Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s so strange how much DCUM hates Georgetown
I don’t think it’s strange. Just spend some time around a GU graduate. You will understand.
Anonymous wrote:It’s so strange how much DCUM hates Georgetown
Anonymous wrote:It shouldn’t be really.
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.
I always thought it was a fine school but never a top-tier destination. Mostly for rich kids who couldn't get into an Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a Georgetown SFS alum (now a corporate lawyer, so my career is not in any way tied to the SFS’ rankings) but as long as the SFS is around, Georgetown will be an elite school. The faculty, teaching, and opportunities that students get by virtue of being in DC is pretty unparalleled. It’s also a top feeder school for finance and consulting jobs. I’m not sure why Georgetown gets so much hate here. Of the random sample of the roommates (6 of us) who lived together during our senior year of undergrad (and only one graduated with high Latin honors/top of the class): 4 of us went to T14 law schools, 1 got an investment banking job, and 1 went to a highly-ranked med school. We are all very successful in our jobs now. I couldn’t really ask for better outcomes from an undergrad education.
And in addition to SFS, the law school and hospital are very well-regarded.
SFS is continually ranked one of the world's leading international affair schools. They bring in students from around the world.
Anonymous wrote:It will be in the top 20 once all this BS of test-optional, grade inflation and other holistic crap washes out over the next decade.
Their student body has to show merit through required scores with no super-scoring and gpa/course rigor. It's reported selectivity is misleading because it is actually much higher since requiring all test scores with no super scoring weeds out THOUSANDS of Applicants that don't bother applying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It will be in the top 20 once all this BS of test-optional, grade inflation and other holistic crap washes out over the next decade.
Their student body has to show merit through required scores with no super-scoring and gpa/course rigor. It's reported selectivity is misleading because it is actually much higher since requiring all test scores with no super scoring weeds out THOUSANDS of Applicants that don't bother applying.
It hasn’t been top 20 for like 30 years, we’ll before any of that stuff you mentioned came into play.
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:It will be in the top 20 once all this BS of test-optional, grade inflation and other holistic crap washes out over the next decade.
Their student body has to show merit through required scores with no super-scoring and gpa/course rigor. It's reported selectivity is misleading because it is actually much higher since requiring all test scores with no super scoring weeds out THOUSANDS of Applicants that don't bother applying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a Georgetown SFS alum (now a corporate lawyer, so my career is not in any way tied to the SFS’ rankings) but as long as the SFS is around, Georgetown will be an elite school. The faculty, teaching, and opportunities that students get by virtue of being in DC is pretty unparalleled. It’s also a top feeder school for finance and consulting jobs. I’m not sure why Georgetown gets so much hate here. Of the random sample of the roommates (6 of us) who lived together during our senior year of undergrad (and only one graduated with high Latin honors/top of the class): 4 of us went to T14 law schools, 1 got an investment banking job, and 1 went to a highly-ranked med school. We are all very successful in our jobs now. I couldn’t really ask for better outcomes from an undergrad education.
And in addition to SFS, the law school and hospital are very well-regarded.
SFS is continually ranked one of the world's leading international affair schools. They bring in students from around the world.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a Georgetown SFS alum (now a corporate lawyer, so my career is not in any way tied to the SFS’ rankings) but as long as the SFS is around, Georgetown will be an elite school. The faculty, teaching, and opportunities that students get by virtue of being in DC is pretty unparalleled. It’s also a top feeder school for finance and consulting jobs. I’m not sure why Georgetown gets so much hate here. Of the random sample of the roommates (6 of us) who lived together during our senior year of undergrad (and only one graduated with high Latin honors/top of the class): 4 of us went to T14 law schools, 1 got an investment banking job, and 1 went to a highly-ranked med school. We are all very successful in our jobs now. I couldn’t really ask for better outcomes from an undergrad education.
Anonymous wrote:Given it’s Catholic affiliation and small(ish) endowment? It seems like other schools around it have more momentum.