Methodology: College Choices by High School Counselors

U.S. News incorporates feedback from guidance counselors into these lists.

September 12, 2011 RSS Feed Print

For the second consecutive year, U.S. News counts guidance counselor opinions in ranking the National Universities and National Liberal Arts Colleges. There's little doubt that high school counselors often have a considerable amount of firsthand knowledge about colleges and universities in their regions, and the experience and expertise needed to assess academic quality and give prospective students smart direction. Over the years, high school guidance counselors have asked many times that U.S. News take account of their opinions in preparing the Best Colleges rankings. We've listened. 

This means that in the 2012 edition of the Best Colleges rankings, public and private independent school counselor ratings are used as a separate indicator of academic reputation for National Universities and National Liberal Arts Colleges in addition to the ratings by college admissions deans, provosts, and presidents.

The rating by high school guidance counselors are weighted 7.5 percent in the National Universities and Liberal Arts Colleges rankings. The separate peer assessment rating factor of academic reputation by college admissions deans, provosts, and presidents is weighted 15 percent in the rankings of the National Universities and National Liberal Arts Colleges. Both sets of weights are unchanged from the 2011 Best Colleges rankings. 

[Read more about the category weights used in the 2012 Best Colleges rankings.]

The high school counselors we asked to participate were from the 1,787 public high schools nationwide in 48 states and the District of Columbia that made the 2010 U.S.News & World Report's Best High Schools rankings, which were published in December 2009. In addition, this year we also included approximately 600 additional counselors in the survey's sample from the largest private independent high schools in each state. There were approximately 2,400 public and private high school counselors surveyed in spring 2011. 

The entire sample was divided in half and each state's high school counselors surveyed were also divided in half. That meant that approximately 1,200 counselors nationwide were sent a survey to rate the colleges in the National Universities category and another 1,200 high school counselors nationwide were sent a survey to rate the colleges in the National Liberal Arts Colleges category. The result of this process was that the sample was both balanced geographically nationwide and evenly distributed by state. 

We asked the high school counselors to take into account the insights they use to direct students to particular colleges in addition to their knowledge about these schools in general. Also, we asked them to consider what they know about each college's academic record, curriculum, faculty, programs, and graduates. The counselors rated the quality of a school's undergraduate academic programs on a scale from 1 (marginal) to 5 (distinguished). Those who didn't know enough about a school to evaluate it fairly were asked to mark "don't know." 

Scores for each school were totaled and divided by the number of counselors who rated that school, and then they were ranked in descending order based on the average high school counselor reputation score. Schools receiving the same rank and average reputation score are tied.

Of those who received the High School Counselor National Universities survey and the High School Counselor National Liberal Arts Colleges survey, 13.4 percent responded. These results were incorporated into the Best Colleges rankings methodology for the 2012 edition. Synovate, an opinion-research firm based in Chicago, collected the data.

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This is a useless measure because it is so susceptible to bias. Local and regional universities will benefit from reviews by local counselors or counselors who get favorable placement at these universities. These people know nothing. Many many counselors are not college grads. They have no clue about rating the academic quality of an institution. Most of the institutions they are rating they could never have attended. Deans, presidents tenured faculty in various departments etc - these are the people who have the expertise to judge academic programs.

ed of CA 12:14PM May 07, 2012

This system of rating is flawed; the 5 point system is ambiguous. I suggest a binary rating system. Which is essentially just "Thumbs Up" or "Thumbs Down". With a higher sample and a more defined criteria, this ranking might serve a better purpose.

David Yoon of CA 12:58AM April 17, 2012

The only problem with this list is that it is more geared towards the Ivy League Schools. All nine of them are in the top fifteen. Not only that, but there also seems to be regional bias, hence Pepperdine is within the top 40 and U of San Francisco is in the top 100, ostensibly because the Bay Area and the Valley are major population centers and neither are well recognized East of St. Louis. If US News really wants to be comprehensive, multiple rankings have to be made based on what people look for in colleges. People could really use a ranking of undergrad engineering and comp sci programs. Or maybe one for public policy. I'd pay good money for that.

Sai of FL 8:06PM March 05, 2012

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