Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Know several Hoya friends and family who haven’t contributed in a long time. Not happy with drift from its Catholic heritage.
You must hang out with some very old people, and/or a group of trad Catholics.
I went to Georgetown in the 1980s, when it was already about 50% non-Catholic students. There were certainly some students who were very involved in Campus Ministry and attending Ignatian retreats, as well as a lot of cradle Catholics, but I don't remember any culture warriors.
The theology requirements have not changed since then, nor has the rough share of the study body who are Catholic. Georgetown has been, for a very very long time, a community that welcomes and appreciates people from various religious backgrounds. Anyone who claims a 'drift' attended over 50 years ago.
And the ones who attended 50 years ago are the ones with the most wealth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Know several Hoya friends and family who haven’t contributed in a long time. Not happy with drift from its Catholic heritage.
You must hang out with some very old people, and/or a group of trad Catholics.
I went to Georgetown in the 1980s, when it was already about 50% non-Catholic students. There were certainly some students who were very involved in Campus Ministry and attending Ignatian retreats, as well as a lot of cradle Catholics, but I don't remember any culture warriors.
The theology requirements have not changed since then, nor has the rough share of the study body who are Catholic. Georgetown has been, for a very very long time, a community that welcomes and appreciates people from various religious backgrounds. Anyone who claims a 'drift' attended over 50 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Know several Hoya friends and family who haven’t contributed in a long time. Not happy with drift from its Catholic heritage.
Anonymous wrote:Know several Hoya friends and family who haven’t contributed in a long time. Not happy with drift from its Catholic heritage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a kid who is an upperclassmen at Georgetown and we live about 4 miles from campus.
Kid is not part of the lax-bro (male or female) culture, apparently has a great group of friends, is active in a number of clubs and has had a number of great internship opportunities, particularly during the school year.
SFS has been a great experience for them, even if going into the government at this time isn't a first choice.
And problem of god was a great class for them - we are not particularly religious or catholic.
My kid is very interested in SFS. Given your kid’s positive experience, what is he/she likely to do post graduation? Is the option to go into government getting any better? What are SFS 2026 graduates gravitating towards as they seek opportunities? How is the career office responding to the current situation with government employment recruiting?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ND’s large endowment comes from having one of the best money managers for decades believe WSJ profiled individual and ND has loyal big donors. Georgetown is the oldest Catholic school and to excuse its small endowment on a late start is ludicrous. Well publicized alumni giving rates over last 30 years Princeton, Dartmouth, Notre Dame and Holy Cross.
Georgetown has also chased away a lot of Catholic support over recent years.
In contrast. Notre Dame embraces their Catholic heritage.
Wasn't Georgetown the one with the shameful slavery history?
Anonymous wrote:What exactly is a "Catholic community?" there are different types of Catholics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ND has $18-20 billion endowment while Gtown has less than $4 billion. Enough said.
ND and Georgetown are the top two Catholic schools, and lots of kids apply to both, in part bc they are both Catholic and in part bc they both offer EA. But they are not actually very alike.
One is a city school, deeply embedded with the city, with an international/ cosmopolitan / outward focus. The other is a (mostly) isolated, very large campus, with a more inward focus and a super-tight community. Both have great academics (with strengths in different areas) but very different feels. I'd think that most students who visited both would have a strong preference for one over the other, based on individual preferences.
Georgetown is not a top Catholic university. It is a secular university with a Catholic history.
No Catholics go to Georgetown for a Catholic University, community or education. The Georgetown jesuits dirched Catholicism a long time ago, dusting it off now and then for alumni, then shoving it into the back of the closet the rest of the time.
Notre Dame is the top Catholic university, followed by schools such as Villanova, Boston, Holy Cross, Catholic U, etc.