Monday, July 7, 2008

Education

USN Current Issue

USNews.com: America's Best Colleges 2008

National Survey of Student Engagement


Seniors have their say

Each year, the National Survey of Student Engagement asks freshmen and seniors at participating schools to answer questions about their educational experiences–their classroom participation, interaction with faculty, and time spent on various enriching activities, for example. The goal is to help schools see how engaged their students are in activities that lead to learning. Since the NSSE project was launched in 1999 by George Kuh at Indiana University (with the support of the Pew Charitable Trusts and sponsorship by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching), some 1,100 four-year schools have turned in answers to the survey. While most schools have not made the results available to the public, many were happy to provide U.S. News with seniors' responses to a few survey questions. To see if other schools you're considering take part in the NSSE project, go to http://www.iub.edu/~nsse/index.htm.

get AcrobatThe NSSE survey results are listed below in PDF files. You will need to have Adobe Acrobat Reader to access these files. If your computer does not already have the free software, you can download it here.

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  1. School refused to fill out U.S. News statistical survey. Data that appear may be from school in previous years or from the National Center for Education Statistics unless otherwise noted.
  2. SAT and/or ACT not required by school for some or all applicants.
  3. Data not submitted in the form requested by U.S. News.
  4. Data reported to U.S. News in previous years.
  5. Data based on fewer than 51 percent of enrolled freshmen.
  6. Some or all data reported to the NCAA and/or the National Center for Education Statistics.
  7. Data reported to the Council for Aid to Education.
  8. Average graduation or freshman retention rates, normally based on four years of data, are given here for fewer than four years because school didn't report rates for the most recent year or years to U.S. News.
  9. SAT and/or ACT not required by school for some or all applicants, and data not submitted in form requested by U.S. News. Data may be based on fewer than 50 percent of enrolled freshmen.
  10. School refused to fill out U.S. News survey. Data from school's website were used.
  11. School was reclassified by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching in 2006 and appeared in a different category of schools in America's Best Colleges 2007.
  12. New to America's Best Colleges rankings or guide this year.
  13. Peer assessment score taken from America's Best Colleges 2007.

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