How We Calculate the Rankings

August 21, 2008 RSS Feed Print

Just how can rankings help you identify colleges and universities that are right for you? Certainly, the college experience consists of a host of intangibles that cannot be reduced to mere numbers. But for families, the U.S. News rankings provide an excellent starting point because they offer the opportunity to judge the relative quality of institutions based on widely accepted indicators of excellence. You can compare different schools' numbers at a glance, and looking at unfamiliar schools that are ranked near schools you know can be a good way to broaden your search.

Of course, many factors other than those we measure will figure in your decision, including the feel of campus life, activities, sports, academic offerings, location, cost, and availability of financial aid. But if you combine the information in this book with college visits, interviews, and your own intuition, our rankings can be a powerful tool in your quest for college.

For the seventh consecutive year, U.S. News helps by spotlighting schools with outstanding examples of eight types of academic programs that have been shown to enhance learning, including first-year experiences, learning communities, writing in the disciplines, senior capstone, study abroad, internships or cooperative education, opportunities for undergraduate research, and service learning.

Pick a category. The U.S. News rankings system rests on two pillars. It relies on quantitative measures that education experts have proposed as reliable indicators of academic quality, and it's based on our nonpartisan view of what matters in education.

How does the methodology work? First, schools are categorized by mission, derived from the basic Carnegie classification, and, in some cases, by region.

The national universities offer a full range of undergraduate majors, plus master's and Ph.D. programs, and emphasize faculty research. The liberal arts colleges focus almost exclusively on undergraduate education. They award at least 50 percent of their degrees in the arts and sciences. The universities-master's offer a broad scope of undergraduate degrees and some master's degree programs but few, if any, doctoral programs. The baccalaureate colleges focus on undergraduate education but grant fewer than 50 percent of their degrees in liberal arts disciplines. The baccalaureate colleges include institutions where at least 10 percent of the undergraduate degrees awarded are bachelor's degrees. The universities-master's and baccalaureate colleges categories are further subdivided by geography—North, South, Midwest, and West.

Next, we gather data from each college for up to 15 indicators of academic excellence. Each factor is assigned a weight that reflects our judgment about how much a measure matters. Finally, the colleges in each category are ranked against their peers, based on their composite weighted score.

Schools are unranked and listed separately for America's Best Colleges 2009 if they have indicated that they don't use the SAT or ACT in admission decisions for first-time, first-year, degree-seeking applicants (or, in a few cases, if they didn't receive enough responses on the peer assessment survey to allow us to use their peer score as part of the overall ranking). Other schools were unranked for the following reasons: a total enrollment of fewer than 200 students; a vast proportion of nontraditional students; no first-year students (these are sometimes called upper-division schools). We did not rank private, for-profit universities; nor did we rank a few specialized schools in arts, business, or engineering.

Sources, sources... Most of the data come from the colleges—and U.S. News takes pains to ensure their accuracy. This year, 91.4 percent of the 1,476 colleges and universities we surveyed returned their statistical information. We obtained missing data from sources such as the American Association of University Professors, the National Collegiate Athletic Association, the Council for Aid to Education, and the U.S. Department of Education's National Center for Education Statistics. Data that did not come from this year's survey are footnoted. Estimates, which are never published by U.S. News, may be used when schools fail to report particular data points. Missing data are reported as N/A in the ranking tables.

The indicators we use to capture academic quality fall into seven categories: assessment by administrators at peer institutions, retention of students, faculty resources, student selectivity, financial resources, alumni giving, and (for national universities and liberal arts colleges) "graduation rate performance," the difference between the proportion of students expected to graduate and the proportion who actually do. The indicators include input measures that reflect a school's student body, its faculty, and its financial resources, along with outcome measures that signal how well the institution does its job of educating students. Following are detailed descriptions of the indicators used to measure academic quality:

Peer assessment (weighting: 25 percent). The U.S. News ranking formula gives greatest weight to the opinions of those in a position to judge a school's undergraduate academic excellence. The peer assessment survey allows the top academics we consult—presidents, provosts, and deans of admissions—to account for intangibles such as faculty dedication to teaching. Each individual is asked to rate peer schools' academic programs on a scale from 1 (marginal) to 5 (distinguished). Those who don't know enough about a school to evaluate it fairly are asked to mark "don't know." Synovate, an opinion-research firm based near Chicago, in spring 2008 collected the data; of the 4,272 people who were sent questionnaires, 46 percent responded.

