Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up here and am Catholic. Boys from my parochial k-8 were going to Landon waaay back when. Not new.
A few, perhaps.
Consider the size of the student bodies at Gonzaga, Prep and St John’s and it shows you just how few Catholics go to Landon.
Landon is definitely on the map for Catholic families. They just have more options and choose Landon less frequently as a result.
Anonymous wrote:Both good schools. It's a matter of fit people. What is good for one boy may be a disaster for another. Go shadow and see which one feel good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up here and am Catholic. Boys from my parochial k-8 were going to Landon waaay back when. Not new.
A few, perhaps.
Consider the size of the student bodies at Gonzaga, Prep and St John’s and it shows you just how few Catholics go to Landon.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up here and am Catholic. Boys from my parochial k-8 were going to Landon waaay back when. Not new.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a family that sent one child to Gonzaga and one to Landon. So both must have been a good fit for one family.
Who knows?
But this is such a rare occurrence, it hardly speaks to anything.
Gonzaga has 1,000 students and one has a brother at Landon?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There really isn’t much these two schools have in common. Are you catholic or not? If so, then choose Gonzaga. If not, Landon.
My Catholic son went to Landon. He loved it. It was the perfect fit for him. We cannot say enough good things about his experience at Landon, academically and athletically. He had a boy in his class at Landon whose older brother went to Gonzaga. The one thing the parents said was that the older son did not make certain teams at Gonzaga that he might have made at Landon, simply because of the numbers. Something to think about if your son wants to be on a sports team or two but is not necessarily a starter at either school--a better chance of making a roster at the smaller school.
Anonymous wrote:There really isn’t much these two schools have in common. Are you catholic or not? If so, then choose Gonzaga. If not, Landon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Getting back on topic. Both Landon and Gonzaga are excellent schools. Having gone to a school like Landon I would prefer a Gonzaga because it will be more diverse and a bit more grounded to reality. Landon will be almost exclusively rich, even more so than in the past with the pricing out of upper middle class families. While Gonzaga isn't cheap either, the lower tuition means you will have a broader range of socio-economic backgrounds from wealthy to middle class. It's just a bit more real. And being in a more urban setting also helps with this.
I'm not Catholic, nor do I have much in the way of faith but I also have respect for the Jesuit beliefs and ethics/moral instruction.
Gonzaga is much more socio-economically diverse, but far less ethnically-culturally-religiously diverse, as you might expect in a Catholic school. They are known as “The Eye Street Irish”.
Gonzaga has a commitment to the local community. It enrolls a significant number of AA’s, hosts the Washington Jesuit Academy, and the McKenna Center which serves the homeless and downtrodden. All of which are consistent with Jesuit philosophy. But the non-AA proportion of the student population is overwhelmingly Catholics, many of whom are legacies or that come from families that are connected with to the school.
The Maryland-DC contingent of any class will be dominated by boys who attended Catholic/parish schools, especially the traditional feeders. These boys will frequently know one another through family connections and CYO interactions.
Landon is much more ethnically-culturally-religiously diverse. It’s location and price obviously affect the composition of the student body.
Also, the self segregation at Gonzaga is huge. So if that is a problem for your family, something to take into account.
What is meant by self segregation?