Why U.S. News Ranks Colleges and Universities

Investment in a college education may profoundly affect your career opportunities and quality of life.

September 12, 2011 RSS Feed Print

Why does U.S. News rank colleges and universities? It's a controversial question with a simple answer: We do it to help you make one of the most important decisions of your life. 

Your investment in a college education could profoundly affect your career opportunities, financial well-being, and quality of life. 

This chart (pdf) uses data from the Bureau of the Census (as analyzed by Thomas Mortenson in the newsletter Postsecondary Education Opportunity) to show average 2009 family income for many types of households that have attained different education levels. It starts with those in which the family member with the highest level of education has far less than a high school degree and goes all the way up to those households where a family member with the highest degree has a professional degree in such fields as medicine or law. 

These figures dramatically show the value in today's world of earning a college degree or going for an additional graduate degree. Those with a college degree had almost twice as much income as those with just a high school diploma. The income disparity is even greater when you compare earnings of those with master's, doctorate, or professional degrees to those with just a high school diploma or were high school dropouts.

Even the current job market is tough for new college grads, but in the long run, a college degree will pay big dividends. Choosing the right college is the first step in getting that degree. 

To find the right college, you need a source of reliable and consistent data—information that lets you compare one college with another and find the differences that matter to you. That's what we do with our rankings. 

[See U.S. News's Best Colleges rankings.] 

We rank for best quality, and we rank for best value as well. You wouldn't go out and buy a computer, cell phone, or a car without making sure it was the best you could afford given your budget. The same rule should apply in choosing a college—especially at a time when four years at some private U.S. universities can cost you more than $200,000 in tuition, room, board, required fees, books, and other personal expenses such as late-night study snacks and transportation. 

Most people choose a college only once in their lifetime, so there's not much opportunity to learn from your past mistakes. Instead, you need first-rate information from the start. The 2012 edition of Best Colleges, in print and online, can help you by making it easier for you to sift through data from more than 1,800 colleges and universities. 

· Do use the rankings as one tool to select and compare schools. 

· Don't rely solely on rankings to choose a college. 

· Do use the search and sort capabilities of this site to learn more about schools. Visit schools, if possible. 

· Don't wait until the last minute. College matters. Take your time, and choose carefully. 

· Do think long and hard about the right place for you.

As in the past, U.S. News recommends that readers think of the rankings as one tool for selecting a college. We recognize that prospective students must consider their academic and professional goals, financial resources, scholastic record, and special needs when choosing a school.

And we recommend that students gather information on colleges in a number of ways—by talking to parents, high school guidance counselors, and other advisers; from college catalogs, view books, and websites; and from campus visits to form firsthand impressions.

 

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Why haven't you acknowledged Marymount College

on Palos Verdes, CA

j liljegren of CA 2:51AM January 16, 2012

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