@Siena19 : That is actually a bit controversial. Emory, kind of like Stanford and Duke does not prioritize SAT scores as much as some other elites (of course they select relatively high ones compared to less competitive schools, but definitely not as high as peers and aspirational peers). They like grades, rigor, intellectual curiosity and raw talent (basically, bubbling in the right answers beyond whatever threshold score is not seen as much of a talent to these schools, and they are correct in thinking this because their own curricula don’t include those types of assessments as much as high school and nor does it emphasize the type of learning and coaching needed to be successful on them) much more: https://apply.emory.edu/apply/first-year/index.html
It says for Academic Preparation:
“The classes you take and the grades you receive in them matter. We typically look for students who’ve taken more challenging clases (which can vary from high school to high school, and we take that into account, too) and have done well in them. We also look at standardized test scores. Low scores can be overcome by good grades in higher-level classes. But low grades rarely, if ever, can be overcome by high test scores.”
Unless the OP plans a decent course load for next year and does well on the current exams they will take this year, then the GPA can hurt. They may be better off banking on selling some of the ECs really well.