Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because private school parents need schools that seem appealing/impressive to other private school parents. Several schools have carved out that space by being “rich kid” schools. Tulane, Wake, Northeastern, etc. Look at their Pell grant numbers, they have some of the lowest percentages of any national university.
This. It is so odd how private school parents think sometimes. They would rather shell out a shit ton of money to have their kids attend second tier private schools over much better state flagships. You see it a lot. And it makes no sense. I guess you can’t buy brains.
Tulane is ranked 63. It is a pretty good school.
It is also a manageable size. Not every kid wants to go to a huge school.
This! I really think the “just go to state school” crowd forgets that not everyone enjoys that environment. I would’ve, personally, traded my time at UMich with a more supportive, small environment.
My kid is at Tulane. Did not get into our in state school (UVA), so we are shamed for choosing Tulane? Why do you people care? It is a fabulous school. Yes, so are lots of other schools. You do what is good for your family and try not to judge others so much.
Not shaming. Just generally curious what changed about it.
Also, would a Catholic school kid fit in? In my time, my Jewish HS friends were the ones who liked Tulane.
FWIW, my not-Jewish DS goes to Tulane and loves it. His best friend at Tulane is a devout Catholic who attends Mass weekly.
+1. Catholic DD loves Tulane. Her BFF also is Catholic. They have many friends of all backgrounds. I find these posts amusing.
Personally I don’t know anyone with dc there who isn’t Jewish (4 right now). But that’s obviously just my experience
Anonymous wrote:Do nit understand the hate for Tulane. It is a very good school, highly selective and really small class sizes taught by professors.
It is no more party school vs other colleges. It use to make the list as a party school because it is in New Orleans and Madri Gras.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because private school parents need schools that seem appealing/impressive to other private school parents. Several schools have carved out that space by being “rich kid” schools. Tulane, Wake, Northeastern, etc. Look at their Pell grant numbers, they have some of the lowest percentages of any national university.
This. It is so odd how private school parents think sometimes. They would rather shell out a shit ton of money to have their kids attend second tier private schools over much better state flagships. You see it a lot. And it makes no sense. I guess you can’t buy brains.
Tulane is ranked 63. It is a pretty good school.
It is also a manageable size. Not every kid wants to go to a huge school.
This! I really think the “just go to state school” crowd forgets that not everyone enjoys that environment. I would’ve, personally, traded my time at UMich with a more supportive, small environment.
My kid is at Tulane. Did not get into our in state school (UVA), so we are shamed for choosing Tulane? Why do you people care? It is a fabulous school. Yes, so are lots of other schools. You do what is good for your family and try not to judge others so much.
Not shaming. Just generally curious what changed about it.
Also, would a Catholic school kid fit in? In my time, my Jewish HS friends were the ones who liked Tulane.
FWIW, my not-Jewish DS goes to Tulane and loves it. His best friend at Tulane is a devout Catholic who attends Mass weekly.
+1. Catholic DD loves Tulane. Her BFF also is Catholic. They have many friends of all backgrounds. I find these posts amusing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tulane has a significant Jewish population.
Correct. It is over 45%. Highest in the US.
Wrong. IT is not 45%…..we are Jewish and my kid is at Tulane. Number is high, but not even above 30%
According to the Hillel Guide To Colleges: Tulane University is at 43% Jewish students population (3,042 Jewish students out of 7,295 total students.)
I don’t think I’d want to send my Christian dc to a school for this reason. Not bc we are anti semitic or religion is so important to us but because it’s often a place where people meet their life partners and life long friends etc, and many Jewish parents I know secretly (or not so secretly) don’t want their dc ending up with non Jews.
Hillel is wrong. The number is more like 25%. I’m the PP. Both of my Jewish kids are there now. My daughter’s BF is Catholic….and I’m perfectly fine with that. Stop he madness…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because private school parents need schools that seem appealing/impressive to other private school parents. Several schools have carved out that space by being “rich kid” schools. Tulane, Wake, Northeastern, etc. Look at their Pell grant numbers, they have some of the lowest percentages of any national university.
This. It is so odd how private school parents think sometimes. They would rather shell out a shit ton of money to have their kids attend second tier private schools over much better state flagships. You see it a lot. And it makes no sense. I guess you can’t buy brains.
