Anonymous wrote:Your data is irrelevant. Mine is based on having an actual student at Georgetown now. Professors are limited in the number of As they can confer. Full stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there's any chance your daughter will need to use the University health insurance, e.g., if she stays for med school or a master's program, be aware that it's backasswards Catholic insurance when it comes to women's reproductive health. I was married and in law school and couldn't get birth control or an IUD through my insurance unless it was for a health purpose other than preventing pregnancy. I'd probably have my daughter choose UVA on that basis, as well as to avoid her being trained in a Catholic hospital where they don't treat women as having reproductive rights.
I'd be shocked if this was GU or within the last 20 years. (Indiana/ND - I might believe)
I checked the GU website before posting and this is still their policy. Women do not have the right to make decisions about their own health or body if on Georgetown insurance or if treated at Georgetown hospitals.
There is plenty of healthcare within close distance to Georgetown. Most kids are on their parents' insurance and if an undergrad female needed insurance, they could forgo GU as their source and obtain a cheap policy through the Marketplace. I didn't get reproductive care through my university when I was in college?
Perhaps you should have read my post before responding? I addressed most of this.
When I was in college lots of girls ended up getting birth control from the student health center, especially if they were from elsewhere and didn't have a local doctor. It was also the first stop for a suspected pregnancy.
And at my college they went to planned parenthood....so...
Also at my graduate school in a different city....
Anonymous wrote:Georgetown limits the number of A grades per class (I believe it’s 30%). Professors that go above this limit must submit a detailed explanation to the department chair. If grades are important, pick UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there's any chance your daughter will need to use the University health insurance, e.g., if she stays for med school or a master's program, be aware that it's backasswards Catholic insurance when it comes to women's reproductive health. I was married and in law school and couldn't get birth control or an IUD through my insurance unless it was for a health purpose other than preventing pregnancy. I'd probably have my daughter choose UVA on that basis, as well as to avoid her being trained in a Catholic hospital where they don't treat women as having reproductive rights.
I'd be shocked if this was GU or within the last 20 years. (Indiana/ND - I might believe)
I checked the GU website before posting and this is still their policy. Women do not have the right to make decisions about their own health or body if on Georgetown insurance or if treated at Georgetown hospitals.
There is plenty of healthcare within close distance to Georgetown. Most kids are on their parents' insurance and if an undergrad female needed insurance, they could forgo GU as their source and obtain a cheap policy through the Marketplace. I didn't get reproductive care through my university when I was in college?
Perhaps you should have read my post before responding? I addressed most of this.
When I was in college lots of girls ended up getting birth control from the student health center, especially if they were from elsewhere and didn't have a local doctor. It was also the first stop for a suspected pregnancy.
And at my college they went to planned parenthood....so...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there's any chance your daughter will need to use the University health insurance, e.g., if she stays for med school or a master's program, be aware that it's backasswards Catholic insurance when it comes to women's reproductive health. I was married and in law school and couldn't get birth control or an IUD through my insurance unless it was for a health purpose other than preventing pregnancy. I'd probably have my daughter choose UVA on that basis, as well as to avoid her being trained in a Catholic hospital where they don't treat women as having reproductive rights.
I'd be shocked if this was GU or within the last 20 years. (Indiana/ND - I might believe)
I checked the GU website before posting and this is still their policy. Women do not have the right to make decisions about their own health or body if on Georgetown insurance or if treated at Georgetown hospitals.
There is plenty of healthcare within close distance to Georgetown. Most kids are on their parents' insurance and if an undergrad female needed insurance, they could forgo GU as their source and obtain a cheap policy through the Marketplace. I didn't get reproductive care through my university when I was in college?
Perhaps you should have read my post before responding? I addressed most of this.
When I was in college lots of girls ended up getting birth control from the student health center, especially if they were from elsewhere and didn't have a local doctor. It was also the first stop for a suspected pregnancy.
Anonymous wrote:Georgetown limits the number of A grades per class (I believe it’s 30%). Professors that go above this limit must submit a detailed explanation to the department chair. If grades are important, pick UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s a wash, and that the kid should pick whichever school they are more comfortable with.
And, for the record, the posters who are saying that Georgetown is no more Catholic than the whole country are full of shit. Georgetown is over 40% Catholic. The country is 23% Catholic. These numbers are very easy to look up. I just hate it when people spew out easily refutable bullshit on DCUM.
Only 40 percent of GU is Catholic? That’s less than the percent of Catholics in many NE states that feed the school.
ND is 80 percent Catholic and still a huge draw among the non religious
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s a wash, and that the kid should pick whichever school they are more comfortable with.
And, for the record, the posters who are saying that Georgetown is no more Catholic than the whole country are full of shit. Georgetown is over 40% Catholic. The country is 23% Catholic. These numbers are very easy to look up. I just hate it when people spew out easily refutable bullshit on DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there's any chance your daughter will need to use the University health insurance, e.g., if she stays for med school or a master's program, be aware that it's backasswards Catholic insurance when it comes to women's reproductive health. I was married and in law school and couldn't get birth control or an IUD through my insurance unless it was for a health purpose other than preventing pregnancy. I'd probably have my daughter choose UVA on that basis, as well as to avoid her being trained in a Catholic hospital where they don't treat women as having reproductive rights.
I'd be shocked if this was GU or within the last 20 years. (Indiana/ND - I might believe)
I checked the GU website before posting and this is still their policy. Women do not have the right to make decisions about their own health or body if on Georgetown insurance or if treated at Georgetown hospitals.
There is plenty of healthcare within close distance to Georgetown. Most kids are on their parents' insurance and if an undergrad female needed insurance, they could forgo GU as their source and obtain a cheap policy through the Marketplace. I didn't get reproductive care through my university when I was in college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My biggest hesitation about Georgetown is the social life. It seems like it is very hard to make friends and the pre-professional vibe seems to foster a hyper competitive atmosphere that works against real friendships and dating. I have heard that this is especially true in the pre-med track. Is it true that many/most students are a bit disappointed in the social life at Georgetown even if they like other aspects of the school?
Niece is a current sophomore at Georgetown. She is not a partier by any stretch but is very disappointed in the social life at Georgetown, lack of any “community” atmosphere and has found it difficult to make friends due to so much of social and school/athletic life happening across DC rather than on campus and competitive atmosphere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there's any chance your daughter will need to use the University health insurance, e.g., if she stays for med school or a master's program, be aware that it's backasswards Catholic insurance when it comes to women's reproductive health. I was married and in law school and couldn't get birth control or an IUD through my insurance unless it was for a health purpose other than preventing pregnancy. I'd probably have my daughter choose UVA on that basis, as well as to avoid her being trained in a Catholic hospital where they don't treat women as having reproductive rights.
I'd be shocked if this was GU or within the last 20 years. (Indiana/ND - I might believe)
I checked the GU website before posting and this is still their policy. Women do not have the right to make decisions about their own health or body if on Georgetown insurance or if treated at Georgetown hospitals.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s a wash, and that the kid should pick whichever school they are more comfortable with.
And, for the record, the posters who are saying that Georgetown is no more Catholic than the whole country are full of shit. Georgetown is over 40% Catholic. The country is 23% Catholic. These numbers are very easy to look up. I just hate it when people spew out easily refutable bullshit on DCUM.