Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why ND if not Catholic? You'll be an oddity. More than 80% of the student body is Catholic.
2/3 of the US population identifies as Christian. If the OP’s kid is Christian it’s fine. In fact, it wouldn’t even matter if OP’s kid were a practicing Muslim. To “fit in” at Notre Dame, you have to be comfortable being around religion. I wouldn’t recommend it to an atheist but other than that you’re good.
Anonymous wrote:Why ND if not Catholic? You'll be an oddity. More than 80% of the student body is Catholic.
Anonymous wrote:^Holy Cross is easier for admission-good back up for ND:
Anonymous wrote:ND is 80-82% Catholic, which makes me think “why would a non-Catholic want to attend there when there are 3,000+ institutions of higher learning in the U.S.?” But, after reading this story in The Observer, I would never send a non-Catholic there. https://www.ndsmcobserver.com/article/2024/04/a-transfer-students-thoughts-on-notre-dame-students
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ND is 80-82% Catholic, which makes me think “why would a non-Catholic want to attend there when there are 3,000+ institutions of higher learning in the U.S.?” But, after reading this story in The Observer, I would never send a non-Catholic there. https://www.ndsmcobserver.com/article/2024/04/a-transfer-students-thoughts-on-notre-dame-students
Sure, a single story from an unhappy transfer (who, quite frankly, sounds immature a slightly unhinged) should definitely weigh more than all OP’s other research. . . .
I read the OP’s kid is coming form a non-Catholic school rather than the kid is non-Catholic.
I didn’t even understand the article. But whatever. The kid was a transfer, meaning he wasn’t happy at his last school either. Clearly he’s the problem.
Same! What was he trying to say? It was such a garbled piece, I didn't understand the point. Sounds like he felt let down by some "two-faced" friends? My (non-Catholic) son also really liked Notre Dame. The 80% Catholic community *does* give him pause but he really liked the kids he met there and academics are top tier.
Anonymous wrote:
Hi -- DC's first choice is ND but scores are below the 50%. Submit?
Any other advice? We've been advised to emphasize service.
Anonymous wrote:ND is a fantastic school but South Bend has long winters. Might look at Holy Cross in Massachusetts, similar vibe as ND but easier to get into.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ND is 80-82% Catholic, which makes me think “why would a non-Catholic want to attend there when there are 3,000+ institutions of higher learning in the U.S.?” But, after reading this story in The Observer, I would never send a non-Catholic there. https://www.ndsmcobserver.com/article/2024/04/a-transfer-students-thoughts-on-notre-dame-students
Sure, a single story from an unhappy transfer (who, quite frankly, sounds immature a slightly unhinged) should definitely weigh more than all OP’s other research. . . .
I read the OP’s kid is coming form a non-Catholic school rather than the kid is non-Catholic.
I didn’t even understand the article. But whatever. The kid was a transfer, meaning he wasn’t happy at his last school either. Clearly he’s the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ND is 80-82% Catholic, which makes me think “why would a non-Catholic want to attend there when there are 3,000+ institutions of higher learning in the U.S.?” But, after reading this story in The Observer, I would never send a non-Catholic there. https://www.ndsmcobserver.com/article/2024/04/a-transfer-students-thoughts-on-notre-dame-students
Sure, a single story from an unhappy transfer (who, quite frankly, sounds immature a slightly unhinged) should definitely weigh more than all OP’s other research. . . .
I read the OP’s kid is coming form a non-Catholic school rather than the kid is non-Catholic.
Anonymous wrote:ND is 80-82% Catholic, which makes me think “why would a non-Catholic want to attend there when there are 3,000+ institutions of higher learning in the U.S.?” But, after reading this story in The Observer, I would never send a non-Catholic there. https://www.ndsmcobserver.com/article/2024/04/a-transfer-students-thoughts-on-notre-dame-students
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reminder, half the enrolled class is below the 50th percentile. Not submitting below the 50th percentile is outdated advice by multiple years. Submit if anywhere near the 25th. The 25th percentile is 1470 for class of 2028, so I'd submit low 1430+.
58% submitted scores in the class of 2028.
Well, yes, but OP’s kid is probably not in the classes of students that the bottom 50th percentile and certainly the bottom 25th percent caters to: UR, first generation, athletes, legacies, sponsored Catholics, diverse geographical points and so on.
you have no idea about the OP's kid.