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August 28, 2012

A different Kind of College Ranking

Washington Monthly:

Our ranking of liberal arts colleges also reveals institutions that stand out in unconventional ways. Bryn Mawr is ranked first this year, continuing a long tradition of women's colleges serving their country. Berea College in Kentucky is ranked third, far above its U.S. News position, because it enrolls a predominantly low-income student population and charges no tuition. Most colleges with 90 percent of students eligible for Pell Grants struggle to graduate even half of their students; at Berea nearly two-thirds finish in a reasonable amount of time. Tougaloo College, a small, private, historically black institution in Mississippi, has struggled financially in recent years. But it continues to enroll large numbers of low-income students, graduate more of them than expected, and keep prices low. Tougaloo also ranks above better-known colleges in research, helping to put the college in the top twenty on our rankings. The Johnnies of St. John's College in Maryland (number nineteen) remain proudly independent, sticking to a "Great Books" curriculum even as many colleges eschew any curriculum at all. It's not for everyone, which is probably why the college's 73 percent graduation rate, while respectable, is still slightly below par. But those who remain go on to earn PhDs at a rate far beyond their numbers, and the college's success in sending graduates into the Peace Corps is just as impressive. St. John's also has a campus in New Mexico, which, for very similar reasons, ranks second on our list of master's universities.

Everyday Excellence

Research universities and liberal arts colleges that draw students from across the nation get the lion's share of attention from the media. But huge numbers of students attend regional, master's-granting universities and colleges that focus on job-related fields along with the liberal arts. The best of them give far more to their country than do their more prominent peers. Elizabeth City State University, a public, historically black institution in North Carolina, tops our ranking of baccalaureate institutions. Tuskegee University, another historically black college, comes in at number three. Both enroll large numbers of low-income students and graduate more of them than statistics predict. Elizabeth City is extremely affordable, with one of the lowest reported net prices in the nation. Tuskegee maintains a strong pipeline into the ROTC program, and tops all but a handful of peers in research. Converse College, an economically diverse all-female liberal arts college in South Carolina, is our third-ranked master's institution, by virtue of its strong commitment to service and record of graduating women who go on to earn PhDs.

Posted by Jim Zellmer at August 28, 2012 3:17 AM
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