target enrollment is 80% resident/20% non-resident, this does not mean that non-resident admission will be exponentially harder than resident admission. Why ? Fewer non-resident apps and lower non-resident yield.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The CDS (common data set) for Univ. of Georgia reveals that state of residence is not considered for admission, the school notes on its website that it wants to limit non-residents to 20%. These are conflicting statements.
The CDS is at least a year old. The policy of favoring IS applicants to maintain the 20% soft cap was announced within the past few months.
Does this apply to Gatech as well?
Anonymous wrote:Easy.
W school lots of admits.
1 or two will go, the rest it was a safety
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The CDS (common data set) for Univ. of Georgia reveals that state of residence is not considered for admission, the school notes on its website that it wants to limit non-residents to 20%. These are conflicting statements.
The CDS is at least a year old. The policy of favoring IS applicants to maintain the 20% soft cap was announced within the past few months.
The top school in GA is Emory, those are the top public schools.Anonymous wrote:I grew up in Atlanta and would have rather died than go to UGA; it was the "hick school" My oh my have times have changed! It is very difficult OOS to get into and it quite hard in-state. The top schools in GA (UGA and GT) are the cream of the crop currently. I would never have predicted it! For reference I got into UNC CH OOS so things were definitely easier back "in the day"![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yes it does - UGA made the preference for state residents explicit this year.
Then this is a very recent change in Univ. of Georgia's admissions policy.