On March 23, 2020 MUBoxer wrote:
Anyone using Niche to rank universities instantly loses credibility.
1. They factor in neighborhood safety and quality which instantly puts schools in large urban settings, particularly Jesuit schools which are usually in rougher neighborhoods, at a major disadvantage.
2. They factor in a ton of other useless metrics. Diversity? Loan amount? I went to a CPS HS then a suburban HS that was even more diverse than my CPS school, it's great for diverse thought but not correlated to great school or else cheaper directional schools would own the more expensive private schools. Loan amount? This is idiotic, it has zero to do with college quality.
Bottom line is Niche is a joke, in an attempt to go wayyyy overboard with analysis Fieldhouse Flyer has a tendency to not review data.
1. U. S. News' 2018 Best Colleges, 3. Forbes, 7. The Princeton Review's Best 384 Colleges 2019, 8. Niche
• The U.S. News Best Colleges 2019 Rankings were first published in 1983 and are the most widely quoted of their kind in the United States. The U.S. News Best Colleges database contains more than 1,800 schools and the 2019 Edition lists 312 National Universities, with ranking numbers assigned to only the Top 226 schools. The US News also ranks what they call ‘Regional Universities’ in four geographic designations: North (196 schools listed), South (148 schools listed), Midwest (172 schools listed), and West (140 schools listed), for a total of 968 schools listed. I have not found any other College Ranking Services subdivides the population of universities into multiple categories before ranking the schools. Rather than assigning a unique sequential ranking number (as the other college ratings services do), the vast majority of the schools ranked by U.S. News are ‘tied’ with a few or many other schools in a designated ‘tier’. The U.S. News’ [unpublished] internally-computed raw scores are then rounded, and schools with ‘similar’ raw scores are lumped together as a ‘tie’. [Presumably in this instance, in order to prevent sixth-listed Yale being ranked below fourth-listed M.I.T and fifth-listed University of Chicago. These three schools along with third-listed Columbia are all lumped together and assigned a ranking of ‘#3(Tied)’ by U.S. News, followed by #7 Stanford.]
• The Princeton Review Best 384 Colleges 2019 Rankings were first published in 1992. For the 2019 Edition, the Princeton Review surveyed 138,000 students from across the country. The Princeton Review does not rank schools overall 1-384, but lists the Top 384 schools alphabetically and provides 62 lists of Top 20 schools in 62 different categories. The Princeton Review added five colleges to their 2019 edition: Butler University, Drury University, Marlboro College, Michigan State University, and Oregon State University. Unlike other college ratings services, The Princeton Review requires a free registration in order to access all of their information, or to access a given webpage more than one time. Creating a free Princeton Review account took me less than a minute, and is well worth the effort, as The Princeton Review has vast amounts of information and numerous interesting rankings.
• The Niche Best Colleges in America 2019 Rankings were first published in 2002 under the name “College Prowler”. In 2013 the company was renamed ‘Niche’. The Niche Best Colleges in America ranking is based on rigorous analysis of academic, admissions, financial, and student life data from the U.S. Department of Education along with millions of reviews from students and alumni. The ranking compares more than 1,000 top colleges and universities in the U.S., with ranking numbers assigned to the Top 880 schools. The Niche Rankings uses the term “Net Price”, which they define as: “The average cost after financial aid for students receiving grant or scholarship aid, as reported by the college”. Unlike other college ratings services, Niche assigns an Overall Niche Grade (A+, A, A-, B+, etc.) to each reviewed university.
• The Forbes ‘America’s Top Colleges’ 2018 Rankings were first published in 2008, and ranks the Top 650 schools 1-650. The Forbes Rankings uses the term “Cost” and defines it as “the estimated total cost of attendance for out-of-state students living on campus in 2017-2018. This estimate includes the reported average cost of tuition and fees, books and supplies, room and board, and ‘other’ living expenses. This figure is an estimate and not a guarantee of the actual amount the student may be charged.” The 2019 Edition of Forbes’ Rankings is scheduled to be published in August, 2019.
Forbes 2018: #12 Georgetown University • Cost: $71,580 • Average Financial Aid: $40,346
U.S. News 2019: 22(T). Georgetown University • Tuition and Fees: $54,104 • Enrolment: 7,463
Niche 2019: 22. Georgetown University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 16% • Net Price: $27,420 • SAT Range: 1350-1520
The Princeton Review 2019: Georgetown University • 7,459 Enrolled
236 • AVERAGE RANKING OF 10 BIG EAST SCHOOLS – Niche (population size = 880 ranked schools)
208 • AVERAGE RANKING OF 10 BIG EAST SCHOOLS – Forbes (population size = 650 ranked schools)
92 • AVERAGE RANKING OF 6 BIG EAST SCHOOLS - US News (population size = 226 ranked National Universities)
Percentile Calculations: Average Percentile of Big East School Rankings:
…… Number of schools ranked worse than the Average Ranking of Big East schools = (population size) - (Average Ranking of Big East schools)
…… Average Percentile of Big East School Rankings = (100)x[(No. of schools ranked worse)/(population size)]
73 = (100)x(880-236)/880 • Average Percentile of 10 Big East Schools - Niche
68 = (100)x(650-208)/650 • Average Percentile of 10 Big East Schools - Forbes
59 = (100)x(226-92)/226 • Average Percentile of 6 Big East Schools - U.S. News
Niche ranks 73% of the 880 ranked schools WORSE than the Average Ranking of Big East schools.
Forbes ranks 68% of the 650 ranked schools WORSE than the Average Ranking of Big East schools.
U.S. News ranks 59% of the 226 ranked National Universities WORSE than the Average Ranking of Big East schools.
U.S. News determined the relative weights of their weighting factors and changes them over time. The National Opinion Research Center reviewed the methodology and stated that the weights "lack any defensible empirical or theoretical basis". The first four of the listed factors account for the great majority of the U.S. News ranking and the "reputational measure" (which surveys high-level administrators at similar institutions about their perceived quality ranking of each college and university) is especially important to the final ranking.
A New York Times article reported that, given the U.S. News weighting methodology, "it's easy to guess who's going to end up on top: the Big Three, Harvard, Yale and Princeton round out the first three essentially every year. When asked how he knew his system was sound, Mel Elfin (M.A. Harvard University, 1952) the rankings' founder, often answered that ”he knew it because those three schools always landed on top.“
A 2010 study by the University of Michigan found that university rankings in the United States significantly affect institutions' applications and admissions. The research analyzed the effects of the U.S. News & World Report rankings, showing a lasting effect on college applications and admissions by students in the top 10% of their class. In addition, they found that rankings influence survey assessments of reputation by college presidents at peer institutions, such that ”rankings and reputation are becoming much more similar over time.”
Critics charged that U.S. News intentionally changed its methodology every year so that the rankings change and they can sell more magazines. A San Francisco Chronicle article argues that [/i]"almost all of US News factors are redundant and can be boiled down to one characteristic: the size of the college or university's endowment."[/i]
Some higher education experts, like Kevin Carey of Education Sector, have argued that U.S. News & World Report's college rankings system is merely a list of criteria that mirrors the superficial characteristics of elite colleges and universities. According to Carey, "The U.S. News ranking system is deeply flawed. Instead of focusing on the fundamental issues of how well colleges and universities educate their students and how well they prepare them to be successful after college, the magazine's rankings are almost entirely a function of three factors: fame, wealth, and exclusivity."
The U. S. News's Best Colleges is the grandaddy of all the lists. Over the years its methodologies have changed and a few schools have been caught fudging their numbers or gaming the rankings. Unfortunately, some trustee boards put stock in the rankings and heads can roll if a school slips. This list and its creators have assumed an arrogance over the years similar to the College Board's. Their attitude is "Don't like our rankings? What're you gonna do about it?"
While U.S. News and World Report’s college rankings are wildly popular, few families know much about how they are created. Before you place too much faith in U.S. News’ college rankings, here are 15 things that you should know about them:
1. U.S. News relies on rankings to stay alive.
2. U.S. News’ college rankings have encouraged institutional bad behavior.
3. The college rankings formula can be gamed.
4. Popularity is a big ratings factor.
5. U.S. News measures six-year graduation rates.
6. Rankings encourage colleges to favor affluent students.
7. Rankings encourage the use of merit scholarships.
8. Elite schools are the exception to merit awards.
9. Rankings encourage admission tricks
10. Rankings don’t measure what’s important.
11. Rankings encourage cheating.
12. Rankings encourage debt.
13. Don’t believe the numbers.
14. Use U.S. News as a tip sheet.
15. U.S. News is here to stay. A few years ago, Brian Kelly, the U.S. News editor made this promise during an press interview: “You can love us or hate us, but we’re not going away.”
US News and World Report released its 2018 US News College Rankings. Parents, high school guidance counselors, students, and even the colleges themselves eagerly await the rankings so they can brag and attempt to impress others with the numbers and hierarchies.
We’re here to tell you that the 2018 US News College Rankings are useless. Unproductive. Meaningless. Even harmful. It is time to expose the shortcomings. Here, we outline the main problems with the US News College Rankings, along with examples and consequences of the nonsense we’re talking about.
The Major Problems with the US News College Rankings Are:
• They are inconsistent
• They are missing critical pieces of information
• They use a bogus “Reputation” measure
• They encourage cheating and schools game the system
• They lead to overall negative outcomes
Let’s look at each of these areas in detail and explore the 14 reasons why these rankings are meaningless.
Inconsistency in the US News College Rankings:
The metrics used by US News College Rankings are changing constantly, so it’s impossible to make meaningful comparisons between schools from year to year. Is this a tactic to get rankings to shift slightly to keep people interested, or is it really necessary to change the ranking system from year to year?
Reason #1 – Unstable rankings and irregular shifts continue to be a problem for US News.
Reason #2 – Inconsistencies cause problems for students.
Reason #3 – Flawed metrics have persisted for over a decade.
Reason #4 – Moving up the rankings has nothing to do with improving the student’s experience.
Reason #5 – Failure to adapt.
Reason #6 – Failure to consider student debt load.
Reason #7 – Doesn’t take into account the student experience.The Bogus “Reputation” Measure
US News asks for “peer assessments” from various college presidents, high school counselors, admissions directors, etc. They ask about “intangibles” such as “faculty dedication to teaching.” This can turn the rankings into a popularity contest, fueled by existing prejudices, and allowing prestigious reputations to work in a positive feedback loop to reinforce themselves. This reputation measure comprises more than 20 percent of the overall ranking.
Reason #8 – The popularity contest.
Reason #9 – Skewed rankings by insiders.
Reason #10 – When colleges refuse to participate, US News penalizes them.
Reason #11 – The US News rankings cause institutions to cheat.
Reason #12 – Schools know how to work the system… and they do.
Reason #13 – Rankings lead to higher tuition.
Reason #14 – When students choose colleges based on US News rankings, they’re in trouble.
U.S. News will consider them unranked for the rest of this rankings year, but that punishment will last only a few weeks.
Eight of the colleges ranked a year ago submitted information that was sufficiently incorrect that it would have changed their places in the rankings. And so U.S. News has declared them to be "unranked," a punishment that lasts until September 10th, when the new edition comes out.
The eight additional colleges reported to have submitted incorrect data follow other incidents this year, which has seen an uptick in the number of colleges whose rankings were based on incorrect information. In one of those cases -- involving the business school of Temple University -- officials have admitted that incorrect data were submitted intentionally and for several years for several programs. Some of the eight new colleges are blaming human error, not malice, for the flaws in their data. Others are blaming U.S. News.
U.S. News has always said that colleges themselves must audit the data they submit.
As writer and best-selling author Malcolm Gladwell once pointed out in a scathing critique of U.S. News' rankings in the New Yorker, “There’s no direct way to measure the quality of an institution—how well a college manages to inform, inspire, and challenge its students. So the U.S. News algorithm relies instead on proxies for quality—and the proxies for educational quality turn out to be flimsy at best.”
