<p>While the other people posting are asking about preppiness, I would wonder about how it feels to be on a Jesuit campus is you are from the northeast, liberal and pro-choice. Is Georgetown comfortable for people like this? Do the professors show a preference for conservative, religious points of view? It is the only school with a religious affiliation that I am considering because of the location and it's general excellance. But I have some concern about feeling compatable. Does anyone know?</p>
<p>I'd say the professors are as liberal as you'd find at any Ivy League school. I was a Culture and Politics major and my professors were all VERY in some cases radically liberal. Even my theology professors were really liberal. Strangely, I came to school a practicing Catholic, and left the school only vaguely religious. The student body is also majority liberal, but maybe not as activist as a whole as some Northeast schools. The school does not recognize the Hoyas for Choice group on campus, but they are one of the most active groups on campus and supported by a majority of the student body. Anyway, pretty much everyone I knew while I was there was liberal and pro-choice, and there are a ton of kids from the Northeast so I promise you, you would blend right in.</p>
<p>As for preppy, its probably just like anyone's high school. There are a group of kids on campus who are very preppy. If you hang out with them or are in the Bschool you probably think it's a really preppy campus. If not, it doesn't seem any different from high school.</p>