I would say "few" fits the definition of "a minority". https://www.dictionary.com/browse/few |
I think it is known to be a nice school - mostly appeals to Catholics and is very athletic and it is more down to earth and diverse economically and geographically than some other all boys schools. I can see the appeal. Less country club families. |
It's actually 37%. And I would consider that to be many relative to expectations of a non ivy going up against an ivy. Let's take a look at other top schools going up against Yale. I would say on some of these (USC, Rice, Vanderbilt, Northwestern), you could say "few" pick it over Yale, but with most schools, "many" pick them over Yale. I would say a third or more constitutes many. If a school is picked over 50% of the time, I would use the term "most." |
Okay. Got it. So it's not "many choose ND over Yale"...it's "relative to what one would expect, a surprisingly large minority of people choose ND over Yale". Cool. |
Yes you got it. Bottom line, many people pick Notre Dame over Yale and other top ivy league schools. Why? Because it offers things that people want that those ivies don't. Similar situation with schools like the Naval Academy, where 44% chose it over Yale. It offers something unique that is impossible for Yale to deliver. Glad I was able to explain this to you and you finally get it. |
So sad folks need to make themselves feel better about their kids second tier school. |
Gonzaga or Notre Dame? Could apply to either |
Have a Freshman at Gonzaga. Came from MCPS. Having a wonderful experience. Takes the Metro which is convenient- a bit pricey. As for the college discussions, I went to Catholic HS, as did my other kids. Lots of kids choosing Catholic colleges- they are only applying to Catholic colleges- this is as true today as it was almost 40 years ago. Most kids getting a great education, regardless of where they go to school. Very happy so far with our experience at Gonzaga. Guessing he will do well when it comes to college, but for now, just looking forward to Sophomore year. Everything does not need to be a competition nor contentious. |
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 |
Public means affiliated and run by and with the government including chartered schools. Everything else is private |
Our middle son was recruited by Yale and visited on an official visit they paid for.
He chose a Catholic university instead. He felt much more comfortable in the Catholic school after attending a Jesuit high school. When he got back from his trip to New Haven he said that this wasn’t the place for him. |
This is probably more typical than people are aware. My son also toured Yale and did not want to apply. In fact he didn't apply to any ivy league schools despite having a perfect ACT score, etc. He had a specific type of environment in mind, and places like Yale and Brown (both places he toured) were crossed off the list immediately. He applied to places like BC and ND...didn't want Georgetown though. |
In 2023, Notre Dame admitted 3,402 students out of 28,354 applicants. 60% enrolled. So, for starters, ND’s yield isn’t particularly impressive and I think is indicative of how applicants view ND’s “unique” experience. To your point: per parchment, 37% of students admitted to both Yale and ND choose ND. 78% choose Harvard over Yale. 70% choose Princeton over Yale. 70% choose Stanford over Yale. 31% choose Michigan over Yale. 67% choose CAL STATE FULLERTON over Yale. 40% choose CAL POLY over Yale. 33% choose NYU over Yale. 31% choose UC Irvine over Yale. Conclusions: 1. ND isn’t exceptional in this regard and 2. We’re ultimately talking about nothing more than a handful of kids who chose ND over Yale. |
Nice cherry-picking. 25% chose Cornell 16% chose Northwestern 20% chose Rice 24% chose Vanderbilt 31% chose UCLA All these schools are ranked higher than ND yet more chose ND. Glad I could bring you some clarity. |
The misunderstanding may be at your end. What the previous poster's demographic desires, above all else, is status. And this status can be obtained by proclaiming that a child got into an Ivy. That the child flounders there when he might have succeeded at a school that did not have a laser focus on The Current Thing, is irrelevant. Can't take "he went to a school that makes him, and by transitivity, me, better than you!" away from a snob. |