Emory vs Georgia Tech for computer science: which is better for undergrad CS?

I’m trying to decide between Emory and Georgia Tech for computer science and keep going back and forth. I know both are strong schools, but I’m mostly trying to understand which one is better for an undergrad CS student in terms of academics, opportunities, and overall fit.

I’m a high school senior looking at both schools seriously, and I want to make a choice that makes sense for CS specifically.
2 weeks ago
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Sundial Team
2 weeks ago
For undergraduate computer science, Georgia Tech is the stronger choice for CS specifically. Emory can still be a good fit, but it is not on the same level as Georgia Tech for breadth, scale, or CS-focused reputation.

Academically, Georgia Tech has a much larger and more established CS ecosystem. That usually translates into stronger day-to-day momentum for a CS major, especially if you want engineering-adjacent work, big tech recruiting, or access to large research labs.

Emory’s advantage is a more traditional smaller-scale liberal arts environment with easier access to some professors and a less intensely technical campus culture. If you want to combine CS with areas like biology, public health, business, ethics, or the humanities, Emory can be appealing, especially because of its strengths in health and interdisciplinary study. But its CS department is smaller.

For opportunities, Georgia Tech generally wins on internships, co-ops, employer visibility, and national recognition in CS. If your main question is which school is better for undergrad CS, the answer is Georgia Tech.

The main reason to choose Emory over Georgia Tech would be fit: if you strongly prefer a less engineering-heavy atmosphere, smaller program size, and a broader liberal arts experience over maximum CS intensity. Otherwise, for CS itself, Georgia Tech is the clearer pick.

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