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Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Education

Morse Code: Inside the College Rankings

The New High School Rankings Are Here

December 05, 2008 12:01 AM ET | Morse, Robert |

U.S. News has just launched its second annual list of America's Best High Schools. The analysis of more than 21,000 public high schools in 48 states is available here and on newsstands as of December 8 in the magazine issue dated Dec. 1522, 2008.

To produce the 2009 America's Best High Schools rankings, U.S. News teamed up with School Evaluation Services (SES), a K-12 education data research business run by Standard & Poor's. SES developed the comprehensive methodology that judges how well high schools serve all their students, not just those who are collegebound.

You can read the America's Best High Schools 2009 methodology here. For those interested in a much more detailed version of the methodology, there is SES's Expanded Methodology (PDF).

...continue reading.

Tags: high schools | rankings

The World’s Best Colleges rankings are now online

November 21, 2008 01:47 PM ET | Morse, Robert |

U.S. News has just published our first World's Best Colleges and Universities rankings. These rankings are based on data from the Times Higher Education-QS World University Rankings which were produced in association with QS Quacquarelli Symonds. One of the world's leading networks for careers and education, QS Quacquarelli Symonds has been publishing world rankings since 2004.

The World's Best Colleges and Universities rankings include the following rankings: Top 200 Universities Worldwide, the Top 30 Asian Universities, the Top 30 European Universities, the Top 20 Canadian Universities, and the Top 20 Australian and New Zealand Universities. The listing also includes the Top 50 global rankings in the fields of arts and humanities; engineering and IT; life sciences and biomedicine; natural sciences; and social sciences.

...continue reading.

Tags: colleges | education | rankings

Coming Soon: the New High School Rankings

November 05, 2008 03:31 PM ET | Morse, Robert |

On December 5, U.S. News will publish online our second annual America's Best High Schools rankings of public high schools in the United States. This year, we hope to expand these rankings to include 47 states. This will be an increase from last year, which covered public high schools in 41 states. The rankings will reach newsstands on December 8 in the magazine issue dated December 15-22. Also new this year will be the inclusion of how well schools do on the International Baccalaureate tests, which were not part of last year's analysis.

To produce America's Best High Schools rankings, U.S. News teams up with School Evaluation Services, a K-12 education data research business run by Standard & Poor's. SES developed the comprehensive methodology, which determines how well high schools serve all their students, not just those who are collegebound.

Briefly, how will these upcoming rankings be done? We plan to analyze all public high schools in 47 states using data from the 2006-2007 school year. A three-step process determines the best high schools. The first two steps will ensure that the schools serve all their students well, using state proficiency standards as the measuring benchmarks. For the schools that make it past the first two steps, a third step assesses "college readiness"—the degree to which schools prepared students for college-level work using Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate tests. A much more detailed America's Best High Schools methodology will be published when the rankings come out in early December 2008.

Tags: high schools | education | rankings

The Grad School Ranking Surveys Are in the Mail

October 30, 2008 01:40 PM ET | Morse, Robert |

We've just started the data collection for the upcoming 2010 edition of America's Best Graduate Schools, which will be published in early spring 2009. The statistical survey data collection for business, law, engineering, medicine, and education programs began in late October on our password-secured website. The deadline to complete the statistical surveys is in mid-November 2008.

The grad school peer assessment surveys also have started going out. Our goal was to have all the first mailings sent out by October 28. The peer surveys have roughly eight weeks in the field, with a second survey mailing that will go to those who don't respond the first time. U.S. News works with a contractor, Synovate, to administer the peer survey mailings.

...continue reading.

Tags: graduate schools | surveys | rankings

Researchers Discuss the Higher Ed Act

October 23, 2008 02:21 PM ET | Morse, Robert |

I recently returned from the 2008 Southern Association for Institutional Research Conference in Memphis. I go to these conferences in the United States and around the world to give talks on the Best Colleges rankings, find out the latest trends at universities, determine what new higher education data U.S. News should try to collect, and get feedback. I made one presentation: "America's Best Colleges Rankings: What Just Happened and What's Ahead."

The impact on colleges and students of the recently passed Higher Education Opportunity Act was discussed at length there. The HEOA includes provisions aimed at making more information available so that the public can better understand and respond to the rising cost of a college education. The act calls for the U.S. Department of Education to collect and publish on its website College Navigator a wide variety of information on college affordability, the net price of attending college by income level for those receiving student aid, which schools are raising tuitions more than others, and other consumer topics, including the time it takes to complete a degree at that college, alternative tuition plans, and information for disabled students.

There was also an update on the now two-year-old Voluntary System of Accountability project, which is a partnership between the American Association of State Colleges and Universities and the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges. The VSA's goal is to provide students with comparable information on public institutions in a standardized format called College Portraits. The VSA deserves a lot of credit for being the only such effort underway that will include comparative data on student engagement as well as information on student learning outcomes. There is good news, too: As of October 18, nearly 60 percent (309 schools) of the 520 member institutions of the two higher education associations have agreed to participate in the project, and over 200 have already posted College Portraits. These colleges enroll some 3 million undergraduates, nearly 60 percent of the total undergraduate enrollment in four-year public colleges and universities. But there's a potential cloud on the horizon: Because the VSA system is, by definition, voluntary, it's unclear what proportion of four-year public colleges will end up participating and making all their information public.

Tags: rankings

Will Paying for SAT Scores Boost Baylor's Ranking?

October 16, 2008 01:31 PM ET | Morse, Robert |

Baylor University's policy of paying already admitted and enrolled students to retake the SAT test so the school possibly can use the improved scores to pursue a higher spot in the America's Best Colleges ranking is causing a lot soul searching in academia. The New York Times, Inside Higher Education, and Chronicle of Higher Education have all weighed in with stories that criticize the practice.

The Baylor Lariat, Baylor University's student newspaper, which broke the story, has written extensively on the controversy surrounding Baylor's policy of paying students a $300 book credit at the school store for retaking the SAT test after they'd already been admitted to the fall 2008 class. If the additional test improved their SAT composite score (on the Critical Reading and Math parts of the SAT) by 50 points or more, they got an additional $1,000 merit-based "Baylor Scholarship."

...continue reading.

Tags: college admissions | rankings | SAT | Baylor University

Best Colleges: Programs to Look For

October 15, 2008 11:55 AM ET | Morse, Robert |

If you are looking for colleges that have unique academic programs, visit the Programs to Look For section of our website.

We felt that it was important to look at innovative things that schools do that go well beyond the America's Best Colleges rankings. With the help of education experts, including staff members of the Association of American Colleges and Universities, for the seventh consecutive year we identified eight such types of programs that have been shown to enhance learning experiences. We then invited college presidents, chief academic officers, deans of students, and deans of admissions from over 1,400 schools to nominate up to 10 institutions with stellar examples of each program type. We list in alphabetical order the ones that were mentioned most often.

...continue reading.

Tags: rankings

About this Blog

Robert Morse is director of data research for U.S. News & World Report and has worked at the magazine since 1976. He develops the methodologies and surveys for the America's Best Colleges and America's Best Graduate Schools annual rankings, keeping an eye on higher-education trends to make sure the rankings offer prospective students the best analysis available. Morse Code provides deeper insights into the methodologies and is a forum for commentary and analysis of college, grad and other rankings.

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