In its 2019 Methodology Statement, the U.S. News wrote:”Hard OBJECTIVE data alone determine each school's rank.
We survey top academics – presidents, provosts, and deans of admissions – asking them to rate the academic quality of peer institutions with which they are familiar on a scale of 1 (marginal) to 5 (distinguished). To get another set of important opinions, U.S. News also surveyed nearly 24,400 counselors at public, private and parochial high schools from all 50 states and Washington, D.C.”
Forbes magazine has come out with a new college ranking system in an apparent attempt to compete with US News. The system used by Forbes is in my opinion the most ridiculous system yet devised. I would be more impressed if they just wandered down the street asking people for their opinion on the best colleges.
Here is what the system is based on: 25% of the ranking is based on evaluations from [ulr=https://www.ratemyprofessors.com/]RateMyProfessor[/url], a website that purports to allow students to rate their professors. Of course the website has virtually no control over who posts so anyone, whether a student or not, can go in and post on a particular professor. Even the professor in question can post if they would wish. If you want to post about a professor multiple times, go ahead, they won’t stop you.
The second criteria, also accounting for 25% of the rating, is how many of the college’s alumni (adjusted for enrolment), are listed in Who’s Who in America - published by none other than Forbes magazine.
The final 50% of the ranking is based equally on three factors including the average amount of student debt, the percentage of students graduating in four years, and number of students and faculty (adjusted for enrolment) who have won nationally-competitive awards like Rhodes Scholarships.
Forbes has taken a few important issues and combined them with the least reliable numbers they could find.
Two of the easiest ways for a publication to get attention are to (1) Make a list and (2) Make an outrageous, contrarian argument. Forbes employed both methods in its report on "America's Best Colleges," which it published last week.
Forbes had to work hard to differentiate themselves from the standard-setting U.S. News and World Report best colleges list, and to that effect, they came up with a thoroughly bizarre methodology.
The single most important factor in a college's placement (25 percent) is the average rating of its faculty on [ulr=https://www.ratemyprofessors.com/]RateMyProfessor.ocm[/url], where one of the four categories in which students grade their teachers is "easiness" (there's also a "hotness" category, but that doesn't count toward one's rating).
The second biggest component (20 percent) in the Forbes rankings is the average amount of debt each student incurs. While that is certainly something most prospective students consider, it's an entirely separate issue from the quality of the institution - a fact Forbes implicitly acknowledges. The third most important criterion in Forbes's methodology (16.67 percent) is the percentage of students who graduate in four years.
How can there be no consideration whatsoever given to student satisfaction or quality of life?
In their Methodology statement U.S. News wrote:Because U.S. News surveys schools directly, much of these data are not readily accessible anywhere else. We do not tour residence halls, chat with recruiters or conduct unscientific student polls for use in our computations.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------2020 RANKING – BEST COLLEGES IN AMERICA
Rank. School • Overall Niche Grade • Acceptance Rate • Net Price* • SAT Range
1. Massachusetts Institute of Technology • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 7 % • Net Price: $22,230 • SAT Range: 1490-1570
2. Stanford University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 5 % • Net Price: $16,562 • SAT Range: 1390-1540
3. Yale University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 7 % • Net Price: $18,053 • SAT Range: 1460-1580
4. Harvard University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 5 % • Net Price: $17,030 • SAT Range: 1460-1590
5. Princeton University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 6 % • Net Price: $16,302 • SAT Range: 1430-1570
6. Duke University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 10 % • Net Price: $22,011 • SAT Range: 1380-1540
7. Brown University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 8 % • Net Price: $25,651 • SAT Range: 1400-1570
8. Columbia University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 7 % • Net Price: $22,824 • SAT Range: 1410-1570
9. University of Pennsylvania • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 9 % • Net Price: $24,539 • SAT Range: 1420-1560
10. Rice University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 16 % • Net Price: $24,131 • SAT Range: 1490-1580
11. Northwestern University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 9 % • Net Price: $26,099 • SAT Range: 1420-1560
12. Vanderbilt University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 11 % • Net Price: $23,292 • SAT Range: 1440-1560
13. Pomona College • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 8 % • Net Price: $18,427 • SAT Range: 1370-1530
14. Washington University in St. Louis • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 16 % • Net Price: $27,777 • SAT Range: 1470-1570
15. Dartmouth College • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 10% • Net Price: $22,303 • SAT Range: 1430-1560
16. Calif. Institute of Technology • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 8 % • Net Price: $24,466 • SAT Range: 1530-1590
17. University of Notre Dame • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 19% • Net Price: $27,453 • SAT Range: 1370-1520 (#1 Catholic College)
18. University of Chicago • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 8 % • Net Price: $34,834 • SAT Range: 1480-1580
19. University of Southern California • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 17 % • Net Price: $32,892 • SAT Range: 1300-1500
20. Cornell University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 13% • Net Price: $31,449 • SAT Range: 1390-1550
21. Bowdoin College • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 14% • Net Price: $24,447 • SAT Range: 1360-1510
22. Amherst College • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 13% • Net Price: $19,519 • SAT Range: 1400-1560
23. University of Michigan • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 27% • Net Price: $16,408 • SAT Range: 1330-1500
24. Georgetown University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 16% • Net Price: $27,420 • SAT Range: 1350-1520 (#2 Catholic College)
48. Boston College • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 32% • Net Price: $27,299 • SAT Range: 1320-1490 (#3 Catholic College)
81. Villanova University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 36% • Net Price: $35,491 • SAT Range: 1250-1440 (#4 Catholic College)
138. Saint Louis University • Overall Niche Grade: A • Acceptance Rate: 64% • Net Price: $31,718 • SAT Range: 1170-1390 (#7 Catholic College)
150. University of Dayton • Overall Niche Grade: A • Acceptance Rate: 72% • Net Price: $35,077 • SAT Range: 1100-1310 (#10 Catholic College)
160. University of Cincinnati • Overall Niche Grade: A • Acceptance Rate: 76% • Net Price: $21,050 • SAT Range: 1120-1340
163. University of Connecticut • Overall Niche Grade: A • Acceptance Rate: 48% • Net Price: $18,699 • SAT Range: 1210-1390
170. Miami University (OH) • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 68% • Net Price: $20,316 • SAT Range: 1190-1380
176. University of Nebraska • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 64% • Net Price: $16,813 • SAT Range: 1100-1380
180. Creighton University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 72% • Net Price: $31,481 • SAT Range: 1070-1290 (#12 Catholic College)
185. Gonzaga University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 65% • Net Price: $34,085 • SAT Range: 1180-1350 (#14 Catholic College)
190. Butler University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 65% • Net Price: $38,051 • SAT Range: 1150-1320
206. Marquette University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 89% • Net Price: $32,377 • SAT Range: 1130-1310 (#17 Catholic College)
212. Temple University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 57% • Net Price: $22,940 • SAT Range: 1010-1230
228. Drexel University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 79% • Net Price: $40,977 • SAT Range: 1160-1360
233. Fordham University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 46% • Net Price: $38,503 • SAT Range: 1230-1410 (#20 Catholic College)
235. Providence College • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 52% • Net Price: $36,099 • SAT Range: 1160-1330 (#21 Catholic College)
238. DePaul University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 72% • Net Price: $32,927 • SAT Range: 1050-1260 (#22 Catholic College)
254. Duquesne University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 72% • Net Price: $30,540 • SAT Range: 1120-1270 (#24 Catholic College)
280. Seton Hall University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 73% • Net Price: $28,700 • SAT Range: 1140-1280 (#28 Catholic College)
301. St. Joseph’s University • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 77% • Net Price: $35,290 • SAT Range: 1110-1290 (#32 Catholic College)
338. St. Bonaventure University • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 71% • Net Price: $22,409 • SAT Range: 1020-1220 (#38 Catholic College)
376. Virginia Commonwealth U. • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 84% • Net Price: $20,741 • SAT Range: 1070-1260
392. Xavier University • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 74% • Net Price: $30,190 • SAT Range: 1060-1240 (#45 Catholic College)
601. La Salle University • Overall Niche Grade: B • Acceptance Rate: 79% • Net Price: $26,276 • SAT Range: 870-1080 (#72 Catholic College)
639. St. John's University • Overall Niche Grade: B • Acceptance Rate: 68% • Net Price: $25,981 • SAT Range: 1060-1250 (#77 Catholic College)
On March 23, 2020 sju88grad wrote:
Stop with the postings about the academic reputations of the schools......you can find dozens and dozens of ranking services that can fit whatever narrative you are trying to promote.....for example, St. John's is a Vincentian University.....the entire mission of the school is "to provide excellent education for all people, especially those lacking economic, physical, or social advantages".......many students at SJU are first-generation college kids and many don't come from privileged backgrounds......
To me, a better measure of a University's success?......this....[/color][/b]
https://www.stjohns.edu/about/news/2018 ... ecognition
Institution • Founded • Type • Enrolment • Endowment
Brown University • 1764 • Private • 9,731 • $3.5 billion
Columbia University • 1754 • Private • 28,984 • $10.0 billion
Cornell University • 1865 • Private • 23,600 • $7.2 billion
Dartmouth College • 1769 • Private • 6,409 • $5.0 billion
Harvard University • 1636 • Private • 19,819 • $37.1 billion
University of Pennsylvania • 1740 • Private • 21,509 • $12.2 billion
Princeton University • 1746 • Private • 8,273 • $23.8 billion
Yale University • 1701 • Private • 12,312 • $27.8 billion
Mass. Institute of Technology • 1861 • Private • 11,574 • $16.4 billion
University of Chicago • 1890 • Private • 16,227 • $8.2 billion
Stanford University • 1891 • Private • 16,336 • $24.8 billion
University of Notre Dame • 1842 • Catholic (Holy Cross) • 12,292 • $13.1 billion
Butler University • 1855 • Private (Christian) • 4,848 • $0.174 billion
Creighton University • 1878 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 8,236 • $0.448 billion
DePaul University • 1898 • Catholic (Vincentian) • 23,799 • $0.596 billion
Georgetown University • 1789 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 17,858 • $1.770 billion
Marquette University • 1881 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 11,745 • $0.550 billion
Providence College • 1917 • Catholic (Dominican) • 4,533 • $0.213 billion
St. John's University • 1870 • Catholic (Vincentian) • 20,448 • $0.648 billion
Seton Hall University • 1856 • Catholic (Diocesan) • 9,627 • $0.243 billion
Villanova University • 1842 • Catholic (Augustinian) • 10,735 • $0.715 billion
Xavier University • 1831 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 6,538 • $0.151 billion
University of Dayton • 1850 • Catholic (Marianist) • 10,920 • $0.524 billion
Duquesne University • 1878 • Catholic (Spiritan) • 10,106 • $0.261 billion
Fordham University • 1841 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 14,667 • $0.739 billion
La Salle University • 1863 • Catholic (De La Salle) • 6,176 • $0.088 billion
St. Bonaventure University • 1858 • Catholic (Franciscan) • 2,406 • $0.060 billion
Saint Joseph's University • 1851 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 7,900 • $0.279 billion
Saint Louis University • 1818 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 16,500 • $1.230 billion
Gonzaga University • 1887 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 7,506 • $0.276 billion
University of Connecticut • 1881 • Public • 32,257 • $0.447 billion
Virginia Commonwealth U.* • 1968 • Public • 32,303 • $1.843 billion
* VCU was officially established in 1968 with the merger of the Richmond Professional Institute and Medical College of Virginia.
The history of VCU first began in 1838 when the Medical Department of Hampden-Sydney College first opened in Richmond.
