What colleges gave better financial aid for your kids? |
+1 I had the first reply to this thread. |
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You should really visit both and see what your child likes. They are both great schools (and hard admits) but the 4yr experience will be different.
Also - be sure to find some true safeties that they love. |
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I think location of colleges matters a lot more than people realize. So many kids go to Northwestern and then .. end up in Chicago. Or they don't and realize they're in SF and 60% of their college friends are in chicago and 40% are spread out in a dozen different cities.
Ditto BC, Ditto Georgetown, Ditto UVA, Ditto Stanford, Ditto UCLA, Ditto Rice ... etc etc. A nice thing about ND (or middlebury or grinnell, etc) is that nobody is staying in South Bend. And it's more like 25% go to chicago, 15% to NY, 15% to DC, 10% to SF etc.. You will have a circle of 25 minimum in your first job town. It can make the decade out of college a lot more fun. And successful -- those connections won't matter much if they're 2000 miles away. If your future is in DC, Georgetown. If not, ND. |
For those who are basing their perception of surrounding area of ND on 10 or more years ago, it is much different now. Nice walkable urban area with shops, restaurants, and apartments. Chicago is an easy train ride or 2 hour drive away. https://www.nd.edu/stories/rolling-out-the-welcome-mat/
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Good point! They're both great, if your kid can indeed get in. But I think this is a valid point to consider. |
| If given a chance, everyone should take one to live in DC at least for few years. |
| Since there are no frats at ND, where are the weekend parties held? |
But Georgetown REA only allows EA to public schools? |
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I vote GT simply because I find ND alums incredibly annoying and would prefer to have fewer in this area.
Since you asked. Though these very irritating people do seem to like their alma mater, so that's nice I guess. |
You're really sticking to your guns here, aren't you? You may not apply to two restrictive action programs. Georgetown has the same restriction. You can apply REA to Georgetown and to other EA, but not other REA. You cannot apply REA to both Georgetown and ND. |
| Georgetown is incredibly stingy with money. Lots of rich kids and lots of poor kids. It has a real 1980s barbell vibe. |
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My son considered a few top Catholic schools...he really wanted to stay in that environment coming out of his Jesuit HS.
He looked at ND, BC, GT and others. He applied to ND BC and some safeties. Ended up at ND. Did not like Georgetown AT ALL. Campus was cramped and tired. No green space to speak of. Also was ready to be FAR away from home. He just graduated from ND and is still going back to campus for football games...is there this weekend for the big game against Ohio State. He has made some lifelong friends, a few of which have moved to DC for jobs. From my perspective, ND seemed to be a really happy, positive place with friendly people (students, parents, staff). The campus is pristine. Residential life is really special where your dorm becomes your home and you bond with the people and it's culture/traditions. Each dorm has a chapel and students can attend mass at their dorm or their friends' dorms. My son was there for four years and I don't think he ever attended mass at the basilica except the times we were there to visit. He really enjoyed mass with his friends in the casual environment of the chapels. Football weekends are absolutely electric. I would recommend he visit campus on a football weekend to get a sense of the vibe. Arrive on a Friday to see normal campus life and stay for the Saturday game day. Good luck! |
Again you are wrong. It is determined on whether or not the other REA school has that restriction. ND does not. |
First of all, it would make more sense to call it GU, not GT (that would be more like Georgia Tech). GU has not "really struggled financially." It's true, their sincere commitment to Jesuit traditions precludes it from investing in over the topness. Notre Dame could take a lesson. The campaign just launching focuses on raising capital to invest in making the world a better place, not a state of the art swimming pool. Would my gym-loving, bro business school son there love a better gym? Maybe. But he really loves the scrappy culture of it all at Georgetown. I just think people leave there feeling proud they are at a place that lives its Jesuit traditions, to give back and do good. I don't know, because I haven't experienced it and only know how badly some current kids there rub me, but I just don't get the sense that ND people have that same attitude. |