A couple years ago, I decided to do an outcomes-based ranking to determine tiers of schools (again, mostly for bragging rights; for different career paths, like Wall Street vs. engineering vs. art vs. design, etc., I’d actually recommend different combinations of school options that don’t neatly fit in to these tiers).
At the time, I used 4 metrics:
- Percentage entering elite professional schools (for MBA/JD/MD).
- Production of “American Leaders”, who are mostly leaders in business, government, and the arts.
- Percentage winning prestigious national student awards.
- Percentage getting PhDs.
Now that I’ve found this old thread (http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/college-admissions/294885-whos-who-among-american-students.html), I’ve decided to add in a “Percentage who appear in Who’s Who” component.
Since I value professional success more than academic success (since most graduates will join the workforce rather than academia, I again value those higher). Though I assign different points to different tiers.
So for “American Leaders”, the top 25 get 3 points, the next 25 2 points, and 51-75 1 point each.
For Elite Professional Schools, Prestigious National Awards, and Who’s Who, the top 25 get 2 points each and 26-50 1 point each
For PhDs (since a PhD may not actually be all that useful), only the top 25 get 1 point.
So here’s the list (and keep in mind that schools within 2-3 points of each other are essentially the same level):
Ivies & equivalents (14 RU’s and 9 LAC’s):
10: HYPSM + WAS LACs
9: Brown, Chicago, Rice, Pomona, Haverford
8: Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Duke, Northwestern
7: UPenn, Bowdoin, Carleton, Oberlin, Smith, Wellesley
Near-Ivies (9 RU’s, 2 service academies, and 10 LAC’s):
6: Georgetown, Barnard, Wesleyan
5: Caltech, UMich, ND, UVa, Bryn Mawr, CMC, Grinnell, Middlebury, Reed, Vassar
4: Cal, Rochester, Tufts, Wisconsin-Madison, West Point, Naval Academy, Macalester, W&L
Other good schools (11 RU’s, most of them giant, 3 LAU’s, and 14 LAC’s):
3: NYU, UCLA, UIUC, UNC, Brandeis, W&M, Davidson, Harvey Mudd, New College of Florida
2: Colorado, CWRU, Indiana, Johns Hopkins, USC, UT-Austin, Vanderbilt, Lehigh, Bates, Bennington, Colby, Colgate, Hamilton, Holy Cross, Mt. Holyoke, Occidental, Pitzer, Scripps, Trinity