Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rats and the rundown facilities. Why is living with rats acceptable for that amount of tuition?
+1
Anonymous wrote:The rats and the rundown facilities. Why is living with rats acceptable for that amount of tuition?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I don't get it. I have a grad degree from Georgetown and got a good education there. I'm not some huge booster or anything, but I'm glad I went.
The one that really confuses me is the people who always compare Georgetown and Notre Dame for the express purpose of putting down Georgetown. I don't get why they can't both be worthwhile schools? It's not like there can only be one Jesuit school. I'm not Catholic but this one always confounds me.
1. ND is Holy Cross, not Jesuit
2. The reverse is also true -- GU boosters bashing ND, likely because ND always higher on the USNWR rankings.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I don't get it. I have a grad degree from Georgetown and got a good education there. I'm not some huge booster or anything, but I'm glad I went.
The one that really confuses me is the people who always compare Georgetown and Notre Dame for the express purpose of putting down Georgetown. I don't get why they can't both be worthwhile schools? It's not like there can only be one Jesuit school. I'm not Catholic but this one always confounds me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They don’t get in. Seriously.
It’s very tough. In any given year, we barely have a single kid from our HS get accepted. Only 7k undergrad, test required, not on common app and they don’t superstore but want to see every test taken.
Superstore?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown grad here.
There are things to dislike about every school. For Georgetown it’s:
Weak endowment
Georgetown area is a pain/no metro/no parking
Super expensive
Lots of rich international students
Preppy vibe
For DC locals it isn’t far enough away as I’d want for my kids to attend
Catholic/Jesuit might turn some off (not me)
For me, I feel like it doesn’t do a good job really encouraging school loyalty. I chose it for career opportunities, and SFS did that perfectly for me. But I don’t feel a ton of school spirit.
In contrast, DH went to Michigan and that place is like a religion. It’s crazy, but sometimes I wish Georgetown did a better job in the school spirit department.
Personally, I feel that's such a bonus! Why do you need loyalty? Why all this school spirit? It's not rational or an objective assessment of reality. I don't have any association with Georgetown or any other Jesuit institution, but I think the absence of school spirit lives up to the precepts of Jesuit teachings - first and foremost, reasoned discussion. These were created to be intellect-driven institutions. They do not demand loyalty. They want your brain, not your heart. And that's so much healthier.
In theory, of course. I do not have actual experience with this university. I'm just looking at it from the founding Jesuit angle.
Except this has real impact on their endowment.
That's certainly true: people always vote with their heart, not their brain. Why does a smaller endowment bother you?
Anonymous wrote:They don’t get in. Seriously.
It’s very tough. In any given year, we barely have a single kid from our HS get accepted. Only 7k undergrad, test required, not on common app and they don’t superstore but want to see every test taken.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown grad here.
There are things to dislike about every school. For Georgetown it’s:
Weak endowment
Georgetown area is a pain/no metro/no parking
Super expensive
Lots of rich international students
Preppy vibe
For DC locals it isn’t far enough away as I’d want for my kids to attend
Catholic/Jesuit might turn some off (not me)
For me, I feel like it doesn’t do a good job really encouraging school loyalty. I chose it for career opportunities, and SFS did that perfectly for me. But I don’t feel a ton of school spirit.
In contrast, DH went to Michigan and that place is like a religion. It’s crazy, but sometimes I wish Georgetown did a better job in the school spirit department.
Personally, I feel that's such a bonus! Why do you need loyalty? Why all this school spirit? It's not rational or an objective assessment of reality. I don't have any association with Georgetown or any other Jesuit institution, but I think the absence of school spirit lives up to the precepts of Jesuit teachings - first and foremost, reasoned discussion. These were created to be intellect-driven institutions. They do not demand loyalty. They want your brain, not your heart. And that's so much healthier.
In theory, of course. I do not have actual experience with this university. I'm just looking at it from the founding Jesuit angle.
Anonymous wrote:And GWU too?
AU gets lots of appreciative posts.
??
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I don't get it. I have a grad degree from Georgetown and got a good education there. I'm not some huge booster or anything, but I'm glad I went.
The one that really confuses me is the people who always compare Georgetown and Notre Dame for the express purpose of putting down Georgetown. I don't get why they can't both be worthwhile schools? It's not like there can only be one Jesuit school. I'm not Catholic but this one always confounds me.