Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Texas Christian University just sounds like it would be rival schools with Liberty University. Or some kind of extension campus of Trump U. I know it's not the case but it just gives off that vibe.
Then you don't know much. Educate yourself. Places like Liberty are not representative of Christian higher education.
Anonymous wrote:Texas Christian University just sounds like it would be rival schools with Liberty University. Or some kind of extension campus of Trump U. I know it's not the case but it just gives off that vibe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be embarrassed to have a degree from or send any of my kids to a school named Texas Christian University.
Would you be embarrassed to send a kid to Georgetown? Villanova? Boston College? Because everyone knows they are very catholic and there are crucifixes in almost every building. Is that embarrassing to you? Can we stop this narrative that being inclusive and accepting only matters when it’s not Christians?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn’t your mother ever teach you to not speak at all if you couldn’t say anything nice? Hate much?
And my daughter got a 33 on the ACT so she’s not a dumb girl. She went through 4 very stressful years of high school academics and didn’t want a repeat of that. College should be a good balance of academics and fun and the four years where you mature emotionally and socially. Obviously that was lost on the elitist snob who posted above me.
+1. My kid got a 1510 and is also looking for a lower-stress experience. Had unpredictable admission results that were all over the place. Admitted at a much more selective school but without the D1 sports and warm weather that TCU has. And TCU is a decent price after merit scholarship, a little more than half the cost of the more selective school - perhaps ironic, considering the rich-kid comments above.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn’t your mother ever teach you to not speak at all if you couldn’t say anything nice? Hate much?
And my daughter got a 33 on the ACT so she’s not a dumb girl. She went through 4 very stressful years of high school academics and didn’t want a repeat of that. College should be a good balance of academics and fun and the four years where you mature emotionally and socially. Obviously that was lost on the elitist snob who posted above me.
+1. My kid got a 1510 and is also looking for a lower-stress experience. Had unpredictable admission results that were all over the place. Admitted at a much more selective school but without the D1 sports and warm weather that TCU has. And TCU is a decent price after merit scholarship, a little more than half the cost of the more selective school - perhaps ironic, considering the rich-kid comments above.
Anonymous wrote:Didn’t your mother ever teach you to not speak at all if you couldn’t say anything nice? Hate much?
And my daughter got a 33 on the ACT so she’s not a dumb girl. She went through 4 very stressful years of high school academics and didn’t want a repeat of that. College should be a good balance of academics and fun and the four years where you mature emotionally and socially. Obviously that was lost on the elitist snob who posted above me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be embarrassed to have a degree from or send any of my kids to a school named Texas Christian University.
Would you be embarrassed to send a kid to Georgetown? Villanova? Boston College? Because everyone knows they are very catholic and there are crucifixes in almost every building. Is that embarrassing to you? Can we stop this narrative that being inclusive and accepting only matters when it’s not Christians?
Exactly. The hypocrisy is blatant.
Actually, I agree with PP. I’d be embarrassed to send my DC to TCU. It means that they just couldn’t get in anywhere else and is just going to have fun, watch football and hang out with rich friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be embarrassed to have a degree from or send any of my kids to a school named Texas Christian University.
Would you be embarrassed to send a kid to Georgetown? Villanova? Boston College? Because everyone knows they are very catholic and there are crucifixes in almost every building. Is that embarrassing to you? Can we stop this narrative that being inclusive and accepting only matters when it’s not Christians?
Exactly. The hypocrisy is blatant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be embarrassed to have a degree from or send any of my kids to a school named Texas Christian University.
Would you be embarrassed to send a kid to Georgetown? Villanova? Boston College? Because everyone knows they are very catholic and there are crucifixes in almost every building. Is that embarrassing to you? Can we stop this narrative that being inclusive and accepting only matters when it’s not Christians?
Exactly. The hypocrisy is blatant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be embarrassed to have a degree from or send any of my kids to a school named Texas Christian University.
Would you be embarrassed to send a kid to Georgetown? Villanova? Boston College? Because everyone knows they are very catholic and there are crucifixes in almost every building. Is that embarrassing to you? Can we stop this narrative that being inclusive and accepting only matters when it’s not Christians?
Anonymous wrote:I notice that many Holton Arms girls go there. Is it competitive to get in?