Retention (20 percent in national universities and liberal arts colleges and 25 percent in master's and baccalaureate colleges). The higher the proportion of freshmen who return to campus the following year and eventually graduate, the better a school is apt to be at offering the classes and services students need to succeed. This measure has two components: six-year graduation rate (80 percent of the retention score) and freshman retention rate (20 percent). The graduation rate indicates the average proportion of a graduating class who earn a degree in six years or less; we consider freshman classes that started from 1998 through 2001. Freshman retention indicates the average proportion of freshmen entering from 2003 through 2006 who returned the following fall.

Faculty resources (20 percent). Research shows that the more satisfied students are about their contact with professors, the more they will learn and the more likely it is they will graduate. We use six factors from the 2007-08 academic year to assess a school's commitment to instruction. Class size has two components: the proportion of classes with fewer than 20 students (30 percent of the faculty resources score) and the proportion with 50 or more students (10 percent of the score). In our model, a school benefits more for having a large proportion of classes with fewer than 20 students and a small proportion of large classes. Faculty salary (35 percent) is the average faculty pay, plus benefits, during the 2006-07 and 2007-08 academic years, adjusted for regional differences in the cost of living (using indexes from the consulting firm Runzheimer International). We also weigh the proportion of professors with the highest degree in their fields (15 percent), the student-faculty ratio (5 percent), and the proportion of faculty who are full time (5 percent).

Student selectivity (15 percent). A school's academic atmosphere is determined in part by the abilities and ambitions of the student body. We therefore factor in test scores of enrollees on the Critical Reading and Math portions of the SAT or Composite ACT score (50 percent of the selectivity score); the proportion of enrolled freshmen (for all national universities and liberal arts colleges) who graduated in the top 10 percent of their high school classes or (for institutions in the universities-master's and baccalaureate colleges) the top 25 percent (40 percent); and the acceptance rate, or the ratio of students admitted to applicants (10 percent). The data are for the fall 2007 entering class. Whether the SAT or ACT was used in making these calculations was determined by which score was submitted most often at that school for fall 2007 admissions.

Financial resources (10 percent). Generous per-student spending indicates that a college can offer a wide variety of programs and services. U.S. News measures financial resources by using the average spending per student on instruction, research, student services, and related educational expenditures in the 2006 and 2007 fiscal years. Spending on sports, dorms, and hospitals doesn't count, only the part of a school's budget that goes toward educating students.

Graduation rate performance (5 percent; only in national universities and liberal arts colleges). This indicator of "added value" shows the effect of the college's programs and policies on the graduation rate of students after controlling for spending and student characteristics such as the proportion receiving Pell grants and test scores. We measure the difference between a school's six-year graduation rate for the class that entered in 2001 and the rate we predicted for the class. If the actual graduation rate is higher than the predicted rate, the college is enhancing achievement.

Alumni giving rate (5 percent). This reflects the average percentage of living alumni with bachelor's degrees who gave to their school during 2005-06 and 2006-07, which is an indirect measure of student satisfaction.

To arrive at a school's rank, we first calculated the weighted sum of its scores. The final scores were rescaled: The top school in each category was assigned a value of 100, and the other schools' weighted scores were calculated as a proportion of that top score. Final scores for each ranked school were rounded to the nearest whole number and ranked in descending order. Schools that receive the same rank are tied and are listed in alphabetical order. Our rankings of accredited undergraduate business programs and engineering programs are based exclusively on peer assessment data gathered from the programs' deans and senior faculty members.

