<p>That’s true, but they do the same for all these colleges (and the sticker price plays no part in the computation). I view this as the “average” debt load per student who graduates. The usual suspects are “good” (HP, Rice, WashU…) and “bad” (NYU!!!)</p>
<p>It’s interesting to compare numbers quoted here on CC with this model. U Rochester is often listed as quite generous, but they are near the top of the scale (i.e. large student debt). They are third after NYU and RPI. Not clear if that’s because they give lots of small awards or whether more of their students cannot pay the EFC.</p>
<p>I wonder why these numbers are so different than what is reported as “average indebtedness at graduation” on the College Board site. For many of the private schools it appears that the debt numbers are nearly double on the College Board site vs this study. For instance, Dartmouth reports about $19K indebtedness at graduation on its College Board profile, while it shows only about 9K in this study ([College</a> Search - Dartmouth College - Cost & Financial Aid](<a href=“College Search - BigFuture | College Board”>College Search - BigFuture | College Board)).<br>
Other variances are Princeton ($5200 vs $2500), Notre Dame ($27K vs $13K), Emory($26K vs $12K). Not surprising, NYU does not report their indebtedness on its College Board profile. The study uses DOE numbers and simply divides the total amount of money borrowed by undergraduates by the total number of degrees awarded. Perhaps the DOE is only looking at federal loans while the schools report total, including private loans? thoughts?</p>