Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Will conservatives stop sending their kids to colleges other than super conservative ones like Liberty? If so will it make it easier for other kids to get into places like Harvard and Yale?
Also if you are super conservative and your kid got into an Ivy League school will you refuse to let them go?
Not super conservative, but spouse and I have questioned if we would PAY for tuition to a place that is hostile to our beliefs. Obviously we cannot stop our kids from going.
To be blunt, our oldest wants to go to conservative schools of his own volition, our middle one is the only one to likely be Ivy material and he is perhaps our most conservative kid. He doesn’t think Notre Dame is Catholic enough. Our youngest loves SEC culture. So we’ll see.
And what belief are these? Better yet what colleges meet these stricts beliefs?
Mainline Catholic beliefs taught by the Magisterium of the Catholic Church.
Benedictine (KS), Franciscan (OH) and University of Dallas (TX) are the types of schools our oldest is attracted to. He has asked us if BYU would welcome him because he likes the mountains and what he has read about the culture. He’s also found a few Catholic schools in Europe that are of interest to him. But from a young age he’s been adamant that he wants to go into residential real estate investing (made his first investment when he was 12). His stated goal in life since he was 9 is to own apartment buildings. We know he is toying with the idea of skipping or deferring college to pursue real estate, but hasn’t approached us about it yet. We’ll see what advice we give him.
You can surmise from this list that the Jesuit schools are out for him. We toured University for Dallas and it was the closest thing to Catholic BYU in culture I’ve seen. Spouse and I felt really old because there were multiple enrolled early 20s married couples with kids there. We married in our early 20s after graduation but didn’t have our first until 28. It was refreshing and different to see that on campus.
Middle child is the one that will be a viable Ivy candidate, but he’s more intense than the oldest, so will be interesting to see what he wants when his turn rolls around.
The youngest loves the pageantry and social scene of big time college football (we have season tickets to our alma mater). A lot will change for the youngest as there is a long way to go, so we’ll see.