Tulane is ranked 63. It is a pretty good school.
It is also a manageable size. Not every kid wants to go to a huge school.
This! I really think the “just go to state school” crowd forgets that not everyone enjoys that environment. I would’ve, personally, traded my time at UMich with a more supportive, small environment.
My kid is at Tulane. Did not get into our in state school (UVA), so we are shamed for choosing Tulane? Why do you people care? It is a fabulous school. Yes, so are lots of other schools. You do what is good for your family and try not to judge others so much.
Not shaming. Just generally curious what changed about it.
Also, would a Catholic school kid fit in? In my time, my Jewish HS friends were the ones who liked Tulane.
FWIW, my not-Jewish DS goes to Tulane and loves it. His best friend at Tulane is a devout Catholic who attends Mass weekly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because private school parents need schools that seem appealing/impressive to other private school parents. Several schools have carved out that space by being “rich kid” schools. Tulane, Wake, Northeastern, etc. Look at their Pell grant numbers, they have some of the lowest percentages of any national university.
This. It is so odd how private school parents think sometimes. They would rather shell out a shit ton of money to have their kids attend second tier private schools over much better state flagships. You see it a lot. And it makes no sense. I guess you can’t buy brains.
Tulane is ranked 63. It is a pretty good school.
It is also a manageable size. Not every kid wants to go to a huge school.
This! I really think the “just go to state school” crowd forgets that not everyone enjoys that environment. I would’ve, personally, traded my time at UMich with a more supportive, small environment.
My kid is at Tulane. Did not get into our in state school (UVA), so we are shamed for choosing Tulane? Why do you people care? It is a fabulous school. Yes, so are lots of other schools. You do what is good for your family and try not to judge others so much.
Not shaming. Just generally curious what changed about it.
Also, would a Catholic school kid fit in? In my time, my Jewish HS friends were the ones who liked Tulane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tulane has a significant Jewish population.
Correct. It is over 45%. Highest in the US.
Wrong. IT is not 45%…..we are Jewish and my kid is at Tulane. Number is high, but not even above 30%
According to the Hillel Guide To Colleges: Tulane University is at 43% Jewish students population (3,042 Jewish students out of 7,295 total students.)
I don’t think I’d want to send my Christian dc to a school for this reason. Not bc we are anti semitic or religion is so important to us but because it’s often a place where people meet their life partners and life long friends etc, and many Jewish parents I know secretly (or not so secretly) don’t want their dc ending up with non Jews.
Anonymous wrote:Tulane has a significant Jewish population.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tulane has a significant Jewish population.
Correct. It is over 45%. Highest in the US.
Wrong. IT is not 45%…..we are Jewish and my kid is at Tulane. Number is high, but not even above 30%
According to the Hillel Guide To Colleges: Tulane University is at 43% Jewish students population (3,042 Jewish students out of 7,295 total students.)
Anonymous wrote:Fwiw the kids we know that go to Tulane are mostly not academically oriented, including kids from NOLA itself. Plus, EDI and II kids are a major proportion of the school, and they are rarely top-of-the-class type kids. That inevitably impacts Tulane's reputation. But, maybe it's changing, given how competitive college admissions have become. Look at USC, as a standout example. In my (prehistoric) days, USC and Tulane had the same reputation as party schools with not a lot of academic rigor.
Anonymous wrote:According to this Hillel guide To Colleges table, undergrad population at Tulane University is 44%:
https://Hillel.org/top-60-jewish-colleges/
Scroll down to the second list titled: Top 60 Private Universities by Jewish Population
Then scroll a bit further to Top 60 Schools (both public & private) and Tulane University is listed at #1 for percentage of Jewish undergraduate students at 44%.
Anonymous wrote:Fwiw the kids we know that go to Tulane are mostly not academically oriented, including kids from NOLA itself. Plus, EDI and II kids are a major proportion of the school, and they are rarely top-of-the-class type kids. That inevitably impacts Tulane's reputation. But, maybe it's changing, given how competitive college admissions have become. Look at USC, as a standout example. In my (prehistoric) days, USC and Tulane had the same reputation as party schools with not a lot of academic rigor.