We’re looking to do a few different things here:
· Highlight the Monthly’s annual college rankings, which rate schools not based on crude and easily-manipulated measures of money and prestige, like certain other magazines do, but rather on their contributions to society. Are they producing cutting-edge scientific research and PhDs? Do they steer their graduates into public-service jobs? Do they recruit economically disadvantaged students and help them graduate, or merely cater to the affluent? On these measures, the elite schools don’t do so well. For instance, only one of U.S. News & World Report’s top ten universities—Stanford—makes the Washington Monthly’s top ten, while some institutions that rank high on our list, like South Carolina State (#6) and Jackson State (#22), are buried in the bottom tier of the U.S. News list. We hope you’ll take the time to look at some of the surprising results our methodology led to. Washington Monthly
Wednesday, September 02, 2009
100 Best Colleges List Doesn't Include Princeton or Duke
Washington Monthly just released its best college rankings, but it doesn't list prestige universities at the top-- they don't even make the list. It uses different criteria to measure a school, not money and prestige. University of California, Berkeley tops the list.