"Perhaps a playoff is in order. For the
second straight year, Harvard and Princeton share
the top spot in the controversial U.S. News &
World Report rankings of 'America's Best
Colleges.' Princeton earned at least a tie for
the No. 1 ranking for the fifth consecutive year
of the rankings, which saw few changes among the
highest-rated schools. The latest survey, which
hits newsstands August 23, 2004, again has Yale
at No. 3, followed by the University of
Pennsylvania. The University of
California-Berkeley, at No. 21, was the top-rated
public university. It was followed at 22 by the
Universities of Virginia and Michigan-Ann Arbor
in a year that saw public universities generally
hold their own despite state budget cuts across
higher education." - Source
http://www.cnn.com/2004/EDUCATION/08/19/college.rankings.ap/index.html

Harvard, Princeton lead rankings of best colleges

Friday, August 20, 2004 Posted: 12:34 PM EDT
(1634 GMT)


AP) -- Perhaps a playoff is in order. For the
second straight year, Harvard and Princeton share
the top spot in the controversial U.S. News &
World Report rankings of "America's Best
Colleges."

Princeton earned at least a tie for the No. 1
ranking for the fifth consecutive year of the
rankings, which saw few changes among the
highest-rated schools. The latest survey, which
hits newsstands Monday, again has Yale at No. 3,
followed by the University of Pennsylvania.

The University of California-Berkeley, at No. 21,
was the top-rated public university. It was
followed at 22 by the Universities of Virginia
and Michigan-Ann Arbor in a year that saw public
universities generally hold their own despite
state budget cuts across higher education.

Williams College was the top-ranked top liberal
arts college. Cal Tech was considered the best
value among national universities based on
ranking and price, including financial aid.

The rankings are generated by a formula that
includes variables such as graduation and
retention rates, faculty and financial resources,
and the percentage of alumni who donate money to
their alma mater.

The rankings are both reviled and breathlessly
awaited by college administrators, who insist no
formula can capture the value of a college
experience but have been forced to acknowledge
the enormous role rankings play in the minds of
many applicants and parents.

Even the magazine, however, urges students to use
the rankings as just one source of information.

"Dig into the data, read the numbers, then use
that as a launching point to learn about the
nature of the school, the personality," said
Executive Editor Brian Kelly. "We say this is a
great starting point, but we don't pretend it's
anything more than that."

Princeton issued a statement saying
administrators there "were pleased to be
recognized as one of many outstanding
universities" but that formulaic rankings "cannot
capture the distinctiveness of any institution or
whether one or another university might be an
appropriate match for any individual student."

Harvard did not respond to requests for comment.

-------------------------------------------------

Copyright 2004 The Associated Press. All rights
reserved.



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