Founded • Institution • Type • Enrolment • Endowment
1636 • Harvard University • Private • 19,819 • $37.1 billion
1701 • Yale University • Private • 12,312 • $27.8 billion
1740 • University of Pennsylvania • Private • 21,509 • $12.2 billion
1746 • Princeton University • Private • 8,273 • $23.8 billion
1754 • Columbia University • Private • 28,984 • $10.0 billion
1764 • Brown University • Private • 9,731 • $3.5 billion
1769 • Dartmouth College • Private • 6,409 • $5.0 billion
1789 • Georgetown University • Catholic (Jesuit) • 17,858 • $1.770 billion
1818 • Saint Louis University • Catholic (Jesuit) • 16,500 • $1.230 billion
1831 • Xavier University • Catholic (Jesuit) • 6,538 • $0.151 billion
1841 • Fordham University • Catholic (Jesuit) • 14,667 • $0.739 billion
1842 • University of Notre Dame • Catholic (Holy Cross) • 12,292 • $13.1 billion
1842 • Villanova University • Catholic (Augustinian) • 10,735 • $0.715 billion
1850 • University of Dayton • Catholic (Marianist) • 10,920 • $0.524 billion
1851 • Saint Joseph's University • Catholic (Jesuit) • 7,900 • $0.279 billion
1855 • Butler University • Private (Christian) • 4,848 • $0.174 billion
1856 • Seton Hall University • Catholic (Diocesan) • 9,627 • $0.243 billion
1858 • St. Bonaventure University • Catholic (Franciscan) • 2,406 • $0.060 billion
1861 • Mass. Institute of Technology • Private • 11,574 • $16.4 billion
1863 • La Salle University • Catholic (De La Salle) • 6,176 • $0.088 billion
1865 • Cornell University • Private • 23,600 • $7.2 billion
1870 • St. John's University • Catholic (Vincentian) • 20,448 • $0.648 billion
1878 • Creighton University • Catholic (Jesuit) • 8,236 • $0.448 billion
1878 • Duquesne University • Catholic (Spiritan) • 10,106 • $0.261 billion
1881 • Marquette University • Catholic (Jesuit) • 11,745 • $0.550 billion
1881 • University of Connecticut • Public • 32,257 • $0.447 billion
1887 • Gonzaga University • Catholic (Jesuit) • 7,506 • $0.276 billion
1890 • University of Chicago • Private • 16,227 • $8.2 billion
1891 • Stanford University • Private • 16,336 • $24.8 billion
1898 • DePaul University • Catholic (Vincentian) • 23,799 • $0.596 billion
1917 • Providence College • Catholic (Dominican) • 4,533 • $0.213 billion
1968 • Virginia Commonwealth U.* • Public • 32,303 • $1.843 billion
* VCU was officially established in 1968 with the merger of the Richmond Professional Institute and Medical College of Virginia.
The history of VCU first began in 1838 when the Medical Department of Hampden-Sydney College first opened in Richmond.
Enrolment • Institution • Founded • Type • Endowment
32,303 • Virginia Commonwealth U. • 1968 • Public • $1.843 billion
32,257 • University of Connecticut • 1881 • Public • $0.447 billion
28,984 • Columbia University • 1754 • Private • $10.0 billion
23,799 • DePaul University • 1898 • Catholic (Vincentian) • $0.596 billion
23,600 • Cornell University • 1865 • Private • $7.2 billion
21,509 • University of Pennsylvania • 1740 • Private • $12.2 billion
20,448 • St. John's University • 1870 • Catholic (Vincentian) • $0.648 billion
19,819 • Harvard University • 1636 • Private • $37.1 billion
17,858 • Georgetown University • 1789 • Catholic (Jesuit) • $1.770 billion
16,500 • Saint Louis University • 1818 • Catholic (Jesuit) • $1.230 billion
16,336 • Stanford University • 1891 • Private • $24.8 billion
16,227 • University of Chicago • 1890 • Private • $8.2 billion
14,667 • Fordham University • 1841 • Catholic (Jesuit) • $0.739 billion
13,819 • AVERAGE ENROLMENT OF 10 BIG EAST SCHOOLS
12,312 • Yale University • 1701 • Private • $27.8 billion
12,292 • University of Notre Dame • 1842 • Catholic (Holy Cross) • $13.1 billion
11,745 • Marquette University • 1881 • Catholic (Jesuit) • $0.550 billion
11,574 • Mass. Institute of Technology • 1861 • Private • $16.4 billion
10,920 • University of Dayton • 1850 • Catholic (Marianist) • $0.524 billion
10,735 • Villanova University • 1842 • Catholic (Augustinian) • $0.715 billion
10,106 • Duquesne University • 1878 • Catholic (Spiritan) • $0.261 billion
9,731 • Brown University • 1764 • Private • $3.5 billion
9,627 • Seton Hall University • 1856 • Catholic (Diocesan) • $0.243 billion
8,273 • Princeton University • 1746 • Private • $23.8 billion
8,236 • Creighton University • 1878 • Catholic (Jesuit) • $0.448 billion
7,900 • Saint Joseph's University • 1851 • Catholic (Jesuit) • $0.279 billion
7,506 • Gonzaga University • 1887 • Catholic (Jesuit) • $0.276 billion
6,538 • Xavier University • 1831 • Catholic (Jesuit) • $0.151 billion
6,409 • Dartmouth College • 1769 • Private • $5.0 billion
6,176 • La Salle University • 1863 • Catholic (De La Salle) • $0.088 billion
4,848 • Butler University • 1855 • Private (Christian) • $0.174 billion
4,533 • Providence College • 1917 • Catholic (Dominican) • $0.213 billion
2,406 • St. Bonaventure University • 1858 • Catholic (Franciscan) • $0.060 billion
Endowment • Institution • Founded • Type • Enrolment
$37.1 billion • Harvard University • 1636 • Private • 19,819
$27.8 billion • Yale University • 1701 • Private • 12,312
$24.8 billion • Stanford University • 1891 • Private • 16,336
$23.8 billion • Princeton University • 1746 • Private • 8,273
$16.4 billion • Mass. Institute of Technology • 1861 • Private • 11574
$13.1 billion • University of Notre Dame • 1842 • Catholic (Holy Cross) • 12,292
$12.2 billion • University of Pennsylvania • 1740 • Private • 21,509
$10.0 billion • Columbia University • 1754 • Private • 28,984
$8.2 billion • University of Chicago • 1890 • Private • 16,227
$7.2 billion • Cornell University • 1865 • Private • 23,600
$5.0 billion • Dartmouth College • 1769 • Private • 6,409
$3.5 billion • Brown University • 1764 • Private • 9,731
$1.84 billion • Virginia Commonwealth U. • 1968 • Public • 32,303
$1.77 billion • Georgetown University • 1789 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 17,858
$1.23 billion • Saint Louis University • 1818 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 16,500
$0.739 billion • Fordham University • 1841 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 14,667
$0.715 billion • Villanova University • 1842 • Catholic (Augustinian) • 10,735
$0.648 billion • St. John's University • 1870 • Catholic (Vincentian) • 20,448
$0.596 billion • DePaul University • 1898 • Catholic (Vincentian) • 23,799
$0.551 billion • AVERAGE ENDOWMENT OF 10 BIG EAST SCHOOLS
$0.550 billion • Marquette University • 1881 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 11,745
$0.524 billion • University of Dayton • 1850 • Catholic (Marianist) • 10,920
$0.448 billion • Creighton University • 1878 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 8,236
$0.447 billion • University of Connecticut • 1881 • Public • 32,257
$0.279 billion • Saint Joseph's University • 1851 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 7,900
$0.276 billion • Gonzaga University • 1887 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 7,506
$0.261 billion • Duquesne University • 1878 • Catholic (Spiritan) • 10,106
$0.243 billion • Seton Hall University • 1856 • Catholic (Diocesan) • 9,627
$0.213 billion • Providence College • 1917 • Catholic (Dominican) • 4,533
$0.174 billion • Butler University • 1855 • Private (Christian) • 4,848
$0.151 billion • Xavier University • 1831 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 6,538
$0.088 billion • La Salle University • 1863 • Catholic (De La Salle) • 6,176
$0.060 billion • St. Bonaventure University • 1858 • Catholic (Franciscan) • 2,406
1. Princeton University • Tuition and Fees: $47,140
2. Harvard University • Tuition and Fees: $50,420
3(T). Columbia University • Tuition and Fees: $59,430
3(T). Mass. Institute of Technology • Tuition and Fees: $51,832
3(T). University of Chicago • Tuition and Fees: $57,006
3(T). Yale University • Tuition and Fees: $53,430
7. Stanford University • Tuition and Fees: $51,354
8(T). University of Pennsylvania • Tuition and Fees: $55,584
12(T). Dartmouth College • Tuition and Fees: $55,584
14(T). Brown University • Tuition and Fees: $55,656
16(T). Cornell University • Tuition and Fees: $55,188
18. University of Notre Dame • Tuition and Fees: $53,391
22(T). Georgetown University • Tuition and Fees: $54,105
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1. Princeton University • Tuition and Fees: $51,870
2. Harvard University • Tuition and Fees: $51,925
3(T). Columbia University • Tuition and Fees: $61,850
3(T). Mass. Institute of Technology • Tuition and Fees: $53,790
3(T). Yale University • Tuition and Fees: $55,500
6(T). Stanford University • Tuition and Fees: $53,529
6(T). University of Chicago • Tuition and Fees: $59,298
6(T). University of Pennsylvania • Tuition and Fees: $57,770
9(T). Northwestern University • Tuition and Fees: $56,691
10(T). Duke University • Tuition and Fees: $58,198
12(T). Calif. Institute of Technology• Tuition and Fees: $54,600
12(T). Dartmouth College • Tuition and Fees: $57,204
14. Brown University • Tuition and Fees: $58,504
15(T). University of Notre Dame • Tuition and Fees: $55,553
24. Georgetown University • Tuition and Fees: $56,058
2019 RANKING – BEST COLLEGES IN AMERICA
Rank. School • Overall Niche Grade • Acceptance Rate • Net Price* • SAT Range
1. Massachusetts Institute of Technology • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 7 % • Net Price: $22,230 • SAT Range: 1490-1570
2. Stanford University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 5 % • Net Price: $16,562 • SAT Range: 1390-1540
3. Harvard University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 5 % • Net Price: $17,030 • SAT Range: 1460-1590
4. Yale University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 7 % • Net Price: $18,053 • SAT Range: 1460-1570
5. Princeton University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 6 % • Net Price: $16,302 • SAT Range: 1430-1570
6. University of Pennsylvania • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 9 % • Net Price: $24,539 • SAT Range: 1420-1560
7. Columbia University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 7 % • Net Price: $22,824 • SAT Range: 1410-1570
9. Brown University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 8 % • Net Price: $25,651 • SAT Range: 1400-1570
13. University of Notre Dame • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 19% • Net Price: $27,453 • SAT Range: 1370-1520 (#1 Catholic College)
15. University of Chicago • Overall Niche Grade: [b]A+ • Acceptance Rate: 8 % • Net Price: $34,834 • SAT Range: 1480-1580
19. Dartmouth College • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 10% • Net Price: $22,303 • SAT Range: 1430-1560
21. Cornell University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 13% • Net Price: $31,449 • SAT Range: 1390-1550
22. Georgetown University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 16% • Net Price: $27,420 • SAT Range: 1350-1520 (#2 Catholic College)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------2020 RANKING – BEST COLLEGES IN AMERICA
Rank. School • Overall Niche Grade • Acceptance Rate • Net Price* • SAT Range
1. Massachusetts Institute of Technology • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 7 % • Net Price: $22,230 • SAT Range: 1490-1570
2. Stanford University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 5 % • Net Price: $16,562 • SAT Range: 1390-1540
3. Yale University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 7 % • Net Price: $18,053 • SAT Range: 1460-1580
4. Harvard University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 5 % • Net Price: $17,030 • SAT Range: 1460-1590
5. Princeton University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 6 % • Net Price: $16,302 • SAT Range: 1430-1570
6. Duke University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 10 % • Net Price: $22,011 • SAT Range: 1380-1540
7. Brown University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 8 % • Net Price: $25,651 • SAT Range: 1400-1570
8. Columbia University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 7 % • Net Price: $22,824 • SAT Range: 1410-1570
11. Northwestern University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 9 % • Net Price: $26,099 • SAT Range: 1420-1560[/color]
15. Dartmouth College • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 10% • Net Price: $22,303 • SAT Range: 1430-1560
16. Calif. Institute of Technology • Overall Niche Grade: [b]A+ • Acceptance Rate: 8 % • Net Price: $24,466 • SAT Range: 1530-1590
17. University of Notre Dame • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 19% • Net Price: $27,453 • SAT Range: 1370-1520 (#1 Catholic College)
24. Georgetown University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 16% • Net Price: $27,420 • SAT Range: 1350-1520 (#2 Catholic College)
The final 50% of the Forbes Ranking is based equally on three factors including the average amount of student debt, the percentage of students graduating in four years, and number of students and faculty (adjusted for enrolment) who have won nationally-competitive awards like Rhodes Scholarships.
