Anonymous wrote:If football isn’t high on her list, look at St. Joe’s in Philly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a freshman at a large, secular, public school. He is member of the Newman community there and spends multiple days a week at the house. They have meals together, play sports together, do Bible study etc. You do not have to go to a Catholic School to find your people and will be disappointed to find out how not Catholic some of them actually are.
+1
In addition to Catholic universities, I'd also suggest considering secular schools with a strong Catholic community as a second option.
OP here. Yes, thank you. She is looking at that. She has friends at UMD where they have a strong community.
I’m interested in learning how one determines which secular schools have a strong Catholic community. Do you look for Newman centers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a freshman at a large, secular, public school. He is member of the Newman community there and spends multiple days a week at the house. They have meals together, play sports together, do Bible study etc. You do not have to go to a Catholic School to find your people and will be disappointed to find out how not Catholic some of them actually are.
+1
In addition to Catholic universities, I'd also suggest considering secular schools with a strong Catholic community as a second option.
OP here. Yes, thank you. She is looking at that. She has friends at UMD where they have a strong community.
Anonymous wrote:She’d be great at BC. Despite the other thread BC is not a party school the way Tulane is. It’s a social service minded smart kid wealthy school. If that’s your kid she will be great there. And then if a safety is needed Holy Cross is a baby BC however Worcester kinda sucks. Good luck with ND!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a freshman at a large, secular, public school. He is member of the Newman community there and spends multiple days a week at the house. They have meals together, play sports together, do Bible study etc. You do not have to go to a Catholic School to find your people and will be disappointed to find out how not Catholic some of them actually are.
+1
In addition to Catholic universities, I'd also suggest considering secular schools with a strong Catholic community as a second option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To answer your question on social fit, everyone will have a story on how their similar personality student had a great time / was unhappy and transferred across all of these Catholic Schools.
If your daughter is in the mix for Notre Dame and feels it checks the boxes in a lot of different spaces, I would think about the following schools for Reaches, Targets and Safeties (some not Catholic - but felt the culture of the school might work)
Reaches - BC, Davidson, Rice
Target - Holy Cross, Case Western
Safety - Loyola, Providence (Honors College), St. Olaf
Rice and Notre Dame could not possibly be any more different. Where do you people come from?
The main similarity I see right off the bat is that they both have residential colleges and no Greek life.
Anonymous wrote:If she is truly devoted to her faith, have her consider whether she has a deeper calling:
https://www.usccb.org/beliefs-and-teachings/vocations/discerning-women
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’d be great at BC. Despite the other thread BC is not a party school the way Tulane is. It’s a social service minded smart kid wealthy school. If that’s your kid she will be great there. And then if a safety is needed Holy Cross is a baby BC however Worcester kinda sucks. Good luck with ND!
HC has an acceptance rate of 18% for class of 2028. It is not safety school for most people especially OP's daughter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UCSF is on the western side of SF which is really nice. Not a party school at all.
I don't think that is a Catholic school
Anonymous wrote:UCSF is on the western side of SF which is really nice. Not a party school at all.
Anonymous wrote:My son is a freshman at a large, secular, public school. He is member of the Newman community there and spends multiple days a week at the house. They have meals together, play sports together, do Bible study etc. You do not have to go to a Catholic School to find your people and will be disappointed to find out how not Catholic some of them actually are.
Anonymous wrote:Hillsdale
Creighton
Fairfield
If interested in Liberal Arts school
Anonymous wrote:Marist
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To answer your question on social fit, everyone will have a story on how their similar personality student had a great time / was unhappy and transferred across all of these Catholic Schools.
If your daughter is in the mix for Notre Dame and feels it checks the boxes in a lot of different spaces, I would think about the following schools for Reaches, Targets and Safeties (some not Catholic - but felt the culture of the school might work)
Reaches - BC, Davidson, Rice
Target - Holy Cross, Case Western
Safety - Loyola, Providence (Honors College), St. Olaf
Rice and Notre Dame could not possibly be any more different. Where do you people come from?