Do you have a link ? (curious as to some other schools as well as whether or not these are out-dated.) TIA |
It's great to have professors doing research (which is essentially what grad school rankings are all about) but for undergrads a much more relevant measure would be quality of undergrad teaching. You could have brilliant researcher not put much effort into teaching undergrads, which doesn't strengthen the undergrads at all. |
That's why a school like Dartmouth is so strong for undergrad even though none of its graduate programs are really esteemed. They still educate the best of the best |
This argument just doesn't hold. The idea that brilliant researchers are at odds with undergraduate teaching just isn't true. If you want to master a subject, it is better to learn from the top minds in your field. Every department measures undergraduate teaching and provides faculty feedback. The top departments have more faculty and graduate students that offer subject matter expertise and resources to provide better undergraduate courses. |
| University of Chicago was 4% this year ... just crazy |
What are at odds are focus and time. At a high level, a faculty member can devote time to 1) Research 2) Graduate Student Education 3) Undergraduate Education. The schools that are more research and graduate driven devote more time obviously to 1 and 2 to the detriment of 3. But it is worse than that. Schools have to come up with some part of overall research expenditure from institutional resources (20% or more). Although university finances are typically murky, it is a solid bet that some part of that is (unknowingly) paid for by undergraduates through tuition and fees. |
Top faculty with expertise in their field to offer to undergraduate courses also all do research. If you want faculty that do not conduct research, that is more comparable to highly educated high school teachers. |
Again, it is focus and time. Look at the extreme, if the faculty do nothing but research, they do not benefit undergraduate education in any meaningful way. Simple as that. A real world example. Berkeley has great researchers and graduate programs. That is their focus. If you look over at Niche or Princeton Review to capture what undergraduate students say about their professors, the story doesn't look quite as great. They get comparatively low ratings for availability, effort, attention to success, etc. |
I would attribute the problems at Berkeley to being a public university. |
There are public universities with much better Princeton Review and Niche professor/teaching ratings than Berkeley. |
True. Michigan, for example, ranks #16 in undergraduate teaching at USNWR. |
Please enlighten us with all of the top ten graduate programs available at Duke. |
Michigan doesn’t have the budget problems that Berkeley has. |
| Duke has a lemur center! I've been, it's super cool. Not a deciding factor unless your kid loves primatology though. |
The MBA program was just ranked 6th in the recent US News listing. And is top 10 on most lists. There are really only 2 other grad programs - Engineering and Medicine. All 3 are small. |