<p>Hello, I'm a senior from Dominican Republic, and I'm interested on applying for International Affairs and Modern Language at Georgia Tech, but there seems to be a problem with their page, as I try to access the international student requirements, deadlines, and all crucial information , all I get is a "Page Not Found" blank page, so I would really appreciate If you could help me with these, Thanks a lot!</p>
<p>Start here:</p>
<p><a href=“Blow the Whistle! (404 error: page not found) | Undergraduate Admission”>Blow the Whistle! (404 error: page not found) | Undergraduate Admission;
<p>I assume you realize the deadlines have passed to apply for fall 2014 entry?</p>
<p>(I’m also wondering why you’ve selected Georgia Tech for those subjects, since it is best known for its STEM offerings.)</p>
<p>I had the same issue with the link you gave me, but thanks anyways.</p>
<p>I do know the deadline passed, and I wanted to apply for spring 2015. I choose Georgia Tech because of what they offer with International Affairs and Modern Language, but as I am an International student and my only source of information has been the internet I really couldn’t tell if Georgia Tech doesn’t offer a good program for this subjects, I also have considered University of Georgia whose deadline for fall 2014 still hasn’t passed, do you know which of these universities has a better program or any other university in or close to Atlanta? </p>
<p>Thanks a lot you your help.</p>
<p>MommaJ’s link does work for me. </p>
<p>Georgia Tech does not accept freshman applications for spring admission. While you are undecided, why don’t you apply to the University of Georgia right now before their application deadline passes? </p>
<p>Thank you a lot, I’ll apply for UOG, and will keep looking for other possibilities, thanks for your help</p>
<p>At Georgia Tech, you would have to study a lot of math, physics, etc, even as a Modern Language/international relations major. UGA (and Georgia College) sound better suited to you major choices. Why GA though? </p>
<p>is there a lot of math/physics even after the first semesters?. I only recently got the opportunity to study abroad with the help of a relative but it has to be in GA, thanks for your help.</p>
<p>Yes, you’d have two semesters each of calculus/math and science (physics, chemistry…), plus one semester of computer science. The scientific level is quite high so it’s good if you’re into math but if you’re not… it may be impossible.
Other good universities in Georgia: UGA (public flagship, huge, college town, very centered on football), GCSU (public, 5,500 students, residential, less football-fan oriented), Georgia State (urban, 25,000, big on football too, less academically driven than UGA and GCSU), Agnes Scott (if you’re a girl and you’re driven, it’s an impressive school linked to various other campuses in the Atlanta area, liberal with lots of traditions), Ogglethorpe (good small college in Atlanta), Emory (elite university in Atlanta), Oxford College of Emory (if you want an Emory degree but would rather not start in a crowd, would prefer a smaller setting and closer relationships with professors), Morehouse(men) and Spelman (women) which are HCBU’s.</p>
<p>Thank you so much, you’ve been of incredible help! I don’t think I’ll be applying to GT afterall, I would rather go to a university more accordingly to my abilities and maintein a good GPA, thank you again.</p>