Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory doesnt have the alumni base in places of power. It was a fine regional school until the Coca-Cola money changed that in the eighties. It's been a top 25 school for a relatively short time.
My guess in another cycle or two, it will place string students into places of power. Then, it's reputation will soar like those ranked above it.
It clearly has the student, resources and firepower. Give it time.
Google is Free . And you and your friend is moving the goal post.
How many Cornell and Vandy grads are in positions of power. How many too 5 programs does Cornell have? No one is comparing Emory it to Harvard or any top 10 school. How many Rice grads are in positions of power? Dartmouth?
Cornell has 61 Nobels and has been an elite school for over a century. Not a Cornell alum or affiliated in any way, but the insistence on comparing Emory to Cornell just highlights the gulf between the two schools.
Answer the freaking question. You're being moronic. You said Emory isn't top 5 in wall street or Consulting, and the 19 plus programs it is too 5 in doesn't matter. Okay great. IS CORNELL top 5 in wall street or Consulting? Is Vanderbilt? Is Georgetown? Do any of those schools have more top 5 programs than Emory? I'm looking on US news and the answer is NO!.
Anonymous wrote:Who in the world would choose Emory over Cornell? No one.
Anonymous wrote:Vanderbilt average ACT is 35. Case closed. Not comparable. Emory is a back up school for any top student.
It's only a dream destination for those who aspire to Wake Forest and hope to avoid Wisconsin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory doesnt have the alumni base in places of power. It was a fine regional school until the Coca-Cola money changed that in the eighties. It's been a top 25 school for a relatively short time.
My guess in another cycle or two, it will place string students into places of power. Then, it's reputation will soar like those ranked above it.
It clearly has the student, resources and firepower. Give it time.
Google is Free . And you and your friend is moving the goal post.
How many Cornell and Vandy grads are in positions of power. How many too 5 programs does Cornell have? No one is comparing Emory it to Harvard or any top 10 school. How many Rice grads are in positions of power? Dartmouth?
Cornell has 61 Nobels and has been an elite school for over a century. Not a Cornell alum or affiliated in any way, but the insistence on comparing Emory to Cornell just highlights the gulf between the two schools.
Anonymous wrote:Not all schools can be at the top at the same time. I often hear this argument from alums from schools like Emory, NYU, Tufts, WashU, etc all the time — “just you wait, it’ll be elite in just a few years and soar through the rankings!” It’s not that easy, and if every school is soaring through the rankings, there won’t be much movement. Just accept it.
Anonymous wrote:When your most famous alum is Newt Gingrich.....
Anonymous wrote:Vanderbilt average ACT is 35. Case closed. Not comparable. Emory is a back up school for any top student.
It's only a dream destination for those who aspire to Wake Forest and hope to avoid Wisconsin.
Anonymous wrote:If you want pre-med/health care opportunities with the CDC and a top ranked hospital on campus, Emory is an excellent school comparable to other top 15 schools.
It's a tweener sitting naturally between the low Ivys and its peers and the next tier outside of the top 30.
Since it doesnt get people excited by it's athletics or isn't top in anything, it engenders ill will. It isn't the top choice for most that are there. And it doesn't have the pull to consulting, and Wall Street the way other undergraduate B Schools have.
As you look as other top 25 school, most have some sort of spike. Some division that is top 5 in something. Emory doesnt fit the bill.
I think it engenders so much ill will here as it represents the worst case outcome for Top 25/Top 30 striving students. An expensive private school that doesnt have name recognition and doesnt have a spike program.
It sits at the bottom of the Top schools and picks off students who weren't special enough/connected enough to get into higher ranked schools. It has the lowest yield in the Top 25 and that speaks volumes.
For those at schools ranked 30-50, it is a dream school. For those at schools ranked 1-10, it is a safety school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory doesnt have the alumni base in places of power. It was a fine regional school until the Coca-Cola money changed that in the eighties. It's been a top 25 school for a relatively short time.
My guess in another cycle or two, it will place string students into places of power. Then, it's reputation will soar like those ranked above it.
It clearly has the student, resources and firepower. Give it time.
Google is Free . And you and your friend is moving the goal post.
How many Cornell and Vandy grads are in positions of power. How many too 5 programs does Cornell have? No one is comparing Emory it to Harvard or any top 10 school. How many Rice grads are in positions of power? Dartmouth?
Anonymous wrote:Those top 5 programs are all in non-desirable health care fields with mediocre paying jobs. Not Wall Street. Not consulting.
Sorry, Emory grads dont make up the Board Room or corner offices.
It's a fine school. Just mostly for pre-Med. Everything else. Meh.
Anonymous wrote:Emory doesnt have the alumni base in places of power. It was a fine regional school until the Coca-Cola money changed that in the eighties. It's been a top 25 school for a relatively short time.
My guess in another cycle or two, it will place string students into places of power. Then, it's reputation will soar like those ranked above it.
It clearly has the student, resources and firepower. Give it time.