| Please don't talk like this about people's children. This is a very good school with a great community. The OP was asking about admitted children. |
Please see links and you can guess how difficult is to get in or not .. Every year GZ is getting more difficult to get in https://www.lotusprep.com/best-high-schools-dc/ http://www.gonzaga.org/document.doc?id=7108 |
| wait, so if two kids are applying and have the same stats, except one is Catholic and one is not, the advantage doesn't go to the Catholic one? |
Off course not |
It's not a simple yes, but generally yes. |
It's a Catholic school. It's owned by a Catholic religious order and run by priests. Almost all of its faculty and staff are Catholics. Almost all of its alumni and supporters are Catholics. And you don't think they would give a Catholic applicant the nod over a non-Catholic? How in the world would you come up with that? |
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Preference goes to legacies and then athletes.
Gonzaga is an independent Catholic school. They don't receive funding from the local arch dioces. |
Um nope. Gonzaga IS an archdiocesan school. Prep is independent. |
Gonzaga is independent. It is part of the ADW, so is Prep, but it is independent. GC and SJC are also independent. |
Well, they have to pick one of them, my money would be on the Catholic one 9/10 times. I'm sure they hope he grows up to be a legacy/donor/whatever, and the chances are stronger with him being Catholic. |
Sorry but nope again. This is directly from their website : In-Brief Gonzaga College High School is a Jesuit, Roman Catholic school and a part of the Archdiocese of Washington. In 1821, the Society of Jesus (commonly referred to as the Jesuits) founded Gonzaga. It is a part of the system of Jesuit High Schools in this country and around the world. The school's all-male student body currently numbers 960 students, and Gonzaga seeks to challenge each student while encouraging spiritual growth. In addition to our strong academic program, other important aspects of life at Gonzaga are our community service outreach programs and co-curricular activities, including our sports teams and club organizations. Altogether, these aspects educate a well-rounded student, a young man who is: intellectually competent, open to growth, religious, loving, and committed to doing justice in generous service to the people of God. Simply put, we educate our students to be Men for Others. |
Again, a school can be part of the ADW and independent. |
| I heard from a friend that her son scored in the 20% and still got in this year. His brother is there and he goes to Catholic School. This is a kid who never worked hard in school and has the poor grades to show it, but he is a legacy. I know a lot of great kids there but the fact that a student of this caliber can get in speaks volumes. I have no boys so no dog in this fight but it definitely shocked me. |
A legacy and 3 families with strong political ties were chosen over a stronger candidate. The student was not even waitlisted. |
Yikes! You mean his HSPT score was in the 20s? I’m shocked that he got into Gonzaga. Our k-8 parochial school is sending many to Gonzaga this year; all legacies that applied but 1 & many new families. |