Monday, November 9, 2009

Education

Morse Code: Inside the College Rankings

Clemson and the College Rankings

June 04, 2009 02:17 PM ET | Robert Morse | Permanent Link | Print

Clemson University is facing both controversy and criticism after Catherine Watt, a director of a research center at Clemson, made a presentation this week at the annual forum of the Association for Institutional Research in Atlanta about the aggressive steps the university has taken to meet its goal of rising in the U.S. News America's Best Colleges rankings.

It's no secret that Clemson's goal is to become a top 20 public research university: There's a whole section of the school's website called "Why Top 20" that explains the rationale behind the goal and what the potential benefits would be for students and the university. (Currently, Clemson ranks 22nd in that "best publics" list, up from 38th in 2001.) Yesterday, Clemson responded to Watt's presentation with a prepared statement after both Inside Higher Ed and the Chronicle of Higher Education had articles on her presentation.

I was at the conference and attended Watt's presentation. The most controversial parts were some of the techniques she suggested that Clemson has been using to meet its goal and how open Watt was in discussing the university's strategy publicly. According to her presentation, Clemson took precise steps to improve in some U.S. News ranking variables: create more small classes of under 20 students and fewer large classes with 50 or more students, boost the SAT scores and high school class standing of incoming students, increase freshman retention and graduation rates, decrease the student-to-faculty ratio, improve faculty salaries, and more accurately report data. In addition, the presentation implied that Clemson's peer survey respondents gave other universities they compete against a below average rating, though this claim has been vigorously denied by the school.

U.S. News produces the rankings to provide the public—in particular, families of collegebound students—one tool that offers a clear perspective on differences among the options in higher education. We realize we can't control how this information gets used in the higher ed community, but the rankings are not meant to drive the mission or any other strategic goals that a university may be trying to attain. It's up to the Clemson University community to decide whether rising in the college rankings is a goal it ought to pursue.

In terms of the reputation survey, U.S. News has safeguards in place to prevent strategic voting from affecting the results. We subtract a few of the highest and lowest scores from respondents before the results are calculated in order to prevent downgrading or upgrading from altering the results. We are confident that such voting practices by respondents are not affecting the results of the reputation survey in any meaningful statistical way.

Tags: colleges | rankings | Clemson University

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Reader Comments

Clemson

Clemson worked to "create more small classes of under 20 students and fewer large classes with 50 or more students, boost the SAT scores and high school class standing of incoming students, increase freshman retention and graduation rates, decrease the student-to-faculty ratio, improve faculty salaries, and more accurately report data." All of those sound like good things. Congratulations to Clemson for making an effort to do such good things.

And now the University of Florida !!!!!!!!

With another scandalous documentation that shows the irrelevance and unreliability of the Peer Assessment, we can only hope that Mr Morse changes the methodology radically as far as this glorified opinion survey is concerned.

US News integrity? Please...Let's not count on it.

gaming the test

the methodology designed to protect US News doesn't work. Merely throwing out low and high scores doesn't work if every student is taught to game the test-which happens at many top schools.

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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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