From the write-up regarding their methodology:techno-ag said:
It's like they tried to figure out if a school's degree was worth it or something.
"Our new ranking rebalances this. To calculate the value added by colleges, we estimate how well their students would do regardless of which college they attended, taking into account the factors that best predict student outcomes. The colleges are rewarded for their students' success over and above that estimate. These scores are combined with raw graduation rates and graduate salaries. In other words, success in absolute terms is still taken into account, but with the value added given greater emphasis than previously."
I don't think that is really all that easy to do. How can you really "estimate how well their students would do regardless of which college they attended"? You can't do a controlled, scientific experiment and put the same student through two different schools. Similarly, doesn't going to school with students who are more academically prepared count for a lot when comparing schools? These surveys are soft science at best, as evidenced by 30% of the school's grade being given to student experience and diversity.
I applaud the study and what they are trying to do. It's interesting. Again, I love my school and it got me where I wanted to be. I'm just not sure it is necessarily "Better than" Pomona, UC Berkeley, Rice, Brown, Carnegie Mellon, UNC, UVA, and Johns Hopkins, among others.
If you REALLY want to "figure out if a school's degree was worth it or something", you see what the students earn upon receipt of their sheepskin. The WSJ indeed DID do that as well. It's just not the headline ranking being discussed here. In those rankings, Texas A&M was 62nd in the nation (and first in Texas).
Avoid the rush. Start hating Socialism now.
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