Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a Jesuit college and Notre Dame for grad school. There wasn’t much of a different with respect to the Catholic thing. Jesuit school graduates and parents of students routinely overstate this.
Grad school and undergrad are not comparable when all undergrads live on campus for 3 to 4 years.
Anonymous wrote:If iconic artwork is a problem for you, there are many colleges you should avoid.
Anonymous wrote:![]()
Traditional Catholic
Anonymous wrote:Traditional Catholic
Traditional Catholic Anonymous wrote:I think your chIld may be seen as an outsider, especially not receiving communion or attending Sunday mass in the dorms.
Anonymous wrote:There’s no rational argument against the statement that ND is more traditional Catholic that BC. And neither school tries to hide that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a Catholic with degrees from 2 Catholic universities (neither of which I attended BECAUSE they were Catholic), it seems like non-Catholics often overestimate the cohesion & exclusivity among Catholics. Yes, there are few extremist factions within Catholicism, but at ND, BC, Villanova, etc there are no secret handshakes or special privileges. In fact, anybody who would try to establish something like that would be scorned.
Also I Catholic with a degree from a Catholic college, and kids in Catholic schools, and while I don't disagree with what pp says, I don't think it can go with out saying that ND and Villanova are much more traditional Catholic than Georgetown and BC. My own kid has toured and will apply to several Jesuit colleges and zero non-Jesuit colleges.
But if OP's kid feels a connection with ND, then good for both of them.
Wow, you seem very close minded. You need to get over the Jesuit thing. There isn't much difference between the vibe at ND and BC. You eliminate a top 20 Catholic university because it isn't Jesuit? Your poor kid.
Save your faux pity. DS eliminated ND & Villanova because he felt they were too traditionally Catholic, too close-minded, and not aligned with his personal values. He felt very comfortable at BC and felt he could fit right in. It's his decision making process. Kids have eliminated schools for all sorts of reasons. Notre Dame will do just fine. As I said, if op's kid feels that connection with ND, then that's a win for both the kid and ND.
Anonymous wrote:I went to a Jesuit college and Notre Dame for grad school. There wasn’t much of a different with respect to the Catholic thing. Jesuit school graduates and parents of students routinely overstate this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best of luck to your kid, OP. He will love it if he is drawn to the aspects you highlight.
Not sure why race is a part of this discussion. It's irrelevant except to OP.
Not being Catholic is to be considered.
You must be white.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a Catholic with degrees from 2 Catholic universities (neither of which I attended BECAUSE they were Catholic), it seems like non-Catholics often overestimate the cohesion & exclusivity among Catholics. Yes, there are few extremist factions within Catholicism, but at ND, BC, Villanova, etc there are no secret handshakes or special privileges. In fact, anybody who would try to establish something like that would be scorned.
Also I Catholic with a degree from a Catholic college, and kids in Catholic schools, and while I don't disagree with what pp says, I don't think it can go with out saying that ND and Villanova are much more traditional Catholic than Georgetown and BC. My own kid has toured and will apply to several Jesuit colleges and zero non-Jesuit colleges.
But if OP's kid feels a connection with ND, then good for both of them.