Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet it is consistently considered the tops in disciplines such as foreign policy/IR/government and highly regarded in law, business, linguistics, public policy, life sciences, classics, philosophy, and medicine.
So perhaps, they just know how to manage their resources.
+1. Their operating revenues are essentially the same as ND’s (actually slightly higher). What they miss on endowment distributions they make up for in graduate student tuition and fees.
Anonymous wrote:And yet it is consistently considered the tops in disciplines such as foreign policy/IR/government and highly regarded in law, business, linguistics, public policy, life sciences, classics, philosophy, and medicine.
So perhaps, they just know how to manage their resources.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notre Dame significantly better than Georgetown especially for business ND alumni are rabid only Catholic school with more engaged alumni network maybe Holy Cross but Georgetown is not a destination for kids who want to watch sports. Georgetown has mismanaged its basketball program for decades. The Notre Dame campus is beautiful and like a small town one could not say the same about Georgetown nice area but not much of a campus. Totally different vibes can’t see kids agonizing over which one ND vs Georgetown.
This proves no one on DCUM knows what they are talking about. Georgetown is top 5 placement for both IB and MBB. Notre Dame is Emory/ UVa level placements.
Anonymous wrote:Notre Dame significantly better than Georgetown especially for business ND alumni are rabid only Catholic school with more engaged alumni network maybe Holy Cross but Georgetown is not a destination for kids who want to watch sports. Georgetown has mismanaged its basketball program for decades. The Notre Dame campus is beautiful and like a small town one could not say the same about Georgetown nice area but not much of a campus. Totally different vibes can’t see kids agonizing over which one ND vs Georgetown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where does it rank? Not HYPSM obviously but I'd put it with the next level (Columbia, Penn, Brown, Duke). The 12% acceptance rate seems generous but predictions are it will go into low single digits next year with the Common App.
It’s in the same tier as Notre Dame, Boston College, and Holy Cross. Good Catholic schools with strong reputations among the non-Catholic community in the United States. Villanova would be a tier above all four schools given their basketball program and pipeline into the Vatican.
This is…a ridiculous take.
Exactly. Notre Dame is a tier above Georgetown. You’re comparing a school with an $18 billion endowment with one with less than $4 billion.
Unless one is a football fan or has issues with Jesuits, there aren't too many who would choose ND over Georgetown if interested in liberal arts, interntional/domestic politics etc.
Laughable comment. The two schools are direct competitors for students and both schools are filled with kids who also got into the other.
As a non-Catholic, I'd say that when I hear Notre Dame, I think Catholic. When I hear Georgetown, I think of DC.
My point being that ND is more closely-aligned with the Catholic church. I would bet that that there are few non-Catholics at ND while there are plenty of non-Catholics at Georgetown. I think this affects the perception of the schools - one being religious, the other not.
Same here. A lot of people - maybe most Americans - don't consider Georgetown to be a school that attracts Catholics. It is Jesuit, the way that BC, LMU, Santa Clara and USF are Jesuit. So, it doesn't turn off a lot of non-Catholics the way that ND might. My DH went to Georgetown and his group of college friends includes a few Jewish folks, a couple of WASPs and one Catholic and the latter is not a practicing Catholic.
Agree with this. When I think of ND, I think very niche Catholic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where does it rank? Not HYPSM obviously but I'd put it with the next level (Columbia, Penn, Brown, Duke). The 12% acceptance rate seems generous but predictions are it will go into low single digits next year with the Common App.
It’s in the same tier as Notre Dame, Boston College, and Holy Cross. Good Catholic schools with strong reputations among the non-Catholic community in the United States. Villanova would be a tier above all four schools given their basketball program and pipeline into the Vatican.
This is…a ridiculous take.
Exactly. Notre Dame is a tier above Georgetown. You’re comparing a school with an $18 billion endowment with one with less than $4 billion.
Unless one is a football fan or has issues with Jesuits, there aren't too many who would choose ND over Georgetown if interested in liberal arts, interntional/domestic politics etc.
Laughable comment. The two schools are direct competitors for students and both schools are filled with kids who also got into the other.
As a non-Catholic, I'd say that when I hear Notre Dame, I think Catholic. When I hear Georgetown, I think of DC.
My point being that ND is more closely-aligned with the Catholic church. I would bet that that there are few non-Catholics at ND while there are plenty of non-Catholics at Georgetown. I think this affects the perception of the schools - one being religious, the other not.
Same here. A lot of people - maybe most Americans - don't consider Georgetown to be a school that attracts Catholics. It is Jesuit, the way that BC, LMU, Santa Clara and USF are Jesuit. So, it doesn't turn off a lot of non-Catholics the way that ND might. My DH went to Georgetown and his group of college friends includes a few Jewish folks, a couple of WASPs and one Catholic and the latter is not a practicing Catholic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where does it rank? Not HYPSM obviously but I'd put it with the next level (Columbia, Penn, Brown, Duke). The 12% acceptance rate seems generous but predictions are it will go into low single digits next year with the Common App.
It’s in the same tier as Notre Dame, Boston College, and Holy Cross. Good Catholic schools with strong reputations among the non-Catholic community in the United States. Villanova would be a tier above all four schools given their basketball program and pipeline into the Vatican.
This is…a ridiculous take.
Exactly. Notre Dame is a tier above Georgetown. You’re comparing a school with an $18 billion endowment with one with less than $4 billion.
Unless one is a football fan or has issues with Jesuits, there aren't too many who would choose ND over Georgetown if interested in liberal arts, interntional/domestic politics etc.
Laughable comment. The two schools are direct competitors for students and both schools are filled with kids who also got into the other.
As a non-Catholic, I'd say that when I hear Notre Dame, I think Catholic. When I hear Georgetown, I think of DC.
My point being that ND is more closely-aligned with the Catholic church. I would bet that that there are few non-Catholics at ND while there are plenty of non-Catholics at Georgetown. I think this affects the perception of the schools - one being religious, the other not.