C
Con_Alma
Posts: 12,198
Oct 6, 2012 6:09am
http://www.usnews.com/education/best-colleges/the-short-list-college/articles/2012/10/02/10-colleges-with-the-highest-4-year-graduation-rates
Swarthmore College (PA) | 91.3% | 3, National Liberal Arts Colleges |
Haverford College (PA) | 91.1% | 9, National Liberal Arts Colleges |
Pomona College (CA) | 90.8% | 4, National Liberal Arts Colleges |
University of Notre Dame (IN) | 90.5% | 17, National Universities |
Georgetown University (DC) | 90.1% | 21, National Universities |
Columbia University (NY) | 89.4% | 4, National Universities |
College of the Holy Cross (MA) | 89.2% | 32, National Liberal Arts Colleges |
Williams College (MA) | 89.0% | 1, National Liberal Arts Colleges |
United States Naval Academy (MD) | 88.8% | 14, National Liberal Arts Colleges |
Yale University (CT) | 88.8% | 3, National Universities |
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Rotinaj
Posts: 7,699
Oct 6, 2012 9:44am
I figured a 2 year community college would be #1.
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Ytowngirlinfla
Posts: 2,295
Oct 6, 2012 10:03am
He's just trying to show info about the Naval Academy. I'm not surprised it's up there but I also see the product of the Academy and shake my head daily. You can tell who was someone's son/daughter and got into the Academy that way.
G
gut
Posts: 15,058
Oct 6, 2012 3:56pm
That applies to a lot of schools, especially the "best" that have a lot of legacy admits.Ytowngirlinfla;1288371 wrote:He's just trying to show info about the Naval Academy. I'm not surprised it's up there but I also see the product of the Academy and shake my head daily. You can tell who was someone's son/daughter and got into the Academy that way.
Somewhat related, but colleges really need to review requirements to let kids get thru in 4 years. As I think about my undergrad, after general/program requirements and my major requirements, I really didn't have a lot of room for exploration or "indecisiveness".
The idea is they give you 5 or 6 options or whatever for a laundry list of requirements. But what if I just want a degree an employer values, and then time to go in-depth on 15th century art?
Point being, I think colleges really overrate the value of their "liberal arts" requirements. I would guess the majority of students ignore it, hate it, and take the approach of what is the easiest and/or most convenient (to my schedule) to fill the requirement?
Just seems to me time to graduate is growing, and I think it has as much to do with program structures as costs. Sort of like electronics - they have a bunch of bells and whistles they promote that doesn't add anything but price. I think schools are doing the same thing (in the interest of "differentiation" and "value") and making it very difficult for a student to finish in 4 years if they don't have a laser focus.