<p>Berkeley: +1 to 23 (jumped Georgetown)
UCLA: no change @ 25 (tied w/ Wake Forest & UVirginia both years)
UCSD: -2 to 37 (jumped by GeorgiaIT and URochester)
UC Davis +1 to 38 (tied w/ Case Western Reserve, Lehigh, UMiami)
UCSB -3 to 42 (tied w/ UWisconsin and UWashington)
UCI -4 to 45</p>
<p>In other words college rankings are total BS</p>
<p>There are different kinds of institutions, so US News splits them into four groups: National Universities, Regional Universities, National Liberal Arts Colleges, and Regional Liberal Arts Colleges.</p>
<p>This is because you can’t really compare, say, Claremont McKenna with UCLA. They’re both great, but very different. That said, the “regional” categories are generally less prestigious than the “national” categories. At the same time, I’d rank University of Redlands (a top regional) above Azusa Pacific University (a low-ranked national)–and even though these two are in different categories they’re similar in a lot of ways. APU hardly does the sort of research you’d see at a UC.</p>
<p>CSUs are considered regional universities, but only a few are ranked (Cal Poly SLO is the top-ranked of them).</p>
<p>But as someone else said, the US News rankings, especially, are total BS. Schools don’t change much in a single year, but somehow schools always manage to move around (largely because of arbitrary changes to the ranking methodology, from what I understand).</p>