Tuesday, July 14, 2009

The statistics that colleges hate to share

July 12, 2009

When you start searching for that perfect college for your child, you might think there’s plenty of information to help you with your decision. Just for starters, every college has a website that will give you all the essentials.

Take Stephens College, a private, four-year women’s school in Columbia, Missouri. A quick tour of its website will tell you that the college offers more than 50 major and minors, everything from English to event planning to equestrian science. Class sizes average just 13 students. Annual costs total $32,250, but nearly all students get some kind of financial aid. And the campus looks nice.

But what you won’t see without diligent searching is that half of Stephens students fail to graduate, even after six years. Not to pick on Stephens, which does mention that statistic deep in its website. Point is, little of the data that colleges provide really tell you much about the value of your investment: the quality of the education, the experience of the students, or how the graduates fare later in life. Instead parents have long accepted the value of the diploma on faith. And many assume that a college that charges $50,000 a year will give their child a better education than one that charges $25,000. the rest

1 Comments:

At 2:27 AM, Anonymous robroy said...

Interesting.

Harvard graduates 97.9%.

Stanford 95%

My alma mater, Rice University graduates 93%

Texas A&M, a pretty good 80%

A random black college that I checked out, Bethune Cookman 33%. (Check out similar black colleges here, http://tinyurl.com/menpz3 )

In contrast, black students at Florida State have a 71 percent graduation rate.

The thing I don't like about publishing this data is that there will be a push to grade inflate even more.

 

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