Check Out Academic Programs to Look For
If you are looking for schools that have some unique academic programs and also provide an especially rich academic environment on campus, then you may want to visit the Academic Programs to Look For list that's part of America's Best Colleges 2010.
For the eighth consecutive year, U.S. News is publishing a list of schools with outstanding examples of academic programs that are commonly linked to student success at college.
Why did we choose these particular types of programs? We felt that it was important to look at innovative things that schools do that go beyond the rankings that we publish. With the help of education experts, including staff members of the Association of American Colleges and Universities, we identified eight such types of programs that have been shown to enhance learning experiences. Next, we invited college presidents, chief academic officers, deans of students, and deans of admissions from more than 1,400 schools to nominate up to 10 institutions with stellar examples of each program type. We list in alphabetical order the ones that were mentioned most often.
Here are brief descriptions of the eight areas; the links will lead you to the list of schools considered leaders in each type of program:
First-year experiences are first-year seminars or other programs that bring small groups of freshmen together with faculty or staff on a regular basis.
Internships/co-ops send students into the real world—through closely supervised internships, workshops, or through cooperative education, in which a period of study typically alternates with one of work.
Senior capstone is a culminating experience in which students create a project that integrates and synthesizes what they've learned. The project might be a thesis, a performance, or an exhibit of artwork.
Undergraduate research/creative projects involve students and faculty doing intensive and self-directed research or creative work that results in an original scholarly paper or other product that can be formally presented on or off campus.
Learning communities are where students typically take two or more linked courses as a group and get to know one another and their professors especially well.
Study abroad programs involve substantial academic work—a year or a semester or an intensive experience equal to a course—and considerable interaction between the student and the culture.
Service learning programs involve volunteering in the community and are a requirement of a student's coursework.
Writing in the disciplines is where colleges typically make the writing process a priority at all levels of instruction and across the curriculum.
- Searching for a college? Get our complete rankings of America 's Best Colleges.
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Reader Comments
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May I ask you a quetion?
Dear Morse,
The following is a part of my question: The LSAT versus the Confucianism. I idea one of the LSAT formula and Confucianism together:
A sufficient condition -> A necessary condition
Man of noble
character Oversight -> Magnanimous
Vile person Meticilous -> Vindictive
I found most of the methods of the LSAT train us how to deliberate(meticilous), and if it meet the vindictive, that should be vile person in Confucianism. I think nobody wants to be a vile person especially for a lawyer.
I really scare be a vile person.So I think if a university teach when and how to oversight? What is the standard of the magnanimous? What means of the vindictive? Or your university follow the principle is:
MagnanimousVindictiveOversightMeticilous
(Oversight is intentionally; vindictive is limited, etc.)
Could you give me some advice? which is a key about my applying, but I don't know which school have this king of courses.looking forwords for your return. thanks for your time.
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