Monday, November 23, 2009

Best Graduate Schools

Education Program Rankings Methodology

How we rank graduate education programs

Posted April 16, 2009

Graduate programs at 278 schools granting doctoral degrees in education were surveyed in fall 2008 and early 2009. Of those schools, 241 responded; 238 provided the data needed to calculate rankings based on a weighted average of the 11 quality measures described here. All schools are listed in the online directory.

Quality assessment (weighted by .40)

Peer Assessment Score (.25) In the fall of 2008, education school deans and education school deans of graduate studies were asked to rate programs on a scale from "marginal" (1) to "outstanding" (5). Those individuals who did not know enough about a school to evaluate it fairly were asked to mark "don't know." A school's score is the average of all the respondents who rated it. Responses of "don't know" counted neither for nor against a school. About 47 percent of those surveyed responded.

Superintendent Assessment Score (.15) In the fall of 2008, school superintendents nationwide in a sampling of school districts were asked to rate programs on a scale from "marginal" (1) to "outstanding" (5). Those individuals who did not know enough about a school to evaluate it fairly were asked to mark "don't know." A school's score is the average of all the respondents who rated it. Responses of "don't know" counted neither for nor against a school. About 24 percent of those surveyed responded. For the purpose of calculating this year's rankings, the two most recent years' superintendents' survey results were averaged and are weighed by .15.

Student Selectivity (weighted by .18)

Mean GRE Verbal Scores (.06) The mean verbal score of the Graduate Record Examination for doctoral students entering in the 2008-2009 academic year. Where mean GRE verbal scores are not available for entering doctoral students, mean GRE verbal scores for all entering graduate students are substituted, if available.

Mean GRE Quantitative Scores (.06) The mean quantitative score of the Graduate Record Examination for doctoral students entering in the 2008-2009 academic year. Where mean GRE quantitative scores are not available for entering doctoral students, mean GRE quantitative scores for all entering graduate students are substituted, if available.

Acceptance Rate (.06) The proportion of applicants to the doctoral program who were offered admission for the 2008-2009 academic year.

Faculty Resources (weighted by .12)

Student-Faculty Ratio (.045) The 2008 ratio of all full-time equivalent doctoral students to full-time faculty.

Percent of Faculty With Awards (.025) The average percentage of the full-time tenured or tenure-track faculty that held awards or editorships among selected education journals in 2007 and 2008.

Doctoral Degrees Granted (.05) Ratio of the number of doctoral degrees awarded in the past school year 2007-2008 to the number of full-time faculty members in 2007-2008.

Research Activity (weighted by .30)

Total Research Expenditures (.15) The total education-school research expenditures averaged over fiscal years 2007 and 2008. Expenditures refer to separately funded research, public and private, conducted by the school.

Average Expenditures Per Faculty Member (.15) The average research expenditures per full-time tenured and tenure-track faculty member averaged over fiscal years 2007 and 2008. Expenditures refer to separately funded research, public and private, conducted by the school.

Overall Rank: Data were standardized about their means, and standardized scores were weighted, totaled, and rescaled so that the top school received 100; other schools received their percentage of the top score.

Specialty Rankings: Specialty ratings are based solely on nominations by education school deans and education school deans of graduate studies from the list of schools surveyed. They selected up to 10 top programs in each area. Those schools receiving the most votes in each specialty are listed.

Reader Comments

Getting on the Evaluation List?

I am on the faculty at San Francisco State University in the College of Education. How does our college get on a list to be considered for possible ranking?

I read through your criteria to rank colleges of education and the criteria seems to only relate to doctoral students. How do you factor in undergraduates and masters students?

useless

Cannot use this as a source for helping my recent grads choose a new school. Not helpful at all.

SUPER INTENDENTS?

The superindents of school districts opinions of Graduate programs carry 15% of the weight in these rankings? What the hell does that have to do with graduate schools? By US News' own admission less than 1/4 of them even responded. That's like asking 4th grade teachers to to rank the top undergraduate programs in Biology. Superintendents' opinions carry 15% but combined GRE scores carry 12%. Well done USSnooze. That's what happens when you monopolize a product. Garbage in....Garbage out. PLEASE Bring back Barrons.

Someone else please get in this one horse race!

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