In August 2019, U.S. News, Niche, and The Princeton Review will publish their 2020 College Rankings.
In August 2019, Forbes will publish their 2019 College Rankings. Forbes’ College Rankings lag a year behind their competitors, because Forbes requires Niche’s published 2019 College Rankings as an input to Forbes’ yet-to-be-published 2019 College Rankings.
2018 RANKING – BEST COLLEGES IN AMERICA
#1 Harvard University • Cost*: $69,600 • Average Financial Aid: $48,195
#2 Yale University • Cost: $71,290 • Average Financial Aid: $48,126
#3 Stanford University • Cost: $69,109 • Average Financial Aid: $47,782
#4 Mass. Institute of Technology • Cost: $67,430 • Average Financial Aid: $41,674
#5 Princeton University • Cost: $66,150 • Average Financial Aid: $44,128
#7 University of Pennsylvania • Cost: $71,715 • Average Financial Aid: $43,856
#8 Brown University • Cost: $71,050 • Average Financial Aid: $40,116
#9 Dartmouth College • Cost: $71,827 • Average Financial Aid: $45,867
#12 Georgetown University • Cost: $71,580 • Average Financial Aid: $40,346
#13 Cornell University • Cost: $70,321 • Average Financial Aid: $35,445
#15 Columbia University • Cost: $74,199 • Average Financial Aid: $46,127
#18 University of Chicago • Cost: $75,735 • Average Financial Aid: $39,032
#21 University of Notre Dame • Cost: $69,395 • Average Financial Aid: $38,080
* The Forbes Rankings uses the term “Cost” and defines it as “the estimated total cost of attendance for
out-of-state students living on campus in 2017-2018. This estimate includes the reported average cost of tuition and fees,
books and supplies, room and board, and ‘other’ living expenses. This figure is an estimate and not a guarantee of the
actual amount the student may be charged.”
2019 RANKING – BEST COLLEGES IN AMERICA
#1 Harvard University • Net Price: $14,327 • Average Debt: $7,372
#2 Stanford University • Net Price: $13,261 • Average Debt: $8,155
#3 Yale University • Net Price: $18,627 • Average Debt: $4,962
#4 Mass. Institute of Technology • Net Price: $20,771 • Average Debt: $7,530
#5 Princeton University • Net Price: $9,327 • Average Debt: $4,451
#6 University of Pennsylvania • Net Price: $24,242 • Average Debt: $7,733 ]
#7 Brown University • Net Price: $30,205 • Average Debt: $7,794
#8 Calif. Institute of Technology • Net Price: $24,245 • Average Debt: $5,988
#9 Duke University • Net Price: $35,737 • Average Debt: $6,114
#10 Dartmouth College • Net Price: $30,421 • Average Debt: $6,239
#11 Cornell University • Net Price: $31,230 • Average Debt: $8,107
#14 Columbia University • Net Price: $24,231 • Average Debt: $10,740 ]
#15 Georgetown University • Net Price: $30,107 • Average Debt: $6,358
#18 University of Notre Dame • Net Price: $28,768 • Average Debt: $6,600
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Methodology:
Now in its 12th year, the FORBES Top Colleges ranking has always placed its focus solely on the direct benefits a college or university provides its students.
Favoring output over input, Forbes eschews common metrics like acceptance rate, endowment, and freshmen SAT scores – numbers that say far more about a school’s “prestige” than its actual effectiveness – and instead favors variables like student debt, alumni salary, graduation rate and student satisfaction.
On March 23, 2020 MUBoxer wrote:
Anyone using Niche to rank universities instantly loses credibility.
1. They factor in neighborhood safety and quality which instantly puts schools in large urban settings, particularly Jesuit schools which are usually in rougher neighborhoods, at a major disadvantage.
2. They factor in a ton of other useless metrics. Diversity? Loan amount? I went to a CPS HS then a suburban HS that was even more diverse than my CPS school, it's great for diverse thought but not correlated to great school or else cheaper directional schools would own the more expensive private schools. Loan amount? This is idiotic, it has zero to do with college quality.
Bottom line is Niche is a joke, in an attempt to go wayyyy overboard with analysis Fieldhouse Flyer has a tendency to not review data.
Niche 2019 Rankings: 98. Villanova University: Top 11 % of 880 schools ranked by Niche (#98/880 schools)
Forbes 2018 Rankings: 70. Villanova University: Top 11 % of 650 schools ranked by Forbes (#70/650 schools)
U.S. News 2019 Rankings: 49(T). Villanova University: Top 22% of 226 National Universities ranked by US News (49/226)
US News ‘National Liberal Arts Colleges 2019’ Ranking • Niche Ranking • School
1 • 42 •Williams College
2 • 24 • Amherst College
3(T) • 30 • Swarthmore College
3(T) • 39 • Wellesley College
5(T) • 17 • Bowdoin College
5(T) • 35 • Carleton College
5(T) • 16 • Pomona College
5(T) • 32 • Middlebury College
9 • 41 • Claremont McKenna College
10 • 54 • Davidson College
11(T) • 68 • Grinnell College
11(T) • 40 • Haverford College
11(T) • 56 • Smith College
11(T) • 72 • Vassar College
11(T) • 36 • Washington and Lee University
16 (T) • 55 • Colgate University
16 (T) • 53 • Hamilton College … etc. … etc. …
22. Georgetown University
98. Villanova University
212. Creighton University
214. DePaul University
219. Marquette University
225. Providence College
227. Butler University
236. • AVERAGE RANKING OF 10 BIG EAST SCHOOLS
241. Oregon State University • PAC 12 • Enrolment: 31,904
247. University of Tennessee • SEC • Enrolment: 27,410
272. West Virginia University • Big 12 • Enrolment: 31,287
274. University of Kentucky • SEC • Enrolment: 30,720
296. University of Louisville • ACC • Enrolment: 22,640
302. Seton Hall University
331. Xavier University
508. St. John's University • Big East • Enrolment: 20,448
#12 Georgetown University
#70 Villanova University
#162 Providence College
#175 Marquette University
#208 • AVERAGE RANKING OF 10 BIG EAST SCHOOLS
#222 Creighton University
#224 University of Tennessee • SEC • Enrolment: 27,410
#237 Butler University
#243 DePaul University
#265 Oregon State University • PAC 12 • Enrolment: 31,904
#272 Xavier University
#287 Seton Hall University
#323 University of Kentucky • SEC • Enrolment: 30,720
#402 St. John's University • Big East • Enrolment: 20,448
#406 West Virginia University • Big 12 • Enrolment: 31,287
#429 University of Louisville • ACC • Enrolment: 22,640
22(T). Georgetown University
49(T). Villanova University
89(T). Marquette University
92 • AVERAGE RANKING OF 6 BIG EAST SCHOOLS
115(T). University of Tennessee • SEC • Enrolment: 27,410
119(T). DePaul University
119(T). Seton Hall University
140(T). Oregon State University • PAC 12 • Enrolment: 31,904
147(T). University of Kentucky • SEC • Enrolment: 30,720
152(T). St. John’s University • Big East • Enrolment: 20,448
171(T). University of Louisville • ACC • Enrolment: 22,640
205(T). West Virginia University • Big 12 • Enrolment: 31,287
2. Providence College
1(T). Butler University
1(T). Creighton University*
8. Xavier University
Niche 2019 Rankings: 247. University of Tennessee: (Top 28 % of 880 schools ranked by Niche (#247/880 schools)
Forbes 2018 Rankings: #224 University of Tennessee: (Top 34 % of 650 schools ranked by Forbes (#224/650 schools)
U.S. News 2019 Rankings: 115(T). University of Tennessee*: (Top 51% of 226 National Universities ranked by US News (#115/226)
* University of Tennessee • SEC • Enrolment: 27,410 • Endowment: $ 1,100,000,000
A significant change to U.S. News & World Report’s methodology has sent the ranking of Case Western Reserve [enrolment: 11,824] below 40 for the first time in eight years. The magazine’s methodology adjustments made a major impact on several other institutions. For example, Lehigh University [enrolment: 6,989] fell eight (from 45th to 53rd), while Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute[enrolment: 7,962] fell seven places (to 49).
Conversely, several public institutions climbed in the rankings. Rutgers University-New Brunswick [enrolment: 49,577] leapt 13 spots (to 56th). The University of California-Irvine [enrolment: 29,307] went up nine (to 33); the University of Georgia [enrolment: 37,606] and UC-Davis [enrolment: 39,152] climbed eight (to 46th and 38th, respectively); and the University of Florida [enrolment: 54,906] and University of Texas-Austin [enrolment: 51,832] both rose seven slots (35th and 49th, respectively).
Academics & Administration – 18 lists
• Administrators Get Low Marks
• Best Career Services
• Best Classroom Experience
• Best College Library ==> #1 Columbia University, #4 University of Chicago, #5 Stanford University, #7 Cornell University
• Best Health Services ==> #8 Stanford University
• Best Science Lab Facilities ==> #4 Stanford University, #10 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
• Best-Run Colleges ==> #4 Stanford University, #10 University of Dayton
• Financial Aid Not So Great ==> #4 Duquesne University
• Great Financial Aid ==> #6 Princeton University, #7 Yale University, #13 Stanford University, #17 Brown University, #20 Cornell University
• Least Accessible Professors
• Most Accessible Professors
• Most Popular Study Abroad Program ==> #18 Saint Louis University
• Professors Get High Marks ==> #18 Brown University
• Professors Get Low Marks ==> #4 University of Connecticut, #9 St. John's University (NY)
• Students Study the Least ==> #7 St. John's University (NY), #16 St. Bonaventure University
• Students Study the Most ==> #11 University of Chicago, #16 Brown University
• Their Students Love These Colleges ==> #7 Brown University, #8 University of Dayton
• This is a Library? ==> #5 Creighton University, #14 St. John's University (NY), #20 Providence College
Demographics – 6 lists
• Least Religious Students ==> #10 Brown University
• LGBTQ-Friendly ==> #3 Brown University (Providence, R.I.)
• LGBTQ-Unfriendly ==> #10 Providence College (Providence, R.I.)
• Little Race/Class Interaction ==> #1 Providence College
• Lots of Race/Class Interaction ==> #14 St. Bonaventure University
• Most Religious Students ==> None of the 32 Schools of Interest appear on this Top 20 list.
Extracurriculars – 10 lists
• Best Athletic Facilities ==> #14 Providence College, #20 Stanford University
• Best College Newspaper ==> #1 Columbia University , #4 Cornell University, #11 Fordham University, #19 Brown University
• Best College Radio Station ==> #3 St. Bonaventure University, #13 Fordham University, #14 Providence College, #18 Columbia University
• Best College Theater ==> #18 Brown University, #19 Columbia University
• Students Most Engaged in Community Service ==> #1 Saint Louis University, #15 Creighton University
• Everyone Plays Intramural Sports ==> #1 University of Dayton, #10 Providence College, #11 Saint Joseph's University (PA)
• Nobody Plays Intramural Sports
• Students Pack the Stadiums ==> #3 Xavier Univ., #7 Marquette Univ., #8 Univ. of Connecticut, #9 Providence College, #16 St. John's Univ. (NY)
• There’s a Game?
