Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does she feel compelled to want to attend a Catholic college/university ?
OP here - none of the earlier responses were me.
She has a list of about 15 schools and three of them are Catholic (Jesuit I think) They are attractive to her because of location, mission (social justice), they aren't horribly hard to get into, and the cost is a little more affordable than some other schools on her list.
As I said, I grew up Catholic (very religious) but it I never would have considered a Catholic college. She has not grown up Catholic and doesn't have any negative associations with the church. To be honest, I don't think she actually understands how conservative many Catholic churches can be.
Anonymous wrote:I would send my child to any college they found themselves drawn to as long as they were mature and could be respectful of the mission of the school. I am not Jewish but did my student teaching in a religious school. I willingly followed all of their rules out of respect for the climate they were offering their students. I attended a Catholic college and had no issues with the myriad of students of other faiths because they were 99.9% of the time respectful of the climate they chose to put themselves in.
Anonymous wrote:It's not a good idea, even just for female health care reasons at this point.
Have you already done campus visits to the colleges OP?
Anonymous wrote:Why does she feel compelled to want to attend a Catholic college/university ?
Anonymous wrote:Sure when it's a T20 like Notre Dame with superb student care or even little lesser but great schools like Georgetown or Boston College.
My kid is at ND. Not attending mass.
Doing great so far. Kid is also a minority.
!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you going to make a decision for a soon to be adult based on what they'll be "exposed to." Surely she knows that some religions don't have female leaders, I disagree with that, but it's not going to harm her to be around people from that religion.
I just want a higher standard than not harm. I think it is important for a young woman to see by some women in the highest leadership positions of the organization at a time of such growth in her life. I went to a Catholic college and I don't think that part of it was helpful to me.
Anonymous wrote:Why are you going to make a decision for a soon to be adult based on what they'll be "exposed to." Surely she knows that some religions don't have female leaders, I disagree with that, but it's not going to harm her to be around people from that religion.