How to Use Our Rankings Wisely

March 14, 2011 RSS Feed Print

The U.S. News 2012 Best Graduate Schools rankings spotlight the country's academically excellent graduate programs and can start you on the track toward picking the right school for you. But many other factors that cannot be measured also should figure in your decision, including the course offerings and culture of departments that interest you, the advising or mentoring you can expect to receive, career opportunities, cost of attendance, and the location and campus life. 

So, why study our data at all? Because, for instance, you can see at a glance where your undergraduate academic record and admissions test scores might take you and where you would rise to the top of the applicant pool. You can look up GMATs, MCATs, LSATs, and GRE test scores and compare them between schools. You also can see how deans rate the schools in terms of academic excellence, which may matter to job recruiters.

The data in the ranking tables allow you to compare medical, law, engineering, business, and education schools on many other key characteristics and will almost certainly open up further lines of investigation. Someone interested in law, for example, can examine how successful the schools are at preparing graduates for the bar exam. Applicants to M.B.A. programs can see how diplomas from various schools will affect their earning power. Future engineers can get a sense from a school's research expenditures of how cutting-edge their experience there might be. You might even discover possible choices that were not on your radar screen before.

The rankings can inform your thinking—but they won't hand you an easy answer. The rankings should only be used as one tool in finding the right graduate school or program. You need to consider many factors. The rankings should not be used as the sole criteria in deciding where to go to graduate school. We urge you to use them wisely.—The Editors

Tags:
students,
education,
rankings,
graduate schools

Reader Comments

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

Grad School Search

advertisement

Knowledge Centers

Looking at grad schools? Find out what you need to know.

The GRE® Tests: Get the Facts

Find out more about the new types of questions at takethegre.com.

The GRE® revised General Test features antonyms and analogies.

True

False

Submit
Answer: False

There are no antonyms and analogies on the GRE® revised General Test, so there’s no vocabulary out of context. Find out more about the new types of questions.

Parent Question-of-the-Day

What will be your primary resource to help pay for college?
[ View Results ]

Advance your career with an online degree