• Most Active Student Government
Politics – 4 lists
• Election? What Election? ==> #17 Duquesne University
• Most Conservative Students
• Most Liberal Students ==> #17 Brown University
• Most Politically Active Students ==> #6 Columbia University, #13 Brown University
Quality of Life – 9 lists
• Best Campus Food ==> #4 Cornell University
• Best College Dorms ==> #11 Columbia University, #18 University of Dayton
• Best Quality of Life
• Happiest Students ==> #10 Brown University, #12 University of Dayton
• Is It Food? ==> #6 Providence College, #9 Creighton University, #16 Butler University, #17 Saint Joseph's University (PA)
• Is That a Dorm? ==> #13 Providence College, #14 Creighton University, #17 Duquesne University
• Least Beautiful Campus
• Least Happy Students ==> #7 Seton Hall University, #9 St. John's University (NY)
• Most Beautiful Campus
Schools by Type – 4 lists
• Birkenstock-Wearing, Tree-Hugging, Clove-Smoking Vegetarians ==> #10 Brown University
• Future Rotarians and Daughters of the American Revolution ==> #11 Butler University, #18 Saint Joseph's University (PA)
• Party Schools ==> #13 Providence College
• Stone-Cold Sober Schools
Social Scene – 7 lists
• Don't Inhale
• Got Milk? (a.k.a. ‘Absence of Beer’ ranking) ==> #1 Brigham Young University, #18 St. John's University (NY)
• Lots of Beer ==> #2 University of Dayton, #12 Providence College
• Lots of Greek Life ==> #15 Butler University, #20 Providence College
• Lots of Hard Liquor ==> #20 Providence College
• Reefer Madness
• Scotch and Soda, Hold the Scotch
Town Life – 4 lists
• College City Gets High Marks ==> #2 Columbia University (Manhattan), #17 Duquesne University (Pittsburgh)
• College College City Gets Low Marks ==> #10 Butler University (Indianapolis)
• Town-Gown Relations are Great
• Town-Gown Relations are Strained ==> #13 Providence College (Providence), #15 Marquette University (Milwaukee)
Dartmouth College, Harvard University, University of Pennsylvania, University of Notre Dame, DePaul University, Georgetown University, Villanova University. ==> [Not listed in Princeton's Best 384 Colleges: La Salle University and Virginia Commonwealth University]
Brown University
Columbia University
Cornell University
Dartmouth College
Harvard University
University of Pennsylvania
Princeton University
Yale University
Mass. Institute of Technology
University of Chicago
Stanford University
University of Notre Dame
Butler University
Creighton University
DePaul University
Georgetown University
Marquette University
Providence College
St. John's University
Seton Hall University
Villanova University
Xavier University
University of Dayton
Duquesne University
Fordham University
St. Bonaventure University
Saint Joseph's University
Saint Louis University
Gonzaga University
University of Connecticut
'School of Interest' not listed in The Princeton Review’s Best 384 Colleges: La Salle University and Virginia Commonwealth University.
In Post #1 above, Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
1983 • U.S. News & World Report publishes its first "America's Best Colleges" report in its news magazine. The rankings have been compiled and published annually since 1987.
23. Ranking the College Ranking Services
1. Niche (and it’s not even close)
2. The Princeton Review
3. Forbes
4. U.S. News
How the Methodology Works
Although our methodology is the product of years of research, we continue to refine our approach based on user feedback, discussions with schools and higher education experts, literature reviews, trends in our own data, availability of new data, and attending and sometimes presenting at professional conferences.
In Posts #1 and #6 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
22. Ranking the College Ranking Services
1. Niche (and it’s not even close)
2. The Princeton Review
3. Forbes
4. U.S. News
In Post #1 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
4. Methodology – Forbes College Rankings
18.2 2. Criticisms of the U.S. News & World Report’s College Rankings – Wikipedia
Critics charged that U.S. News intentionally changed its methodology every year so that the rankings change and they can sell more magazines. A San Francisco Chronicle article argues that "almost all of US News factors are redundant and can be boiled down to one characteristic: the size of the college or university's endowment."
Two of the easiest ways for a publication to get attention are to (1) Make a list and (2) Make an outrageous, contrarian argument. Forbes employed both methods in its report on "America's Best Colleges," which it published last week.
Forbes had to work hard to differentiate themselves from the standard-setting U.S. News and World Report best colleges list, and to that effect, they came up with a thoroughly bizarre methodology.
METHODOLOGY: BEHIND THE RANKING
The rankings are based on six general categories:
Alumni Salary (20%), a combination of early and midcareer salaries as reported by the federal College Scorecard and PayScale data and research;
Student Satisfaction (20%), which includes results from Niche’ 2018 surveys on professor quality and data, and freshman retention rates from the federal IPEDS website;
Student Debt (20%), which rewards schools for low student debt loads and default rates;
American Leaders (15%), which is based on our Forbes Who’s Who database of successful people, including billionaires, powerful women, 30 Under 30 honorees, leaders in public service and in private enterprise, and more;
On-Time Graduation Rate (12.5%), which accounts for both four- and six-year rates; and
Academic Success (12.5%), which rewards schools whose alumni win prestigious scholarships and fellowships like the Rhodes and the Fulbright or have earned Ph.Ds.
In Post #1 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
1983 • U.S. News & World Report publishes its first "America's Best Colleges" report.
1992 • The Princeton Review publishes its first "Best Colleges" rankings.
2007 • College Prowler (rebranded as “Niche” in 2013) makes their content available online for a subscription fee.
2008 • Forbes publishes its first "Top Colleges" rankings.
In the August 2009 edition of Vanity Fair, Matt Pressman wrote:
Forbes had to work hard to differentiate themselves from the standard-setting U.S. News and World Report best colleges list.
In 1976 David Gilmour & Roger Waters wrote:
You gotta be crazy, you gotta have a real need
You gotta sleep on your toes, and when you're on the street
You gotta be able to pick out the easy meat with your eyes closed
And then moving in silently, down wind and out of sight
You gotta strike when the moment is right without thinking
And after a while, you can work on points for style
Like the club tie, and the firm handshake
A certain look in the eye and an easy smile
You have to be trusted by the people that you lie to
So that when they turn their backs on you,
You'll get the chance to put the knife in
You gotta keep one eye looking over your shoulder
You know it's going to get harder, and harder, and harder as you get older
And in the end you'll pack up and fly down south
Hide your head in the sand,
Just another sad old man
All alone and dying of cancer
And when you loose control, you'll reap the harvest you have sown
And as the fear grows, the bad blood slows and turns to stone
And it's too late to lose the weight you used to need to throw around
So have a good drown, as you go down, all alone
Dragged down by the stone (stone, stone, stone, stone, stone)
I gotta admit that I'm a little bit confused
Sometimes it seems to me as if I'm just being used
Gotta stay awake, gotta try and shake off this creeping malaise
If I don't stand my own ground, how can I find my way out of this maze?
Deaf, dumb, and blind, you just keep on pretending
That everyone's expendable and no-one has a real friend
And it seems to you the thing to do would be to isolate the winner
And everything's done under the sun
And you believe at heart, everyone's a killer
Who was born in a house full of pain
Who was trained not to spit in the fan
Who was told what to do by the man
Who was broken by trained personnel
Who was fitted with collar and chain
Who was given a pat on the back
Who was breaking away from the pack
Who was only a stranger at home
Who was ground down in the end
Who was found dead on the phone
Who was dragged down by the stone.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Listing of America's Best Colleges 2008 – Forbes - August 13, 2008
Rank • Name • State • Cost • Freshman Class Size
6 • United States Military Academy • NY • NA • 1,272
12 • Wabash College • IN • $35,550 • 250
13 • Centre College • KY • $37,000 • 316
14 • Massachusetts Institute of Technology • MA • $48,200 • 1,067
23 • Stanford University • CA • $49,227 • 1,721
76 • Georgetown University • DC • $51,466 •1,582
225 • Xavier University • OH • $36,320 • 858
244 • Villanova University • PA • $47,160 • 1,604
America's Best Colleges 2008 – Methodology – [writer not named], Forbes - August 13, 2008
The Center for College Affordability and Productivity (CCAP) compiled its rankings using five components:
1. Listing of Alumni in the 2008 Who's Who in America (25%)
2. Student Evaluations of Professors from Ratemyprofessors.com (25%)
3. Four- Year Graduation Rates (16 2/3%)
4. Enrollment-adjusted numbers of students and faculty receiving nationally competitive awards (16 2/3%)
5. Average four year accumulated student debt of those borrowing money (16 2/3%)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------America's Best Colleges 2009 - Methodology – [writer not named], Forbes - August 5, 2009
Ranking Factors and Weights
The Center for College Affordability and Productivity (CCAP) compiled its college rankings using seven components (the weightings are listed in parentheses):
1. Listings of Alumni in the 2008 edition of Who's Who in America (12.5%)
2. Salaries of Alumni from PayScale.com (12.5%)
3. Student Evaluations from Ratemyprofessors.com (25%)
4. Four-Year Graduation Rates (16.66%)
5. Students Receiving Nationally Competitive Awards (8.33%)
6. Faculty Receiving Awards for Scholarship and Creative Pursuits (5%)
7. Four-year Debt Load for Typical Student Borrowers (20%)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------America's Best Colleges 2010 - Methodology – [writer not named], Forbes - August 11, 2010
The Center for College Affordability and Productivity (CCAP), in conjunction with Forbes, compiled its college rankings using five general categories, with several components within each general category. The weightings are listed in parentheses:
No. 1: Student Satisfaction (27.5%)
Student Evaluations from RateMyProfessor.com (17.5%)
Freshman-to-Sophomore Retention Rates (5%)
Student Evaluations from MyPlan.com (5%)
No. 2: Postgraduate Success (30%)
Salary of Alumni from Payscale.com (15%)
Listings of Alumni in Who's Who in America (10%)
Alumni in Forbes/CCAP Corporate Officers List (5%)
No. 3: Student Debt (17.5%)
Four-year Debt Load for Typical Student Borrower (12.5%)
Student Loan Default Rates (5%)
No. 4: Four-year Graduation Rate (17.5%)
Actual Four-year Graduation Rate (8.75%)
Predicted vs. Actual Four-year Graduation Rate (8.75%)
No. 5: Competitive Awards (7.5%)
Student Nationally Competitive Awards (7.5%)
For the second year in a row, Williams College, a small, western-Massachusetts liberal arts school, has been named as the best undergraduate institution in America. With total annual costs adding up to nearly $55,000, a Williams education is certainly not cheap, but the 2,000 undergraduates here have among the highest four-year graduation rates in the country, win loads of prestigious national awards like Rhodes and Marshall Scholarships.
The complete methodology is available below, and in .pdf format here.
On August 3, 2011 Michael Noer, Executive Editor of Forbes Magazine wrote:
Center for College Affordability and Productivity
Electronics for College
LAPTOPS AND TABLETS
SCIENTIFIC CALCULATORS FOR STUDENTS
OTHER ELECTRONICSVOICE RECORDERS FOR LECTURES AT COLLEGE
Stationery For College
PLANNERS
PAPER NOTEBOOKS
BINDERS
PENS AND PENCILS
… The 4 Best Pens For Note Taking In College
Backpacks, Bags & Accessories For College Students
BACKPACKS AND MESSENGER BAGS
TOTE BAGS
LAUNDRY BAGS
… The 4 Best Laundry Bags For College Students
WATCHES
… The 4 Best Watches for Nursing Students & Nurses
WATER BOTTLES
… The 4 Best Water Bottles For College Students
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The rankings are based on five general categories: post graduate success (32.5%), which evaluates alumni pay and prominence, student satisfaction (27.5%), which includes professor evaluations and freshman to sophomore year retention rates, debt (17.5%), which penalizes schools for high student debt loads and default rates, four-year graduation rate (11.25%) and competitive awards (11.25%)
ABOUT Caroline Howard: “My stories highlight and explore the major stories of the day through the lens of education, power and innovation.”
