Anonymous wrote:You all are crazy. Tops in SFS. A top 10 undergraduate B School. Wall Street and Consulting pipeline. A top law school and medical school. Get over yourselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Location alone, along with generally being the best school in DC will keep it closer to T20 than T30, but really who cares.
Location hasn’t really done wonders for American, GW, Catholic Uni, etc.
I would argue that if AU/GWU etc were in a different place with the same offerings and faculty, they would be in much less demand than they are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Location alone, along with generally being the best school in DC will keep it closer to T20 than T30, but really who cares.
Location hasn’t really done wonders for American, GW, Catholic Uni, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe if they'd hired Rick Pitino.
Anonymous wrote:Location alone, along with generally being the best school in DC will keep it closer to T20 than T30, but really who cares.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TBH I think NYU and USC surpass Georgetown in ten years as they have so many more resources, bigger endowments. Georgetown will always have SFS and it’s proximity to DC and there is an old guard that cannot fathom a school like UC Santa Barbara or U Florida being in the same conversation as Georgetown, so the prestige will linger for one more generation. But I think the next Generation of college kids are going to look for other things in a college and if Georgetown doesn’t invest heavily in STEM it is going to be left in the dust.
Agreed mostly.
NYU and USC are already at the same level as Georgetown.
Agreed. Could see Georgetown settling into the T28-30 range longer term.
But then I don't see good candidates that would replace Georgetown any time soon.
Schools at 28-29 are UNC, UF, WF.
These are not it at all.
Beyond that Tuft, BC, and bunch of 2nd rate UCs which are severely overrated.
Georgetown will flip flop at around 22-25 together with schools like USC, NYU, Emory, CMU, etc.
USC, NYU, Emory, CMU all have better trajectories and potential for T17-20. Whereas Georgetown will be more in contention with the likes of Wake, BC and Tufts, albeit at the top of that grouping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TBH I think NYU and USC surpass Georgetown in ten years as they have so many more resources, bigger endowments. Georgetown will always have SFS and it’s proximity to DC and there is an old guard that cannot fathom a school like UC Santa Barbara or U Florida being in the same conversation as Georgetown, so the prestige will linger for one more generation. But I think the next Generation of college kids are going to look for other things in a college and if Georgetown doesn’t invest heavily in STEM it is going to be left in the dust.
Agreed mostly.
NYU and USC are already at the same level as Georgetown.
Agreed. Could see Georgetown settling into the T28-30 range longer term.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TBH I think NYU and USC surpass Georgetown in ten years as they have so many more resources, bigger endowments. Georgetown will always have SFS and it’s proximity to DC and there is an old guard that cannot fathom a school like UC Santa Barbara or U Florida being in the same conversation as Georgetown, so the prestige will linger for one more generation. But I think the next Generation of college kids are going to look for other things in a college and if Georgetown doesn’t invest heavily in STEM it is going to be left in the dust.
Agreed mostly.
NYU and USC are already at the same level as Georgetown.
Anonymous wrote:TBH I think NYU and USC surpass Georgetown in ten years as they have so many more resources, bigger endowments. Georgetown will always have SFS and it’s proximity to DC and there is an old guard that cannot fathom a school like UC Santa Barbara or U Florida being in the same conversation as Georgetown, so the prestige will linger for one more generation. But I think the next Generation of college kids are going to look for other things in a college and if Georgetown doesn’t invest heavily in STEM it is going to be left in the dust.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s so strange how much DCUM hates Georgetown
UVA, VaTech, Georgetown, Hopkins all get dcum hate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown has a stellar reputation in foreign affairs. It's School of Foreign Affairs is probably the best in the nation. I did note that it had a B- grade for financial health in Forbes, although you could argue the criteria are perhaps not the ones you'd choose to gauge long-term financial health.
However I think it will be many generations before Georgetown declines, if it ever does.
It was the first foreign affair school in the country and still rated as one of the best in the world and attracts many International students.
It’s a Jesuit institution, you know—the best educators. It’s not the same as “Catholic”.
Right...tell me another one. Georgetown is as Catholic as Notre Dame and Villanova -- both not Jesuit. You only wish it wasn't Catholic...it is.
Anonymous wrote:I think georgetown took a hit generations ago when it became easier and more acceptable for Catholics to go to secular schools. I used to joke it was the Irish Catholic Harvard. It broke my mom’s heart a little when I turned it down. And it’s alumni just haven’t been as financially loyal as some of the other top schools—-perhaps because they were planning on sending their kids to ivies.