<p>I attend a small-medium (10,000-11,000 undergrads) public flagship and was shocked to see that the four year grad rate is 19%! Curious, I looked at my home state’s much larger, higher ranked (around US News 100 or so), more selective university and saw that their four year graduation rate was around 16-17%! I know there are various reasons why people graduate late (my mom and dad took 5 and 22 years, respectively, to earn their bachelor’s degrees!)–add a double major late in the process ,student teaching, switch majors junior year, but still, these incredibly low rates shock me–my home state flagship you even broke down the data by admissions index and honors college statistic, and the “best” incoming students still had four year grad. rates of around ~40%. This is especially surprising as most of the seniors that I’ve known (largely through my sorority) have graduated in four years.</p>
<p>What could be the cause of this? Tiered scheduling? Poor advising, maybe? (I’m on a four year renewable merit scholarship and so “need” to graduate in four years–with a double major and minor, I spend a significant amount of time each semester planning out my schedule for all for the remaining semesters, looking at historic trends in course scheduling [even down to the time offered, etc.] and so om I imagine if someone didn’t do this, they could end up surprised by a scheduling snafu… and so could I, for that matter!) </p>
<p>And with such low four year graduation rates, do these public schools end up being significantly more expensive than one might expect?</p>