See CCAP's full methodology here.
Student Satisfaction (25%)
Post-Graduate Success (35%)
Student Debt (17.5%)
Graduation Rate (11.25%) … considering both the actual graduation rate (8.75%) and the actual vs. predicted rate (2.5%).
Nationally Competitive Awards (11.25%)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Over the next seven years, Richard C. Vos, the admission dean at Claremont McKenna College, provided falsified data--the numbers behind our ranking of Claremont McKenna in America's Top Colleges--to the Education Department and others, artificially increasing SAT and ACT scores and lowering the admission rate, providing the illusion, if not the reality, that better students were coming to Claremont McKenna. He got away with it thanks to a disturbing lack of oversight; he was trusted to hand-calculate the data and submit it without review. What had made this longtime employee break bad? "He felt the same pressure to deliver as any executive does," Claremont McKenna spokesman Max Benavidez says. (Vos, who resigned in January 2012, couldn't be reached for comment.)
Claremont McKenna isn't the only top college that lied. Bucknell University doctored SAT results from 2006 to 2012; Emory University provided numbers for admitted students rather than enrolled ones for more than a decade; and Iona College lied about acceptance and graduation rates, SAT scores and alumni giving for nine years starting in 2002. All have since fessed up and claim to have instituted better practices. As a penalty for their dishonesty--and an acknowledgment of the growing scope of the problem--we are removing the four institutions from our list of the country's best schools for two years.
Have suggestions for next year’s list? Leave your ideas in the comments and help us curate Top Colleges 2015.
America's Best Colleges 2014 - Methodology – Forbes - August 12, 2014
The complete methodology is available below.
Student Satisfaction (25%)
Post-Graduate Success (32.5%)
Student Debt (25%)
Graduation Rate (7.5%)
Academic Success (10%)
Some readers may disagree with the way we construct our rankings or the weights we apply to the data. Or they may want us to consider other variables, such as state-of-the-art labs or collaborations with local businesses or government. Let us know if we missed an important component below in comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------America's Top Colleges Ranking 2015 - Methodology - Caroline Howard, Forbes – July 29, 2015Student Satisfaction (25%)
In a significant change from past years, we are including social media into our metrics. During the months leading up to the rankings' release we ran a targeted student satisfaction survey on Facebook. Respondents were asked where they attended school and how satisfied they were with their experience on a scale from 1 to 5. FORBES is the first -- and only -- ranking to make use of dynamic social media in rankings.
Post-Graduate Success (32.5%)
Student Debt (25%)
Graduation Rate (7.5%)
Academic Success (10%)
Some readers may disagree with the way we construct our rankings or the weights we apply to the data. Or they may want us to consider other variables, such as state-of-the-art labs or collaborations with local businesses or government. Let us know if we missed an important component below in comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Post-Graduate Success (32.5%)
Student Debt (25%)
Student Satisfaction (25%)
Graduation Rate (7.5%)
Academic Success (10%)
Some readers may disagree with the way we construct our rankings or the weights we apply to the data. Or they may want us to consider other variables, such as state-of-the-art labs or collaborations with local businesses or government. Let us know if we missed an important component below in comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Post-Graduate Success (35%)
Student Debt (20%)
Student Experience (20%) - College is not merely a means to an end; the ideal college experience pairs long-term value with a 4+ year opportunity to establish lifelong relationships and to grow intellectually. To reward schools that create worthwhile experiences for students as well as graduates, we dedicated a fifth of our score to the student experience. Most this score (15%) went to freshman-to-sophomore retention rate, as recorded by the Department of Education. The thinking here is simple: if life at a school is good, students will stay.
For the remaining 5%, we partnered with comprehensive ranking site Niche (formerly known as College Prowler) to give value more specifically to schools with stand-out community and academic life. Five percent was evenly divided between Niche’s “2017 Colleges with the Best Professors,” and “2017 Colleges with the Best Student Life.” Niche’s data sources include a survey administered to roughly 93,000 current students and recent alumni reviewing over 1,300 colleges.
Graduation Rate (12.5%)
Academic Success (12.5%)
SEE FULL LIST OF TOP COLLEGES 2018
RANK • NAME • STATE • [NICHE’S] NET PRICE • TYPE • AVERAGE STUDENT DEBT • AVERAGE EARLY CAREER SALARY
Top Colleges 2018: The Methodology - Carter Coudriet, Forbes – August 21, 2018Alumni Salary (20%)
Student Debt (20%)
Student Experience (20%)
We assume that students who believe their college experience is worthwhile will remain in school. Therefore we drew most of our student experience score, 15% of our total score, from a school’s first-year-to-sophomore retention rate as recorded by IPEDS, averaging the rates for the most recent three years. We drew the remainder of our student experience score, 5% of our total, from Niche, which administers surveys to more than 90,000 students and alumni. We used their survey data that measured both professor quality and student life. Both use a GPA scale: An A for professor satisfaction would give a school a 4.00 grade, a B a 3.00, and so on.
American Leaders List (15%)
Graduation Rate (12.5%)
Academic Success (12.5%)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------THE LIST: AMERICA’S TOP COLLEGES 2019
RANK • NAME • STATE • [NICHE’S] NET PRICE • TYPE • AVERAGE STUDENT DEBT • AVERAGE EARLY CAREER SALARY
1 • Harvard University • Massachusetts • $14,327 • Private not-for-profit • $7,372 • $74,800
2 • Stanford University • California • $13,261 • Private not-for-profit •$8,155 • $79,000
3 • Yale University • Connecticut • $18,627 • Private not-for-profit • $4,962 • $70,300
15 • Georgetown University • District Of Columbia • $30,107 • Private not-for-profit • $6,358 • $66,400
24 • United States Naval Academy • Maryland • $0 • Public • $0 • $80,100
32 • United States Military Academy • New York • $0 • Public • $0 • $80,200
43 • United States Air Force Academy • Colorado • $0 • Public • $0 • $76,300
53 • United States Coast Guard Academy • Connecticut • $0 • Public • $0 • $67,300
66 • United States Merchant Marine Academy • New York • $6,758 • Public • $5,414 • $80,600
72 • Villanova University • Pennsylvania • $41,858 • Private not-for-profit • $8,420 • $65,100
Top Colleges 2019: The Methodology - Carter Coudriet, Forbes – August 15, 2019
The rankings are based on six general categories: Alumni Salary (20%), a combination of early and midcareer salaries as reported by the federal College Scorecard and PayScale data and research; Student Satisfaction (20%), which includes results from Niche surveys on professor quality and data, and freshman retention rates from the federal IPEDS website; Debt (20%), which rewards schools for low student debt loads and default rates; American Leaders (15%), which is based on our Forbes database of successful people, including billionaires, powerful women, 30 Under 30 honorees, leaders in public service and in private enterprise, and more; On-Time Graduation Rate (12.5%), which accounts for both four- and six-year rates; and Academic Success (12.5%), which rewards schools whose alumni win prestigious scholarships and fellowships like the Rhodes and the Fulbright or have earned Ph.Ds.)
In Posts #1 and #6 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
22. Ranking the College Ranking Services
1. Niche (and it’s not even close)
2. The Princeton Review
3. Forbes
4. U.S. News
Several colleges in recent years have been caught gaming the system — in particular, the avidly watched U.S. News & World Report rankings — by twisting the meanings of rules, cherry-picking data or just lying.
In one recent example, Iona College in New Rochelle, north of New York City, acknowledged last fall that its employees had lied for years not only about test scores, but also about graduation rates, freshman retention, student-faculty ratio, acceptance rates, and alumni giving. Other institutions have found ways to manipulate the data without outright dishonesty.
In 2008, Baylor University offered financial rewards to admitted students to retake the SAT in hopes of increasing its average score. Admissions directors say that some colleges delay admission of low-scoring students until January, excluding them from averages for the class admitted in September, while other colleges seek more applications to report a lower percentage of students accepted.
Last year, the law schools of Villanova University and the University of Illinois acknowledged that they had misreported some statistics; Villanova conceded that its deception was intentional, while Illinois did not say. In 2009, a number of institutions were found to be inflating their percentages of full-time professors — another criterion used in ranking systems.
Repeated revelations of manipulation show the importance of the rankings in the minds of prospective students, their guidance counselors, parents, the alumni considering donations, the professors weighing job offers — and, of course, the colleges themselves.
“The reliance on this is out of hand,” said Jon Boeckenstedt, the associate vice president who oversees admissions at DePaul University in Chicago. “It’s a nebulous thing, comparing the value of a college education at one institution to another, so parents and students and counselors focus on things that give them the illusion of precision.”
The mixed feelings in the academic world were summed up in a report last year by the National Association for College Admission Counseling: Most college admissions officers and high school counselors have a low opinion of the U.S. News rankings.
On March 22, 2020 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
2020 RANKINGS - THE BEST 164 CATHOLIC COLLEGES IN AMERICA - Niche Best Catholic Colleges
2. Georgetown University (National Ranking: #24 of 1,626) ==> No change.
4. Villanova University (National Ranking: #81 of 1,626) ==> Up 2 places.
10. University of Dayton (National Ranking: #150 of 1,626) ==> Down 1 place.
12. Creighton University (National Ranking: #180 of 1,626) ==> No change.
17. Marquette University (National Ranking: #206 of 1,626) ==> Down 9 places.
21. Providence College (National Ranking: #235 of 1,626) ==> Down 11 places.
22. DePaul University (National Ranking: #238 of 1,626) ==> Down 5 places.
28. Seton Hall University (National Ranking: #280 of 1,626) ==> Up 12 places.
45. Xavier University (National Ranking: #392 of 1,626) ==> Down 16 places.
77. St. John's University (National Ranking: #639 of 1,626) ==> Down 28 places.
How Much Is Your College-Basketball Team Worth? - Andrew Beaton, The Wall Street Journal - April 8, 2019
RANK SCHOOL ... VALUATION ... 1-YR VALUE CHANGE
18. University of Dayton .... $100,010,000 ... 18.40%
26. Marquette University ..... $72,400,000 .... 4.50%
28. Villanova University ....... $71,080,000 ... 64.90%
38. Xavier University .......... $61,870,000 ..... 3.30%
50. Georgetown University ... $50,270,000 ... -13.90%
On March 23, 2020 Xudash wrote:
Fieldhouse Flyer’s post was ridiculous. Overstating a program's value and institution's position. Fieldhouse Flyer’s idiocy and reliance on bad data to defend his weak position is more entertaining than annoying.
On March 23, 2020 sju88grad wrote:
Stop with the postings about the academic reputations of the schools......you can find dozens and dozens of ranking services that can fit whatever narrative you are trying to promote.....
On Monday March 23, 2020 Hoopfan wrote:
Anyone who tries to defend X as a better academic institution than Dayton loses credibility right away.
On March 24, 2020 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
1996 • On September 23rd, Stanford President Gerhard Casper sent a letter to James Fallows, editor of U.S. News & World Report, stating: "As the president of a university that is among the top-ranked universities, I hope I have the standing to persuade you that much about these rankings - particularly their specious formulas and spurious precision - is utterly misleading."
1998 • Stanford posted an alternative database on its website stating: "This page is offered in contrast to commercial guides that purport to "rank" colleges; such rankings are inherently misleading and inaccurate. Stanford believes the following information, presented without arbitrary formulas, provides a better foundation for prospective students and their families to begin comparing and contrasting schools." It has since been posted annually as the "Stanford University Common Data Set."
