Monday, November 23, 2009

Nation

The Birth of the College Rankings

How "Best Colleges" became the top source for information on higher education

Posted May 16, 2008

When U.S. News started the college and university rankings 25 years ago, no one imagined that these lists would become what some consider to be the 800-pound gorilla of American higher education, important enough to be the subject of doctoral dissertations, academic papers and conferences, endless debate, and constant media coverage. What began with little fanfare has spawned imitation college rankings in at least 21 countries, including Canada, China, Britain, Germany, Poland, Russia, Spain, and Taiwan.

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Cover Gallery 1980s
The campus of (No. 2) Harvard University, as shot for the first U.S. News college rankings in 1983.
The campus of (No. 2) Harvard University, as shot for the first U.S. News college rankings in 1983.

Today, it's hard to imagine there ever was a void of information to help people make direct comparisons between colleges, but such was the case in 1983 when we first ventured into the field. The editors back then, led by Marvin L. Stone, thought the project was worth attempting because a college education is one of the most important—and most costly—investments that people ever make. (Of course, that perspective is even more relevant today when the price of an undergraduate education at some private universities hovers in the $200,000 range.) So the magazine designed a survey and sent it out to 1,308 college presidents to get their opinions of which schools offered the best education. The winners: Stanford (National Universities) and Amherst (National Liberal Arts Colleges).

That academic-reputation-only method was repeated in 1985 and 1987. In 1988, we started to use statistical data as part of the ranking methodology, evaluating those numbers along with the results of the survey. In 1997, in another pioneering step, the America's Best Colleges rankings made the leap online at usnews.com. The online version, viewed by millions, has substantially more information and extended rankings than there is room for in the magazine.

Of course, we've changed the ranking formula over the years to reflect changes in the world of higher education. In general, the biggest shift has been the move toward evaluating colleges less by the quality of the students they attract (inputs) and more by the success the school has in graduating those students (outputs). We operate under the guiding principle that the methodology should be altered only if the change will better help our readers compare schools as they're making decisions about where to apply and enroll.

Higher ed's response. It helps to have this principle to focus on when the inevitable criticisms of the rankings and their influence arise. Chief among the criticisms is the idea that it is impossible to reduce the experience that any given college has to offer to a number on a list. A fair enough observation, but one that does little to help the student who will have to choose just one to attend. Another criticism of the rankings is that they often substitute as a sort of performance evaluation measure for the school and its employees. U.S. News is keenly aware that the higher education community is also a major audience and consumer of our rankings. We understand how seriously academics, administrators, and governing boards study and analyze our rankings and how they use them in various ways, including benchmarking, alumni fundraising, and advertising to attract students.

Based on the success of the college rankings, we decided to expand the process to other levels of education. The America's Best Graduate Schools rankings debuted in 1990 with annual listings of medical, engineering, law, business, and education schools.

Our newest education ranking is America's Best High Schools, first published in the fall of 2007. It identified the 100 best public schools out of more than 18,000 across the nation. Just as when we embarked on college rankings, setting up the process wasn't easy, but it's already proved to have enormous weight with our readers.

Data Research Director Robert J. Morse has helmed the education rankings since 1987.

Reader Comments

Best High Schools

While I'm at it, may I also comment on your laudable effort to establish a list of the best public high schools in the country.

I bet I am not alone in wishing you would do another that listed [or included] the best private high schools in America. Among those would certainly be some of the fabled private high schools on the east coast, as well as a goodly number of Jesuit high schools (with all due respect to the Christian Brothers and the

Domenicans and the duly renowned place they hold in American intellectual life).

What may be the finest high school in the nation that no one hears about is the Jesuits' St. Louis University High School, with ACT scores so high that the ACT folks are almost ready to establish a trophy in its name. Routinely the school

has as many national merit honorees as large public school districts. The school does all this with a commitment to service and diversity that is the envy of those who work in secondary education. This year it celebrates its 190th birthday, having been founded in 1818. Needless to say, its atmosphere exudes tradition and a nearly two century long commitment to excellence.

One amazing anecdote: on my way back for my 50th reunion in 2003, having recently read Undaunted Courage, I started doing the math about Sacagewea's child. As I began to ask an elderly Jesuit the obvious question, he stopped me with a raised hand, and said "Yes, we did the research. Sacagewea's child did enter the school at age 14, and was a member of its first graduating class."

To this day I am not sure if having a fellow high school alum who was on the Lewis and Clark expedition makes one feel younger or older!

college rankings 1988 to 2008

Could you make available the Best Colleges rankings for the last twenty years?

Some colleges have nearly always been in the top ten, while one that I am interested in has I believe ranged from the low teens to the low thirties.

It would be very helpful to have this information published for at least the top 50 colleges, and the top 50 universities.

Some complain that your rankings always favor the same schools. Yet, as one example, Washington University of St. Louis has vaulted from the 20's to near or in the top ten, in a relatively short time. Such information tells me, at least, which

colleges or universities are more serious about raising their level of academic excellence.

It would be helpful if you could publish this at a locale on your site that is easily accessible by search engines -- and also as free information. After all, you don't have to charge for every fruit borne from the tree you planted [though given the price of gas it would be tempting to do so.

Wishing you continued success

Thank you for an informative article. I wish U.S. News much success in establishing its Best High Schools List as the most credible in the nation. Competition and accountability are driving forces which make this country great. When public schools promote themselves based on a ranking on a national list, I would rather refer to a list which bases its rankings on student outcomes instead of "seats filled". I think it is fairly common knowledge that property values are directly tied to public perception of school district quality and therefore, how Americans decide where to invest in a home can actually be influenced by where a school places on your list.

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