<p>Hi everyone! I got accepted to Emory and Oxford. I applied for Goizueta but I learned from the website that first year students need to apply to enter Goizueta in the second year. If that is the case, then is it hard to get into goizueta? How are the admission rates? Thank You!</p>
<p>@lydiajin: Nope, like 75%-80% gain admission. You just need to do decently and be involved in some things your first 2 years. </p>
<p>@bernie12, is it 75-80 percent for emory college and oxford college people?</p>
<p>It is 75-80% period. They don’t discriminate. You either qualify or you don’t. You really think they’ll turn down a student from Oxford with more rigorous training in pre-reqs (as most will have, by requirements. ECAS students don’t have to take INQ courses, nor do they have actual math instructors, at least if you start at 111/112 you don’t get one on main) if they had the same stats. and level of involvement as an ECAS student? I love how ECAS students are allowed to use AP credit in place of DSci (leaps and bounds harder than AP stats) while Oxford students still have to take a stats. course (with the new one they have starting fall 2014, math 117, likely being harder than math 107). Yeah, don’t worry about being screwed in admissions by going to Oxford. I’m willing to bet they know the difference. I don’t think main campus core econ. classes were put on a new curve for the sake of curving grade inflation in the dept, so much as to filter out some pre-bus. students who would have otherwise gotten in with skimpy preparation that can’t be revealed by the inflated grades they had before (my guess is that perhaps the B-school noticed some weren’t that good. Also, econ. was losing some credibility in the rigor arena. Seems like it’s a little harder across the board now, partially because of this curve). </p>
<p>@bernie12, thanks.</p>