Good to know. I'm old enough to remember when Holy Cross was the premier school in the "Catholic Ivy League." |
I grew up just outside Worcester and my dad went to HC. It was considered the gold standard in our (Catholic) family, although my siblings ended up at BC to the outrage of one grandparent. I agree the Cross is a hidden gem; Naviance for our MCPS HS made it look out of reach for our DC with a 4.5wGPA. And Worcester has improved a lot. But don't oversell; it's at least an hour to Boston by car (1.5hrs on the commuter rail.) And no one's heading out to the Cape during the school year - weather! - and even if they did, it would be at least 3hrs. |
Assumption is fine. It's in the nicest part of Worcester and I grew up down the street. Let's be frank though it is not a hidden gem. It has an 82% acceptance rate and is virtually unknown outside of central Mass. |
| Holy sh*t!!! |
Haha - fair re Cape (but three hours?? Guess depends on where) but proximity to Berkshires and VT was nice for me as a student, and to Boston when I felt like it. Def don’t want to over promise Woo - I went to HC for HC, not for Worcester, and it’s likely the same for almost all now. But I would say it’s net neutral/positive now, vs a negative in the past, depending on your frame of reference. No dig on Waterville, ME, a fine town with great outdoors access, but I’d rather be in Worcester. Colby is a great example of a LAC that has dramatically enhanced its standing over the past decade through effective marketing and capital campaigning, and it’s not Waterville that is bringing people there. |
That part of Worcester is indeed beautiful and could easily pass for Chestnut Hill, or better. The bio med opportunities should not be overlooked in Woo for students interested in that space/medicine. That is the industry that has been key to Worcester’s turnaround. |
So you admit that you practice religious discrimination in hiring? |
| Holy Cross has, except for a strange (and small) recent downturn been comfortably among the academic elite. It is odd to see comments talking about it as something less than that. But I suppose these things can be cyclical. I see schools that have prospered very recently (from say, a few national basketball championships or some such) posing as long time academic bluebloods. That is simply false-some of those schools wouldn't have gotten a second look as recently as the early 2000s. HC has basically returned to what it was. This is not something new. |
Yawn |
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this is the same pattern being experienced across the board at most collleges. Kids are now applying to 15, 20+ colleges whereas they were appkying to onky five a decade ago. That phehomenon alone accounts for larger applicant classes = drop
in acceptances |
No, not “alone.” Holy Cross laudably tried to go need blind for many years and did not quite have the money (though its per student endowment still exceeds all other Jesuit schools). Coupled with poor nationwide admissions recruiting, which was exacerbated by COVID, its acceptance rate went up, relative to its peers, to its highest ever. Targeted merit aid and better recruiting made that a low bar to overcome. |
Allowed? Who is going to limit the number of schools someone can apply to? You realize it's still a free country (unless Trump wins and then who knows what will be allowed. Teenage girls will likely be forced to be handmaids instead of going to college.) |
Completely incorrect. Know a few students who go there. There are different floor options that are or are not co ed but ALL dorms are mixed. |
Pathetic |
| Friend's child denied at Holy Cross and in at 3 ivies: Yale, Brown and Cornell. |