Total all undergraduates: 3,915
Total all graduate and professional students: 2,711
Grand Total All Students: 6,626
ACT Composite:
30-36: 18%
24-29: 53%
18-23: 28%
Total all undergraduates: 4,997
Total all graduate and professional students: 2,135
Grand Total All Students: 7,132
ACT Composite:
30-36: 16%
24-29: 47%
18-23: 35%
Total all undergraduates: 5,047
Total all graduate and professional students: 1,946
Grand Total All Students: 6,993
ACT Composite:
30-36: 16%
24-29: 48%
18-23: 34%
Total all undergraduates: 8,483
Total all graduate and professional students: 2,990
Grand Total All Students: 11,473
ACT Composite:
30-36: 21%
24-29: 50%
18-23: 28%
A smaller student body means a smaller pool of tuition money to collect as well. Universities, like St. Joseph and La Salle derive 80 percent of their revenue from student tuition and fees. As a result, these schools must have a constant supply of applicants and enrollment. When enrollments are down, the schools face a shortfall in their budgets and must make tough decisions. That's what some Catholic schools are experiencing, right now.
Big Catholic schools like Villanova University remain unaffected by this trend due to their large size and their basketball team which will bring in more applicants due to their recent NCAA wins.
La Salle University officials have decided a change in strategy was necessary after years of declining enrollment, leading to a 28.7% reduction in tuition at the start of this school year, said Janie Lucas, chief marketing and communications officer. The reduction in cost - to $28,800 from $40,400 - reduces tuition to 2008 levels, before fees and room and board, Lucas said. La Salle, located in Philadelphia, is a private, Catholic liberal arts university.
Long-term viability: Tuition resets are not a viable strategy for financially distressed universities, said John Lawlor, principal and founder at The Lawlor Group, a higher education marketing firm. Schools operating from a position of strength are the ones who see success with a tuition reset strategy, he said.
Very few schools have seen success from resetting tuition, said Craig Goebel, principal at Art & Science Group, LLC, a strategic group for public and private colleges and universities.
The nation's more than 260 Catholic colleges and universities collectively serve some 875,000 students. The average enrollment for a Catholic school during the 2015-16 academic year was 3,756 students, with a median enrollment of 2,581, according to the Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities. From the high end of enrollments in the tens of thousands to much smaller student populations on smaller campuses, these schools have approached financial challenges in a variety of ways, and with varied success.
Some out-of-the-box thinking has generated public outcry, which suggests that some schools may be in danger of gaining the whole world while losing their own souls. Philadelphia's La Salle University recently decided to sell dozens of its most important artworks over alumni and faculty protests.
"Small institutions with limited endowments are facing tough times," say Melanie Morey (Director of the San Francisco Archdiocese's Office of Catholic Identity Assessment and Formation), co-author of the 2006 book Catholic Higher Education: A Culture in Crisis with Jesuit Fr. John Piderit.
Endowment • Institution • Founded • Type • Enrolment
$1.82 billion • Georgetown University • 1789 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 17,858
$0.767 billion • Villanova University • 1842 • Catholic (Augustinian) • 10,735
$0.749 billion • St. John's University • 1870 • Catholic (Vincentian) • 20,448
$0.698 billion • Marquette University • 1881 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 11,745
$0.697 billion • DePaul University • 1898 • Catholic (Vincentian) • 23,799
$0.604 billion • University of Dayton • 1850 • Catholic (Marianist) • 10,920
$0.587 billion • Creighton University • 1878 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 8,236
$0.462 billion • Univ. of Connecticut • 1881 • Public • 32,257
$0.265 billion • Seton Hall University • 1856 • Catholic (Diocesan) • 9,627
$0.234 billion • Providence College • 1917 • Catholic (Dominican) • 4,533
$0.214 billion • Butler University • 1855 • Private (Christian) • 4,848
$0.169 billion • Xavier University • 1831 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 6,538
* The endowment amounts shown above were copied from each school’s Wikipedia webpage in April 2020, and are higher than the endowment amounts shown on Wikipedia’s Big East Conference webpage, which have not been updated recently. The enrolments have not been updated, and are still as shown on Wikipedia’s Big East Conference webpage.
On September 7, 2017 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
Do Dayton and Xavier still compete for high school students as 'customers' ?
Yes. And that’s still a major reason for the very strong animosity toward the University of Dayton by many of Xavier’s students and alumni. Many of them were refused admission to UD before they decided to attend Xavier, and that situation is very likely to continue indefinitely.
CINCINNATI --- Xavier University President Michael J. Graham, S.J., announced today that Xavier is joining a 10-team conference with fellow private schools Butler, Creighton, DePaul, Georgetown, Marquette, Providence, St. John's, Seton Hall, and Villanova.
Fitch Ratings has upgraded to 'A' from 'A-' the rating on approximately $113 million of Ohio Higher Educational Facility Commission revenue bonds issued on behalf of Xavier University and removed the university from ‘Under Criteria Observation.’ In addition, Fitch has assigned an Issuer Default Rating (IDR) of 'A' to the university. The Rating Outlook is Stable.
The 'bbb' revenue defensibility assessment reflects improving student quality and rising undergraduate enrollment constrained by a very competitive underlying market. Applications have risen over 38% since fall 2015, which has countered a weakening of Xavier's matriculation rate.
The university's dependence on tuition revenues makes it susceptible to enrollment pressures.
Rank. School • Overall Niche Grade • Acceptance Rate • Net Price • SAT Range
385. Saint Mary’s College Indiana • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 82% • Net Price: $25,610 • SAT Range: 1050-1260 (#44 Catholic College)
386. Transylvania College (KY) • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 89% • Net Price: $26,125 • SAT Range: 1100-1310
387. Salisbury University (MD) • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 62% • Net Price: $18,163 • SAT Range: 1080-1230
388. University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 78% • Net Price: $13,940 • SAT Range: Undisclosed
389. Ursinus College (PA) • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 71% • Net Price: $31,351 • SAT Range: 1140-1320
390. Illinois State University • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 89% • Net Price: $19,489 • SAT Range: 1010-1190
391. University of Michigan - Dearborn • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 78% • Net Price: $10,533 • SAT Range: 1070-1290
392. Xavier University • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 74% • Net Price: $30,190 • SAT Range: 1060-1240 (#45 Catholic College)
393. Dordt College (IA) • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 73% • Net Price: $26,273 • SAT Range: 1060-1360
394. William Jessup University (CA) • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 59% • Net Price: $23,637 • SAT Range: 960-1170
395. Towson University (MD) • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 79% • Net Price: $16,148 • SAT Range: 1060-1200
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Rank. School • Overall Niche Grade • Acceptance Rate • Net Price* • SAT Range
190. Butler University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 65% • Net Price: $38,051 • SAT Range: 1150-1320
235. Providence College • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 52% • Net Price: $36,099 • SAT Range: 1160-1330 (#21 Catholic College)
81. Villanova University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 36% • Net Price: $35,491 • SAT Range: 1250-1440 (#4 Catholic College)
150. University of Dayton • Overall Niche Grade: A • Acceptance Rate: 72% • Net Price: $35,077 • SAT Range: 1100-1310 (#10 Catholic College)
238. DePaul University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 72% • Net Price: $32,927 • SAT Range: 1050-1260 (#22 Catholic College)
206. Marquette University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 89% • Net Price: $32,377 • SAT Range: 1130-1310 (#17 Catholic College)
180. Creighton University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 72% • Net Price: $31,481 • SAT Range: 1070-1290 (#12 Catholic College)
392. Xavier University • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 74% • Net Price: $30,190 • SAT Range: 1060-1240 (#45 Catholic College)
280. Seton Hall University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 73% • Net Price: $28,700 • SAT Range: 1140-1280 (#28 Catholic College)
24. Georgetown University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 16% • Net Price: $27,420 • SAT Range: 1350-1520 (#2 Catholic College)
639. St. John's University • Overall Niche Grade: B • Acceptance Rate: 68% • Net Price: $25,981 • SAT Range: 1060-1250 (#77 Catholic College)
163. University of Connecticut • Overall Niche Grade: A • Acceptance Rate: 48% • Net Price: $18,699 • SAT Range: 1210-1390
Xavier is a Catholic Liberal Arts University in Cincinnati, Ohio.
HIRAM, Ohio — Small, private liberal arts colleges — a staple of American academia since before the founding of the republic — are colliding with new realities including changing demographics, ever-increasing demand for technical skills and competition with bigger and richer schools. The result, in many cases, is not pretty.
Moody’s Investor Services estimates 1 in 5 small private colleges faces “fundamental stress” due to declining revenues, rising expenses and little pricing power when it comes to tuition. Analysts project 15 of the colleges will have closed in 2019 — the largest number in recent memory, and three times the rate just 10 years ago. And the trend shows no sign of letting up.
The closures are concentrated in the Northeast and Midwest, Fitzgerald said, where the demographic pressures — including an aging population — are the highest. “It is no secret that weighty financial challenges are pressing on liberal arts colleges throughout the country.” There is a new emphasis on technology
Engineering that Matters: The University of Dayton is a national top-tier research Catholic, Marianist University.
$166 Million in sponsored engineering research & development.
No. 1 for federally sponsored materials engineering research in the nation.
No. 1 Catholic university in the nation for sponsored engineering research.
On March 22, 2020 Xudash wrote:
Finally, think what you will about Xavier‘s ability to block UD’s entrance, but you may want to come around to the reality that it firmly exists. And it is more than just about basketball as far as Xavier is concerned. The conference does not need another team in Ohio.
This fall, there were nearly 250,000 fewer students enrolled in college than a year ago, according to new numbers out Monday from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, which tracks college enrollment by student. "That's a lot of students that we're losing," says Doug Shapiro, who leads the research center at the Clearinghouse.
And this year isn't the first time this has happened. Over the past eight years, college enrollment nationwide has fallen about 11%. Every sector — public state schools, community colleges, for-profits and private liberal arts schools — has felt the decline, though it has been especially painful for small private colleges, where, in some cases, institutions have been forced to close.
Student enrollment confirmations are currently down 20% at Miami
Sara Kilpatrick, the executive director of the Ohio Conference AAUP said "I think that all colleges and universities are going to be facing some difficult financial realities, especially in the wake of COVID-19," but "we have to remember this is about educating students."
Miami had about $375 million more in unrestricted funds than Ohio University as of June 2019, according to state audit records, a discrepancy that Wagner emphasized as she discussed Ohio University's planned pause in cuts. "It's remarkable that Miami, in a robust and strong situation ... was not able to do something like that," she said. "If there was ever a time to dip into (Miami's $349 million) rainy-day fund, I would think it would be now." Johnson, the Miami spokesperson, wrote the university has "the highest financial score among Ohio's public universities based on the Ohio Department of Higher Education financial ratios."
Xavier University’s enrolment declined in 2019.