How can you best use our rankings? Mining the data for the information you need can definitely inform your thinking. The hard work is up to you.

Reader Comments Read all comments (143)

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Your acceptance rate data is way off and I dont think it is a good measure. Many schools that show a low acceptance rate will accept any one who can "fog a mirror with their breath". A better measure might be how many high ability students are you able to attract---this is not self reported and can come straight from the National Merit Corp.

William Alexander of TN 9:58AM August 18, 2009

See below....

...was phenomenal. My personal mojo skyrocketed and has never come down. I didn't care that UCLA had no accounting program. It was my dream school, and something happens to a kid who attends his dream school. That something is called confidence and pride. And to be honest, that's what propelled me on to one of the nation's great law schools.

So, to recap, if you want material success, choose a school local to where you intend to live that offers the area of study that peaks your interest (unless you are Harvard and Stanford material). However, if you can secure an admission to one of the nation's top schools and it is among your dream schools, go live your dream. Go attend that school no matter what (e.g., Michigan). There is nothing like walking into a bar where your alma mater's football team is playing, and everyone knows you attended that school, it was prestigious, and most people growing up in the region wanted so badly to attend that school with you....

;)

Good luck, young bucks with your choice. College is the time of your life. Barely a day passes where I wouldn't surrender my law degree and go right back to being 19, young, handsome, carefree, and away at school on my own for the first time. The moments you will have and share with your friends will be truly priceless--and you will carry them for the whole of your life.....

Dreamer of CA 3:49AM August 08, 2009

I graduated with 2 BA's from UCLA and a third BA from the University of Texas at Austin. I also graduated from one of the top-10 law schools in the country at Northwestern University School of Law. What I can offer about rankings is simply this--it's always comforting in social or professional circles to convey where you've studied when that university is considered among the nation's prestigious schools. Many are familiar with national rankings, and recognize that attendance at these prestigious schools usually requires diligence, some form of relatively higher intelligence, and substantial academic success.

However, some of the earlier comments about choosing a school "that is right for you" is exactly on point. At the end of the day, unless you attend Harvard or Stanford, or to a lesser degree Yale, Penn, or Princeton, most firms and people are unaware of any of the prestigious schools outside of their region (e.g., in Houston, Texas, firms will have little idea of the exclusivity of Emory, Vanderbilt, UC Berkeley, Duke or Michigan--to name a few). That means, you will generally have maximum opportunities if you attend a respected school in the region in which you expect to live (UCLA is great for Los Angeles).

Now, keep in mind--there are different interests in choosing schools. If your interest is material success and opportunities, prestige of school is secondary after area of study. For example, studying accounting at a less prestigious school will provide greater opportunities in accounting versus studying economics at a top-25 university. I know this first-hand as this was my experience after graduation from UCLA. Additionally, if you add a strong grade-point-average, you will have even more opportunities. In fact, I would rate material opportunities in this order:

1. Harvard/Staford (perhaps other Ivies)

2. Engineering/Business/Accounting with high grades & top

local university

3. Engineering/Business/Accounting with high grades and non

top local university

4. Engineering/Business/Accounting with average grades and

top local university

5. Engineering/Business/Accounting with average grades and

non top local university

6. Top school in the region (e.g., Rice in Houston) majoring

in an area different than the profession (BA in History,

applying for an accounting job)

Remember, there are other interests aside from material and professional opportunities. There is also pride and love in the school you've attended. A person might attend Ohio State, and it may not be as prestigious as Michigan or Penn--but, for those growing up in Ohio, attendance at Ohio State is the dream of many. As a kid growing up in California and Texas, it was a boyhood dream to attend both of those universities. And I did. The direct material success I secured from studying three different areas of liberal arts was probably minimal. But, the indirect and non-material utility I acquired from attending my dream schools

Dreamer of CA 3:36AM August 08, 2009

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