Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is my new favorite DCUM thread. Total insanity. Emory doesn’t have engineering but the nuts here won’t stop.
DS graduated from Emory engineering school - what are you talking about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory doesn’t have Engineering.
I'm on the website now, it does
No, it doesn't. At least not an engineering program of its own. IF you want to go to "Emory" for engineering, you take your non-eng classes at Emory but your actual engineering classes and degree are from Georgia Tech.
"The Dual Degree program gives Emory undergraduates the opportunity to study in one of our liberal arts programs before continuing on to Georgia Tech to tackle these challenges and more. Students can complete a major in any subject offered by Emory College while completing the required pre-requisites for one of the programs offered through Georgia Tech.
The Dual Degree program is not an official major at Emory College. Rather it is an academic opportunity for undegraduate students, with an interest in Engineering, to pursue bachelors degrees at both Emory College and Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech)."
http://college.emory.edu/dual-degree/engineering/explore-engineering.html
You aren't guaranteed a sport at GA Tech, either. You have to apply to transfer to GA Tech. It's basically a 3-2 engineering program, similar to the 3-2 programs that dozens of schools run with Washington University and Columbia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is my new favorite DCUM thread. Total insanity. Emory doesn’t have engineering but the nuts here won’t stop.
DS graduated from Emory engineering school - what are you talking about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD has these two schools on her list for engineering. She wants to study chemical engineering and is leaning toward Emory b/c it has the more prestigious engineering program, but she's worried she won't get in. Thoughts?
Uh. What?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't pay for DD to go to Michigan unless it was engineering. Emory is a better exyand better outcome for most other subjects.
Did you read the other posts? Let me summarize for ya!
- ALL departments at UMich are ranked higher than Emory
- The AVERAGE GPA of freshman at Umich is HIGHER than at Emory
- The average starting salary of graduates at UMich is HIGHER that at Emory
- Some Umich departments get you over 90K in starting salary; None at Emory (if you find this data share)
Not sure what "outcomes" you are talking about? Finding a rich husband?
Umich isn't prestigious.
Emory has higher test scores (1390-1510 I believe)
The difference in salary is due to engineering which Emory doesn't have. If Umich engineers are making 90k and the avg is 64k, that means the other grads are making 40-50k. Thus Emory grad are actually doing better at 60k, because that's an apples to apples comparison.
Emory is better for health sciences, creative writing, neuroscience, and a host of others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory doesn’t have Engineering.
I'm on the website now, it does
No, it doesn't. At least not an engineering program of its own. IF you want to go to "Emory" for engineering, you take your non-eng classes at Emory but your actual engineering classes and degree are from Georgia Tech.
"The Dual Degree program gives Emory undergraduates the opportunity to study in one of our liberal arts programs before continuing on to Georgia Tech to tackle these challenges and more. Students can complete a major in any subject offered by Emory College while completing the required pre-requisites for one of the programs offered through Georgia Tech.
The Dual Degree program is not an official major at Emory College. Rather it is an academic opportunity for undegraduate students, with an interest in Engineering, to pursue bachelors degrees at both Emory College and Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech)."
http://college.emory.edu/dual-degree/engineering/explore-engineering.html
Anonymous wrote:This is my new favorite DCUM thread. Total insanity. Emory doesn’t have engineering but the nuts here won’t stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are we even discussing this! Emory is not an engineering school, if your kid is not aware of it than they probably should study something else. Engineers often actually read the manual.
Engineering circles would disagree - Emory's small classes would be attractive for engineering students
Anonymous wrote:Why are we even discussing this! Emory is not an engineering school, if your kid is not aware of it than they probably should study something else. Engineers often actually read the manual.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't pay for DD to go to Michigan unless it was engineering. Emory is a better exyand better outcome for most other subjects.
Did you read the other posts? Let me summarize for ya!
- ALL departments at UMich are ranked higher than Emory
- The AVERAGE GPA of freshman at Umich is HIGHER than at Emory
- The average starting salary of graduates at UMich is HIGHER that at Emory
- Some Umich departments get you over 90K in starting salary; None at Emory (if you find this data share)
Not sure what "outcomes" you are talking about? Finding a rich husband?
Umich isn't prestigious.
Emory has higher test scores (1390-1510 I believe)
The difference in salary is due to engineering which Emory doesn't have. If Umich engineers are making 90k and the avg is 64k, that means the other grads are making 40-50k. Thus Emory grad are actually doing better at 60k, because that's an apples to apples comparison.
Emory is better for health sciences, creative writing, neuroscience, and a host of others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't pay for DD to go to Michigan unless it was engineering. Emory is a better exyand better outcome for most other subjects.
Did you read the other posts? Let me summarize for ya!
- ALL departments at UMich are ranked higher than Emory
- The AVERAGE GPA of freshman at Umich is HIGHER than at Emory
- The average starting salary of graduates at UMich is HIGHER that at Emory
- Some Umich departments get you over 90K in starting salary; None at Emory (if you find this data share)
Not sure what "outcomes" you are talking about? Finding a rich husband?