Rank. School • Overall Niche Grade • Acceptance Rate • Net Price* • SAT Range
94. Ohio State University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 52% • Net Price: $18,694 • SAT Range: 1240-1450 • Enrolment: 68,262
150. University of Dayton • Overall Niche Grade: A • Acceptance Rate: 72% • Net Price: $35,077 • SAT Range: 1100-1310 • Enrolment: 11,473
160. University of Cincinnati • Overall Niche Grade: A • Acceptance Rate: 76% • Net Price: $21,050 • SAT Range: 1120-1340 • Enrolment: 46,388
170. Miami University (OH) • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 68% • Net Price: $20,316 • SAT Range: 1190-1380 • Enrolment: 24,377
264. Ohio University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 78% • Net Price: $22,072 • SAT Range: 1070-1270 • Enrolment: 33,044
392. Xavier University • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 74% • Net Price: $30,190 • SAT Range: 1060-1240 • Enrolment: 6,993
Rank. School • Overall Niche Grade • Acceptance Rate • Net Price* • SAT Range
150. University of Dayton • Overall Niche Grade: A • Acceptance Rate: 72% • Net Price: $35,077 • SAT Range: 1100-1310 (#10 Catholic College)
392. Xavier University • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 74% • Net Price: $30,190 • SAT Range: 1060-1240 (#45 Catholic College)
264. Ohio University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 78% • Net Price: $22,072 • SAT Range: 1070-1270
160. University of Cincinnati • Overall Niche Grade: A • Acceptance Rate: 76% • Net Price: $21,050 • SAT Range: 1120-1340
170. Miami University (OH) • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 68% • Net Price: $20,316 • SAT Range: 1190-1380
94. Ohio State University • Overall Niche Grade: A+ • Acceptance Rate: 52% • Net Price: $18,694 • SAT Range: 1240-1450
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Endowment • Institution • Founded • Type • Enrolment
$0.604 billion • University of Dayton • 1850 • Catholic (Marianist) • 11,473
$0.169 billion • Xavier University • 1831 • Catholic (Jesuit) • 6,993
Total all undergraduates: 3,915
Total all graduate and professional students: 2,711
Grand Total All Students: 6,626
Total all undergraduates: 4,997 ==> Up 1,082 from 2003-2004
Total all graduate and professional students: 2,135 ==> Down 576 from 2003-2004
Grand Total All Students: 7,132 ==> Up 506 from 2003-2004
Total all undergraduates: 5,047 ==> Up 50 from 2018-2019
Total all graduate and professional students: 1,946 ==> Down 189 from 2018-2019
Grand Total All Students: 6,993 ==> Down 139 from 2018-2019
Total all undergraduates: 8,617
Total all graduate and professional students: 2,624
Grand Total All Students: 11,241
Total all undergraduates: 8,483 ==> Down 134 from 2018-2019
Total all graduate and professional students: 2,990 ==> Up 366 from 2018-2019
Grand Total All Students: 11,473 ==> Up 232 from 2018-2019
College presidents are prepping for revenue drops, according to data collected by ABC Insights, a higher education-focused research firm. Nearly three-quarters (72.1%) of college presidents responding to a survey conducted between March 27 and April 1 said they are considering laying off staff as part of a plan to deal with the coronavirus pandemic. However, 75.2% also suggested they’re considering “hunkering down” in response to the spread of COVID-19.
ABC Insights conducted the survey alongside the Association of American Colleges and Universities (AACU). Some 285 college presidents were invited to participate, and of those, 142 completed the survey. The majority of respondents were presidents of private, four-year institutions, followed by public four-year schools, and then public two-year community colleges.
With admissions already in decline, Brian Rosenberg wonders whether the end may finally be nigh for many colleges
Suggestions that the coronavirus crisis could be the final nail in the coffin for many struggling US liberal arts colleges are a variation on a familiar theme. Even in January, before the coronavirus became big news, it was reported that applications to US private colleges. In my state, Minnesota, they are down by about 5 per cent. That may not seem like much, until you remember that most of these institutions are highly tuition-dependent and have almost no margin for error.
It is hard to know, of course, if this is the beginning of a long-term trend or even the early stage of a sudden collapse. But it is certainly more than a blip. Many small private colleges have been under increased enrolment pressure for years.
No one really knows who coined the phrase “demography is destiny”, but, if not wholly true, it points us in an important direction. Economist Nathan Grawe has studied the impact of the decline in US fertility rates and anticipates a sharp decrease in the number of 18-year-olds in [color]2026[/color] – particularly in parts of the country where many private colleges are concentrated.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The pandemic has already cost universities millions of dollars. As they consider the possibility of remote classes into the fall, they’re worried about losing students, too.[/b]
Already, colleges have seen their endowments weakened, and worry that fund-raising efforts will founder even as many families need more financial aid. They also expect to lose international students, especially from Asia, because of travel restrictions and concerns about studying abroad. Foreign students, usually paying full tuition, represent a significant revenue source everywhere, from the Ivy League to community colleges. Some institutions are projecting $100 million losses for the spring, and many are now bracing for an even bigger financial hit in the fall, when some are planning for the possibility of having to continue remote classes.
Administrators anticipate that students grappling with the financial and psychological impacts of the virus could choose to stay closer to home, go to less expensive schools, take a year off or not go to college at all. A higher education trade group has predicted a 15 percent drop in enrollment nationwide, amounting to a $23 billion revenue loss.
In mid-March, Moody’s Investors Service downgraded the outlook for higher education from stable to negative, predicting that institutions with strong endowments and cash flow, like Harvard or Stanford, would weather the virus, while smaller ones would not. At places like the University of Chicago and Iowa State, students are petitioning their schools to cut tuition by as much as 50 percent for as long as the pandemic lasts.
Orientation day, said Richard Ekman, president of the Council of Independent Colleges, “is probably the first time you’re going to know who’s really going to show up.
Xavier University will no longer require applicants to submit an SAT or ACT score.
The private Jesuit Catholic university will join a "national movement" of institutions choosing to limit consideration of the tests, officials said in a news release Tuesday. Doug Ruschman, a Xavier spokesman, pointed to the pressure on high school students, who "have a lot going on, and the SAT and ACT can be very stressful."
But a spokesman for ACT, the nonprofit that provides the assessment, pointed to the universality of the test, allowing for institutions to better compare students from different schools. Spokeman Ed Colby said other academic markers, such as grades, can be more subjective.
392. Xavier University • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 74% • Net Price: $30,190
392. Xavier University • Overall Niche Grade: B+ • Acceptance Rate: 74% • Net Price: $31,240
CINCINNATI — The longest-serving president of Xavier University in Ohio announced his retirement Monday. Rev. Michael J. Graham told university faculty, staff and students he was stepping down next year during Spring Convocation. Graham, 66, became the president of the Jesuit university in 2001, when about 6,600 students were enrolled at Xavier. Last year, the school had an estimated 7,000 students enrolled.
Schools are increasingly banking on the considerable revenues from graduate programs to subsidize their undergraduate divisions.
Cash-strapped private universities and colleges are relying on the money they take in from their graduate programs to stabilize increasingly wobbly budgets. It’s an effective solution to a big problem. But it also means that higher education’s money problems are being balanced on the backs of graduate students who face escalating debt.
Graduate education is a growth industry. As employers increasingly require master’s degrees, the number conferred per year has more than tripled from nearly 236,000 in 1970 to about 759,000 in 2015, the last period for which the figures are available from the U.S. Department of Education
With increasing demand come higher prices. Average graduate and professional school annual tuition at all universities and colleges has also more than doubled from $6,603 to $14,398 between 1988 and 2010, when adjusted for inflation, according to the Department of Education. At private institutions, it’s grown from $12,301 to $20,172.
Graduate Schools are an irresistible source of revenue for colleges and universities, said Andrew Policano, a professor of economics and public policy and former dean at the Paul Merage School of Business, University of California, Irvine. The big growth in loans has been in graduate schools. Fewer than 40 percent of master’s degree candidates get institutional financial aid — less than half the proportion of undergraduates who do.
The survival strategy is raising prices and increasing debt for graduate students
As the number of undergraduates steadily declines in seeming direct proportion to rising costs, debt and the many other obstacles faced by college students, graduate enrollment is quietly on the upswing. It’s being driven by the better job prospects and higher salaries people think it will bring them — and by a conscious strategy among universities like this one to add graduate programs that produce much-needed revenue. “Nowadays everyone’s going to graduate school.That’s what they tell you to do.”
That’s in part because the Net Price, or the amount students actually pay after discounts and financial aid, has increased nearly twice as fast for graduate as for undergraduate programs in the 10 years ending in 2016. “Graduate school is way more expensive than undergrad,” Rivero said.
Yet the number of graduate students continues to grow, up 38 percent since 2000, much faster than the increase in the number of undergraduates during that time, according to the U.S. Department of Education. Undergraduate enrollment has, in fact, dropped by 7 percent since 2010 — for reasons that include not only cost and aversion to debt, but also a decline in the number of 18- to 24-year-olds and an improving job market — while the number of graduate students keeps on rising.
“Graduate education is being used to subsidize undergraduate education. Graduate students feel like they’re just a cog in the machine.”
”Small, faith-based liberal arts institutions have to do this to survive”, said David Armstrong, who took over in August as president of a Catholic university. Several small liberal-arts colleges have already closed, plan to close at the end of this year or are publicly looking for merger partners.
The Net Price, or the amount students actually pay after discounts and financial aid, has increased nearly twice as fast for graduate as for undergraduate programs.
Colleges and universities that fail to adapt risk joining the average of 11 per year that the bond-rating firm Moody’s says have shut down in the last three years.
Thanks, among other reasons, to a decline in the number of 18-year-olds and low unemployment luring potential students straight into the work force, college enrollment is down by more than 2.9 million since the last peak, in the fall of 2011, according to the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center. More than 400 colleges and universities still had seats available for freshmen and transfer students after the traditional May 1 deadline to enroll for this fall, the National Association for College Admission Counseling reports.
More are likely to go under; Moody’s projects that the pace of college closings will soon reach 15 per year. “‘Midsize university’ is a sweet spot,” said Mr. Thorsett.
Colleges and universities are also pushing more students into graduate school, since this is typically a revenue producer for them, and graduate enrollment is a bright spot; it has kept rising, even as undergraduate enrollment is falling.
Fall 2018 • Undergraduate Students: 4,997 • Graduate Students: 2,135 • Total Students: 7,132
Fall 2019 • Undergraduate Students: 5,047 • Graduate Students: 1,946 • Total Students: 6,993
This article contains numerous graphs and charts illustrating the information presented within.
The decline in births that began in the U.S. in 2008 has already been long and deep enough that it’s going to shape the country’s future in a big way.
This drop is not nearly as sharp or as deep (yet) as the one that followed the baby boom of the late 1940s to early 1960s. But it will change things, and the changes will become apparent first at educational institutions. The number of public-school kindergartners in the U.S. began falling in 2014, and that decline will continue to work its way through the K-12 system in the coming years. By the second half of the 2020s, colleges and universities should start feeling it.
Nathan D. Grawe, an economics professor at Carleton College in Minnesota, said: “The late 2020s look to be a very poor time to be seeking a teaching post in higher education,” he warns in his book “Demographics and the Demand for Higher Education.” He also suggests that pressure to get rid of faculty tenure protections will intensify in the 2020s.
The overall college enrollment rate, which has actually slipped a little over the past decade, is not forecast to rise in the 2020s. This seems like a moment when leaders of regional four-year schools should be exploring all possible ways to make their offerings more relevant and affordable for those on the fence between attending college or not.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Leaders in higher education, as well as teachers, students and families, are responding, adapting to the abrupt and deep changes necessitated by COVID-19. Few are planning too far ahead.
Admissions offices and prospective freshmen don’t have that luxury. For them, planning for the fall began long ago and would normally be approaching its zenith right now. That’s more or less on hold as schools cannot plan courses, programs, tuition and fee rates – much of anything – with so much uncertainty. Nonetheless, we’re all looking ahead to fall 2020 as perhaps the earliest moment when higher education could begin to look as it did – maybe. Even if it does, it won’t be the same.
According to a recent survey by the college review and ranking service Niche, just 17% of college students are “considering transferring or taking at least one semester off based upon how their school responded” to the current crisis.
Competition for students will increase even more. The likely cascade of expanded admissions Katzman described will almost certainly make schools more competitive for students. The cost of competition and recruiting was already out of control, driving up actual college costs for students and taxpayers alike. But it’s going to get worse. “College recruitment will become more aggressive as colleges compete for students - and even more so with the reducing demographic pool of 18-year-olds,” said Diego Fanara, CEO of Unibuddy.
All education is local again. “I don’t think the students care as much as parents care,” Katzman of Noodle Partners said, “but students are going to go closer to home.
Colleges will have classes and programs this fall, their classes will have freshmen and returning students. That won’t change. What will be different is that those classes are likely to be far less geographically diverse, colleges will pay more for the students they get, and some smaller, less prestigious schools will be squeezed.
On March 22, 2020 Xudash wrote:
The conference does not need another team in Ohio.
On March 23, 2020 Xudash wrote:
Fieldhouse Flyer’s idiocy and reliance on bad data to defend his weak position is more entertaining than annoying.
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