Scranton is not even remotely struggling. Where are you getting that from? |
lol. You again. |
Notre Dame of Maryland University (NDMU). It's a private, Catholic women's university in Baltimore MD. Undergraduate and graduate programs in Arts/Sciences, Education, Nursing, and Pharmacy. Strong programs in nursing and education. Not a university that usually makes it into discussion on this forum. |
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Key Jesuit Universities & Colleges
Northeast: Boston College, Fairfield University, Fordham University, College of the Holy Cross, Le Moyne College, St. Joseph's University, University of Scranton, Saint Peter's University, Canisius University. Mid-Atlantic/South: Georgetown University, Loyola University Maryland, Spring Hill College, Loyola University New Orleans. Midwest: Marquette University, Loyola University Chicago, Creighton University, John Carroll University, Rockhurst University, University of Detroit Mercy, Xavier University. West: Santa Clara University, Gonzaga University, Loyola Marymount University, Seattle University, University of San Francisco. |
| Personally, I'd look to Boston College, Santa Clara University and Saint Louis University for the breadth of their arts and sciences curricula. |
And there are only 28 of them. |
I know! They are irrelevant, wrong, and sooo persistent. |
| OP- sorry that your thread deteriorated so quickly. There are a lot of great schools, both Jesuit and associated with other orders. Can you give an idea of what you are looking for? |
| Jesuit standouts are Holy Cross and Georgetown. |
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OP, dcum people are harsh. But one thing you should understand, if you don't already, is that non-Jesuit Catholic colleges may be VERY different. Catholic in DC is very "old-fashioned" compared to Jesuit colleges - it has single-sex dorms and generally a much more conservative student body.
Also, I want to add that DCUM is oddly and fairly uniquely not exactly down on BC, but definitely not pro-BC. I am from New England and in academia and BC is extraordinarily popular and sought after. Obviously there are exceptions but in my circles, the rank is very clearly: Georgetown, BC, Holy Cross then the rest. Last, in my opinion, even the least selective Jesuit colleges have a lot to offer. In addition to giving everyone a strong liberal arts education, many of them are very practical and focus on getting students internships during college. Graduates end up having better job results than you might expect for a school of its ranking or selectivity. As a result, Wall Street Journal, which cares about ROI more than anything else, ranks some of the lesser known Jesuit colleges (including Loyola Maryland) extremely high. |
| Agree about Georgetown, Boston College, and Holy Cross being the best. But non-Jesuit Notre Dame is a step above those 3. |
| Who is the poster calling the OP an idiot for posting a question on a college forum? Do you have nothing better to do than yell at people on DCUM for using the forum? You need therapy, |
Have you seen Fairfield’s admit rate the last few years? 25 %. Not a safety. |
who cares? not the question. |