Thursday, November 12, 2009

Education

Morse Code: Inside the College Rankings

The Grad School Ranking Surveys Are in the Mail

October 30, 2008 01:40 PM ET | Robert Morse | Permanent Link | Print

We've just started the data collection for the upcoming 2010 edition of America's Best Graduate Schools, which will be published in early spring 2009. The statistical survey data collection for business, law, engineering, medicine, and education programs began in late October on our password-secured website. The deadline to complete the statistical surveys is in mid-November 2008.

The grad school peer assessment surveys also have started going out. Our goal was to have all the first mailings sent out by October 28. The peer surveys have roughly eight weeks in the field, with a second survey mailing that will go to those who don't respond the first time. U.S. News works with a contractor, Synovate, to administer the peer survey mailings.

What's new this time? For the 2010 edition, we're doing new peer-assessment-only rankings for Ph.D. programs in English, history, psychology, sociology, political science, economics, and criminology and criminal justice. In addition, we're running new rankings for master's degree programs in library and information studies.

We'll continue to publish new rankings in the larger grad school disciplines. As in the past for the America's Best Graduate School rankings, U.S. News surveys both academics and professionals in business, education, engineering, law, and medicine who give us expert opinions about a program's quality.

For our law school rankings, we're continuing to conduct separate peer surveys in clinical training, dispute resolution, environmental law, healthcare law, intellectual property law, international law, legal writing, tax law, and trial advocacy. We also plan to publish our first-ever rankings of part-time J.D. law programs.

In engineering, we will once again have engineering specialty peer-assessment-only rankings in aerospace/aeronautical/astronautical engineering, biological and agricultural engineering, bioengineering/biomedical engineering, chemical engineering, civil engineering, computer engineering, electrical/electronic/communications engineering, environmental/environmental health engineering, industrial/manufacturing engineering, materials engineering, mechanical engineering, and nuclear engineering. These rankings are based solely on assessments by department heads in each specialty area. The names of department heads came from the American Society for Engineering Education.

Tags: graduate schools | surveys | rankings

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Reader Comments

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I got my MBA from Columbia Southern University with a 3.92 GPA.I'm planning to join one of the top 20 business schools to get my PHD in economics; but I don't know which one is best in economics in particular.But my problem is that I'm working in Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and PHD needs classes.Could u help me out?

Grad school (humanities and social sciences) rankings

On the main website under FAQs for America's Best Colleges, in response to the question "How can I find out a school's rank from last year (or an earlier year?," is the answer that one must consult the prior years' editions, and a list of the editions of America's Best Colleges per year-by-year publication date follows.

I have a similar question for the grad school rankings: How can one learn the rank of a university's graduate program in a social science or in the humanities from prior years?

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About this Blog

Robert Morse is director of data research for U.S. News & World Report and has worked at the magazine since 1976. He develops the methodologies and surveys for the America's Best Colleges and America's Best Graduate Schools annual rankings, keeping an eye on higher-education trends to make sure the rankings offer prospective students the best analysis available. Morse Code provides deeper insights into the methodologies and is a forum for commentary and analysis of college, grad and other rankings.

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