Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you say more about Catholic U and what you mean by more conservative than the others? How does that translate with regards to the experience? Thanks.
NP. I think the PP was asking specifically about Catholic University in Washington DC, which does tend to have a more conservative reputation than some of the other Catholic universities.
Good point! I'm the PP who mentioned the Jesuits. My experience of CUA is that it has a higher proportion of students who are training for the priesthood and/or are members of religious orders than any other Catholic college I've experienced in the US, and students, both lay/secular and seminarian/religious, tend to be all in on the party line on right-leaning Catholic politics. My experience of Jesuit colleges is that the more intellectual/free-thinking/less-orthodox commitments of the order can make these institutions welcoming to a wider range of faith-informed positions, and you are more likely to find significant numbers of students with left-leaning/social justice-y orientations, and faculty support for those students. Those are both broad generalizations, of course.
Anonymous wrote:Fordham and Hofstra
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you say more about Catholic U and what you mean by more conservative than the others? How does that translate with regards to the experience? Thanks.
NP. I think the PP was asking specifically about Catholic University in Washington DC, which does tend to have a more conservative reputation than some of the other Catholic universities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you say more about Catholic U and what you mean by more conservative than the others? How does that translate with regards to the experience? Thanks.
Are you asking OP?
Catholic universities = universities associated with Catholic orders. Some orders are known to be more conservative than others. Others are very liberal and social justice-oriented. See: the difference between Pope Benedict and Pope Francis.
This can influence the kind of students the school attracts. If you're a more liberal Catholic, you may bristle at a school with more traditional Catholic students, professors, and administration, and likewise. Some Catholic colleges don't allow condoms to be distributed on campus, for example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you say more about Catholic U and what you mean by more conservative than the others? How does that translate with regards to the experience? Thanks.
As a general rule, Jesuit universities tend to be more liberal, while those more subject to the influence of the hierarchy (i.e., bishops) tend to be more conservative. That's a big generalization, but looking at the whole list of Jesuit universities is a good place to start. They are typically in cities, the result of a specific commitment of the Jesuits to urban education. Most have already been mentioned above, but here's a complete list and map: https://www.ajcunet.edu/institutions .
Anonymous wrote:Can you say more about Catholic U and what you mean by more conservative than the others? How does that translate with regards to the experience? Thanks.