Ranking
Of Colleges
Though many people put a lot of faith in the ranking of colleges,
usually favoring the top college lists formulated by magazines like
U.S. News and World Report, the ranking of colleges really
isn’t much of a science. That’s not to
say that formulas aren’t involved. Depending on the
publication, a large range of different considerations can be taken
into account. Some of the standard criteria are class size,
percentage of professors with advanced degrees, and the percentage of
graduates which are either employed or pursuing further education
within six months of graduation. These are relatively
cut-and-dried numbers; there isn’t much of a fudge factor or
much room for interpretation. However, once those ranking
colleges get beyond these sorts of factors things start to get a little
fuzzier.
For example, some reviews take into account the number of books in a
university’s library when computing the school’s
ranking. How many people are really concerned with how many
books are in the stacks when they’re choosing a
school? Other considerations which make these designations
shaky is different adjustments based on the school’s
reputation, which is a particularly subjective, regionally-dependent
criteria. Some schools will have particularly strong
reputations in one area of the country while their reputations are
completely different on the opposite coast.
Though the ranking of colleges gives you some idea of how different
universities are positioned, by no means allow how a school is ranked
to be a deciding factor in your choice of university. If
you’re accepted to schools A and B and A has a slightly
higher ranking but B has a lot better feel to it, go to school B and
don’t worry about school A’s ranking. If
a school fits you it’s much more important than if
it’s ranked highly, especially since the rankings are
somewhat subjective and arbitrary to begin with.
As a general rule of thumb, allow the ranking of colleges to give you
ideas of different options for school, but don’t allow the
rankings to discredit or rule out any schools. Rankings are
somewhat helpful in that they do give prospective students a general
idea of the highly regarded universities in the country; though the #4
school probably isn’t obviously better than the #6 school,
the #6 school is probably of a noticeably higher caliber than the #300
school. Sometimes colleges that you wouldn’t have
otherwise considered show up on the ranking lists and could be
definitely worth your consideration, just remember that there is some
wiggle room in the rankings and that they don’t always
reflect how things really are.
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