Anonymous wrote:I know nothing about Emory. In terms of prestige I don’t see how it would surpass Georgetown.
Anonymous wrote:Here is an interesting factoid: According to the NYT, about 20% of Georgetown students are from the top 1% of the income scale, and only 13.5% are from the bottom 60%. For Emory, it's about 15% in the top 1% and 28% in the top 60%.
NYT says those stats are from the class of 2013 so this may have changed a bit since then. But it could also help explain the post-graduate income disparities.
Interesting to speculate on why these differences. Don't know if Georgetown is just more popular with the children of the rich-- or if it is a function of different financial aid policies? (Both schools are need blind and meet 100% of demonstrated need, but Georgetown is not as rich as Emory and gives a higher percentage of financial aid as loans, rather than grants, which may deter many lower income kids from applying/attending).
half of Emory grads stay in the south. It's says that on the career outcomes pdf.Anonymous wrote:Interestingly the main source of Emory's increased diversity is: roughly double the percentage of Asians compared to Georgetown. Other non-white groups represented similarly at both schools, according to DoEd College Scorecard. Not sure it is the case that Asian-Americans have lower median salaries after college than white graduates....
Also not sure it is true that Emory grads are more likely to live in the South. Emory draws most heavily on non-Southern states for its student body. (After GA, states sending most students are NY, FL, NJ, CA, TX, IL, MD, PA, MA, CT). Quite similar to Georgetown, in fact.
One other difference: Georgetown is 56% female, 44% male. Emory is 60% female.
Anonymous wrote:Interestingly the main source of Emory's increased diversity is: roughly double the percentage of Asians compared to Georgetown. Other non-white groups represented similarly at both schools, according to DoEd College Scorecard. Not sure it is the case that Asian-Americans have lower median salaries after college than white graduates....
Also not sure it is true that Emory grads are more likely to live in the South. Emory draws most heavily on non-Southern states for its student body. (After GA, states sending most students are NY, FL, NJ, CA, TX, IL, MD, PA, MA, CT). Quite similar to Georgetown, in fact.
One other difference: Georgetown is 56% female, 44% male. Emory is 60% female.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are both great schools. Emory is probably less well-known than Georgetown because it's older and in the nation's capital, but both offer great educations. If a kid wants to live/work in DC or the northeast, Georgetown probably has an edge; if in the South, Emory has a slight edge. Also depends on what fields are of greatest interest to a kid.
According to the Dept. of Education's College Scorecard, Georgetown's graduation and retention rates are slightly higher than Emory's; median earnings of Georgetown graduates (>$93k) are a good deal higher than Emory graduates (~$72k). Georgetown's has fewer students receiving Pell grants (14%)and a higher percentage of white students (51%) compared to Emory (19% and 39%, respectively).
Georgetown has a better law school. Emory has a better medical school. According to Parchment (FWIW), students admitted to both choose Georgetown 74% of the time and Emory 26% of the time.
But basically, the rankings difference for the undergraduate programs is negligible. (And silly to obsess over. Is Yale "better" than Harvard? Is Stanford "worse" than MIT? Georgetown is not "better" than Emory, and Emory is not "better" than Georgetown.)
Well, OP, this PP burned you, on straight up facts.
With parchment? I'm so convinced. Emory is in the south and has less white students, while Georgetown is in DC. The salary difference makes sense.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve never heard of Emory until I got on this forum .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are both great schools. Emory is probably less well-known than Georgetown because it's older and in the nation's capital, but both offer great educations. If a kid wants to live/work in DC or the northeast, Georgetown probably has an edge; if in the South, Emory has a slight edge. Also depends on what fields are of greatest interest to a kid.
According to the Dept. of Education's College Scorecard, Georgetown's graduation and retention rates are slightly higher than Emory's; median earnings of Georgetown graduates (>$93k) are a good deal higher than Emory graduates (~$72k). Georgetown's has fewer students receiving Pell grants (14%)and a higher percentage of white students (51%) compared to Emory (19% and 39%, respectively).
Georgetown has a better law school. Emory has a better medical school. According to Parchment (FWIW), students admitted to both choose Georgetown 74% of the time and Emory 26% of the time.
But basically, the rankings difference for the undergraduate programs is negligible. (And silly to obsess over. Is Yale "better" than Harvard? Is Stanford "worse" than MIT? Georgetown is not "better" than Emory, and Emory is not "better" than Georgetown.)
Well, OP, this PP burned you, on straight up facts.