<p>I noticed that you will first receive an associate degree of Oxford, like a community college… Am I right?</p>
<p>… umm … no.</p>
<p>Yes, it is. That’s why they have 52% acceptance rate.</p>
<p>Yeah, Georgia Tech must also be a community college. Please tell me that was sarcasm.</p>
<p>^Is that to me or to OP? Anyway, community colleges have like 98-100% acceptance rate. So it is obvious that it was sarcasm.</p>
<p>You mean it was not a community college?</p>
<p>Seriously, this is a dumb question. OFCOURSE it is not a community college… some people even choose Oxford College over Emory College because of size and some other benefits. Find me someone who chooses a community college for any other reason other than finances (or some extraordinary circumstances).</p>
<p>Oxford is a two-year college, like a community college.
Oxford students graduate with an Associate in Arts degree (A.A.), just as do graduates from a community college.</p>
<p>However, the term “community college” usually denotes a two-year public school that offers the A.A. degree. Emory University is one of the few universities (perhaps the only one?) to maintain a small two-year college within the university that offers the A.A. degree, and graduates from Oxford can continue their studies at Emory, if they wish.</p>
<p>sortof. some lie and say its the “real emory” lol</p>