Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a Catholic with degrees from 2 Catholic universities (neither of which I attended BECAUSE they were Catholic), it seems like non-Catholics often overestimate the cohesion & exclusivity among Catholics. Yes, there are few extremist factions within Catholicism, but at ND, BC, Villanova, etc there are no secret handshakes or special privileges. In fact, anybody who would try to establish something like that would be scorned.
Also I Catholic with a degree from a Catholic college, and kids in Catholic schools, and while I don't disagree with what pp says, I don't think it can go with out saying that ND and Villanova are much more traditional Catholic than Georgetown and BC. My own kid has toured and will apply to several Jesuit colleges and zero non-Jesuit colleges.
But if OP's kid feels a connection with ND, then good for both of them.
Wow, you seem very close minded. You need to get over the Jesuit thing. There isn't much difference between the vibe at ND and BC. You eliminate a top 20 Catholic university because it isn't Jesuit? Your poor kid.
IYKYK. Jesuit institutions have a very specific educational philosophy that leads to curricular decisions and influences campus life. For people who want that, it really isn't duplicated at non-Jesuit schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a Catholic with degrees from 2 Catholic universities (neither of which I attended BECAUSE they were Catholic), it seems like non-Catholics often overestimate the cohesion & exclusivity among Catholics. Yes, there are few extremist factions within Catholicism, but at ND, BC, Villanova, etc there are no secret handshakes or special privileges. In fact, anybody who would try to establish something like that would be scorned.
Also I Catholic with a degree from a Catholic college, and kids in Catholic schools, and while I don't disagree with what pp says, I don't think it can go with out saying that ND and Villanova are much more traditional Catholic than Georgetown and BC. My own kid has toured and will apply to several Jesuit colleges and zero non-Jesuit colleges.
But if OP's kid feels a connection with ND, then good for both of them.
Wow, you seem very close minded. You need to get over the Jesuit thing. There isn't much difference between the vibe at ND and BC. You eliminate a top 20 Catholic university because it isn't Jesuit? Your poor kid.
Anonymous wrote:ND kids tend to either go teach at a Catholic school and make almost nothing, or go on to law or medicine. Hence, the out comes.
Anonymous wrote:I.grew up in an area with Notre Dame grads. They are pretty much wall flowers with average intelligence. I can find a much more intelligent group of alumni from a Podunk state college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:P.S. Your fake little business district is pathetic.
Huh?
Anonymous wrote:ND kids tend to either go teach at a Catholic school and make almost nothing, or go on to law or medicine. Hence, the out comes.
Anonymous wrote:ND kids tend to either go teach at a Catholic school and make almost nothing, or go on to law or medicine. Hence, the out comes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I.grew up in an area with Notre Dame grads. They are pretty much wall flowers with average intelligence. I can find a much more intelligent group of alumni from a Podunk state college.
Employers disagree with you which is the most important thing.
Employers kind of actually agree with pp
Faang, citadel/sig/marker making trading, PE/vc/hf, top tier consulting isn’t really peppered with ND grads
I like nd a lot and I think its one of the best schools in the country but it is less “high octane” than say Penn or duke
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I.grew up in an area with Notre Dame grads. They are pretty much wall flowers with average intelligence. I can find a much more intelligent group of alumni from a Podunk state college.
Employers disagree with you which is the most important thing.
Anonymous wrote:I.grew up in an area with Notre Dame grads. They are pretty much wall flowers with average intelligence. I can find a much more intelligent group of alumni from a Podunk state college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was looking at Notre Dame’s admissions page —“we empower brilliant energetic thinkers who are motivated to change the world.”
Heady stuff! That’s a pretty high threshold. I suppose there are enough students like that, but most 17/18 year olds have no idea what they want to do in life, let alone change the world!
Are regular high-achieving students ever admitted to Notre Dame— kids who have lots of APs, good work ethic, well-liked, good EC—or just the students who have extraordinary experiences and insights?
You actually believe what an admissions page says? That's all fluff marketing.
So you’re saying regular kids ARE admitted?? You don’t have to be a super star?
Yes, regular catholic legacies are admitted. Here's another piece of ND marketing:
What type of student does Notre Dame look for?
Well-rounded senior class leaders. Dedicated artists. Our most competitive applicants are more than just students—they are creative intellectuals, passionate people with multiple interests. Above all else, they are involved—in the classroom, in the community, and in the relentless pursuit of truth.
same garbage that every school prints
Oh yep, I saw that. “Relentless pursuit of truth” 😂😂