This month, U.S. News & World Report
releases its annual rankings of colleges. First published in 1983,
the guide has become its own mini-event: College presidents,
education reporters, alumni, parents, and high school juniors alike
all scramble to get their hands on the rankings. Its release is
followed by weeks of gloating from the top-ranked schools and
grumbling from those schools that dropped a slot (or 14) from the
previous year. Inspired by the popularity, other guides—from
Princeton Review to Peterson's to Kaplan—have
rushed to compete. College rankings are now so influential that
universities and higher-education journals hold regular
chin-stroking sessions about whether the numbers-game has too much
influence over the way schools behave. New York University's Vice
President John Beckman sniffed to the Harvard Crimson this
spring that the rankings “are a device to sell magazines that feed
on an American fixation with lists,” which is precisely what
institutions say when they're trying to duck accountability.
There's a good reason for the American fixation with rankings—if
done correctly, they can help tell us what's working and what's not.
Of course universities ought to be judged. The key is judging the
right things.
All of the existing college rankings have the same aim—to help
overwhelmed parents and students sift through the thousands of
colleges and universities in this country by giving them some
yardstick for judging the “best” schools. Whether the guides
actually do measure academic excellence—as opposed to, say, academic
reputation (not always the same thing)—is debatable at best (see “Broken
Ranks” by Amy Graham and Nicholas Thompson, September 2001). The
publishers of these guides argue that they are providing a valuable
consumer service. Parents who will shell out tens of thousands of
dollars to put their teenagers through college need to know they are
spending their money wisely.
How much more important, then, is it for taxpayers to know that
their money—in the form of billions of dollars of research grants
and student aid—is being put to good use? These are institutions,
after all, that produce most of the country's cutting-edge
scientific research and are therefore indirectly responsible for
much of our national wealth and prosperity. They are the path to the
American dream, the surest route for hard-working poor kids to
achieve a better life in a changing economy. And they shape, in
profound and subtle ways, students' ideas about American society and
their place in it. It seemed obvious to us that these heavily
subsidized institutions ought to be graded on how well they perform
in these roles, so we set out to create the first annual
Washington Monthly College Rankings. While other guides ask
what colleges can do for students, we ask what colleges are doing
for the country.
Iowa State beats Princeton
The first question we asked was, what does America need from its
universities? From this starting point, we came up with three
central criteria: Universities should be engines of social mobility,
they should produce the academic minds and scientific research that
advance knowledge and drive economic growth, and they should
inculcate and encourage an ethic of service. We designed our
evaluation system accordingly. (See "A
Note on Methodology".)
Given our very different way of measuring success, we suspected
that the marquee schools routinely found at the top of U.S.
News's list might not finish at the very top of ours—but even we
were surprised by what the data revealed. Only three schools in the
2006 U.S. News top 10 are among our highest-ranked: MIT,
Stanford, and the University of Pennsylvania. In addition, while the
private colleges of the Ivy League dominate most rankings of the
nation's best colleges, they didn't dominate ours—only Cornell and
the University of Pennsylvania made our top 10, and Princeton (tied
with Harvard for the top slot on U.S. News's current list)
was all the way down at #44, a few slots behind South Carolina State
University.
Our list was also more heavily populated with first-rate state
schools (the University of California system scored particularly
well) than that of U.S. News, which has no public
universities within its top ten. UCLA finished second in our overall
ranking, UC-Berkeley third, Penn State University sixth, Texas
A&M seventh, UC-San Diego eighth and the University of Michigan
tenth. Each of our highest-rated schools are, by any reasonable
national measure, academically serious schools. But they are not the
super-elite—the Harvards and Yales—that normally dominate lists of
the nation's “best” universities.
The schools that topped our list didn't necessarily do so for the
reasons you might expect. MIT earned its number one ranking not
because of its ground-breaking research (although that didn't hurt),
but on the basis of its commitment to national service—the school
ranked #7 in that category, far better than most of its elite peers.
Similarly, UCLA, which finished second in our overall rankings,
excelled in research and came in first in our social mobility rating
because of its astoundingly high graduation rate given its large
numbers of lower-income students. (Schools in the University of
California's system were consistently high performers in this area:
UCLA took top honors, with UC-Berkeley, UC-San Diego, UC-Davis, and
UC-Riverside not far behind.) At the same time, Princeton finished
behind schools such as the University of Arizona and Iowa
State—schools with which it probably does not often consider itself
to be in competition—not just because of its comparatively low
research numbers, which are perhaps to be expected given that the
university doesn't have a medical school and considers its mission
to be teaching, not research. What really did in Princeton were
mediocre scores on national service and social mobility, categories
in which it should have excelled.
Other priorities
Princeton's comparatively low ranking is evidence of something
else indicated by our numbers. Schools that are similar in size,
prestige, and endowment end up in very different places on The
Washington Monthly College Rankings, largely because of
decisions they have made about how to prioritize their resources or
focus their energies. When it comes to social mobility, for
instance, Harvard has about the lowest percentage of Pell Grant
recipients in its student body of any school in the country. By
comparison, Columbia, whose institutional ambitions and prestige are
similar to Harvard's, has twice as many lower-income students as its
counterpart on the Charles River; Cornell has nearly three times the
number. Public universities provide some equally interesting data:
Both Indiana University and the University of Virginia are the most
elite public institutions in states with populations of roughly
similar wealth, yet the percentage of IU students who are Pell Grant
recipients is nearly twice that of UVa.
On research, as well, the results are interesting. The big state
schools finished somewhat higher than we had expected, and the
super-elite schools (the Cal Techs and Harvards) fell somewhat
lower. Even so, we were caught off-guard by some of the top
finishers, including University of California's San Diego campus.
UCSD is not normally considered among the elite UC campuses—UCLA and
UC-Berkeley have that distinction—much less top-tier national
schools. But it has quietly rounded up a formidable team of
scholars. Nine Nobelists are on faculty at UCSD (Dartmouth, by
comparison, has none), and the National Research Council recently
ranked its Oceanography, Neurosciences, Physiology, and
Bioengineering departments either first or second in the country.
This concentration of talent translates into direct benefits for the
surrounding community: Forty percent of the companies in San Diego's
biotech corridor are spin-offs of research based at UCSD. These
accomplishments landed UCSD in the sixth slot for research grants,
and eighth on our overall rankings.
Perhaps the most striking data, however, is found in national
service. Our measures here were simple: whether a school devotes a
significant part of its federal work study funding to placing
students in community service jobs (as the original work study law
intended); the percentage of students enrolled in ROTC; and the
percentage of graduates currently enrolled in the Peace Corps. All
schools, large and small, are capable of excelling in these areas.
In fact, we found that while some very small and nationally unknown
schools have made an aggressive commitment to national service, most
of the highest ranking U.S. News schools have not. The
University of Portland, for example, finishes third in national
service while Harvard lingers down at #75. Harvard obviously has far
more resources than the University of Portland, and there's no
question that it could match Portland's remarkable performance on
service, if it chose to make a similar commitment to emphasizing
that value among its students. But, at least by the criteria we set,
it has not.
These service results haven't changed much since the first time
we rated colleges on their commitment to national service (see "The
Other College Rankings" by Joshua Green, Jan./Feb. 2002). But
there's one nice surprise: MIT leaped from near the bottom of the
pack three years ago to near the top today.
We created
a separate ranking for the nation's liberal arts colleges, and our
results there confirmed these general trends. Some of the schools at
the top of our list—including Wellesley and Bryn Mawr—are considered
among the nation's most elite liberal arts colleges. But some
schools we didn't expect—Wofford College, #8—or had simply never
heard of—Presbyterian College, #13—crept into top slots. Though
research rankings for both Presbyterian and Wofford were
comparatively low, both schools produced extremely strong numbers
for service, and performed well in the social mobility standings.
And the traditional prestige schools didn't all benefit from the
Washington Monthly ranking system. Williams, which U.S. News
ranks as the top liberal arts school in the country, wound up at #14
on our list, one slot below Presbyterian, largely because of its
weak service numbers.
Patriotic competition
A word on our criteria. This is the first Washington Monthly
College Rankings. In future years, we would prefer to expand our
criteria and develop an even more comprehensive measure of the
qualities by which colleges and universities enrich our country.
There's only one problem: Many of these data aren't available. We
would love, for example, to add a category measuring academic
excellence. It's nearly impossible, however, to directly gauge the
quality of education a student receives at a given school. Most
ranking systems rely on measures of inputs—such as the average SAT
scores of the incoming class or the size of faculty salaries. But as
Amy Graham and Nicholas Thompson noted in these pages four years
ago, “[t]hat's like measuring the quality of a restaurant by
calculating how much it paid for silverware and food: not completely
useless, but pretty far from ideal.”
There is one existing set of data that would do a great deal to
answer that question: the National Survey of Student Engagement
(NSSE). NSSE compiles such information as the average number of
hours students at a particular school spend doing homework or
meeting with professors outside of class—measures which, studies
show, are highly correlated with academic achievement.
Unfortunately, the vast majority of colleges and universities refuse
to grant NSSE permission to release their schools' scores to the
public, and legislation to force them to do so, sponsored by Sen.
Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.), has been stifled in Congress. Rather than use
data that we believe doesn't accurately measure the quality of an
undergraduate education, we chose not to include that category in
this year's ranking. We hope to be able to add those measures in the
future.
And while we're putting together our wish list, we have a few
additional requests. We would prefer that the federal government
require every school to report the percentage of Pell Grant
recipients who actually graduate, but it doesn't. We would love it
if schools kept a systematic count of which professions their
graduates entered—such as teaching—but they don't. And we would be
thrilled if the federal government tabulated how many of its
employees came from which schools.
Still, we have tried to abide by the best principles of social
science and used the best data available to generate the closest
possible measures of the qualities we value. It pleased us to use
metrics for success that were almost all within the means of even
the most modest of our nation's universities. For that is more or
less the point of this exercise. Succeeding on the Washington
Monthly ranking (and succeeding at serving the country) is
within the reach of most schools. Granted, most colleges are
unlikely to catch up to Johns Hopkins on research overnight. But
when it comes to service, Portland finishes well because it has made
an institutional commitment to values that work. And in terms of
social mobility, schools such as Alabama A&M and South Carolina
State—hardly considered academic powerhouses—score very high because
their graduation rates are well above what their Pell Grant numbers
would have predicted.
The U.S. News rankings, and others like them, have had an
impact. A growing body of reporting and scholarship shows that the
criteria these guides use have sent administrators scurrying to
increase the amount of money given by their alumni or the SAT scores
of their incoming freshman in order to improve their score. Such
measures have arguably very little impact on how well a school
serves its student body, but as schools compete for students, every
little thing—including rising or dropping two spots on a
list—counts.
Imagine, then, what would happen if thousands of schools were
suddenly motivated to try to boost their scores on The Washington
Monthly College Rankings. They'd start enrolling greater numbers
of low-income students and putting great effort into ensuring that
these students graduate. They'd encourage more of their students to
join the Peace Corps or the military. They'd intensify their focus
on producing more Ph.D. graduates in science and engineering. And as
a result, we all would benefit from a wealthier, freer, more
vibrant, and democratic country.