Anonymous wrote:"Also, can anyone help with a list of those colleges that focus on undergraduates versus those that don't?"
Undergrad Focus:
All LACs
Princeton
Rice
Brown
Dartmouth
William and Mary
Wake Forest
Tufts
Not very undergrad focused:
UC System
Caltech
Johns Hopkins
Columbia
NYU
USC
Anonymous wrote:As a way to wade into this topic, you can start with US News which has a list (of course they do).
Based on survey of college administrators.
https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/national-universities/undergraduate-teaching
Anonymous wrote:"Also, can anyone help with a list of those colleges that focus on undergraduates versus those that don't?"
Undergrad Focus:
All LACs
Princeton
Rice
Brown
Dartmouth
William and Mary
Wake Forest
Tufts
Not very undergrad focused:
UC System
Caltech
Johns Hopkins
Columbia
NYU
USC
Anonymous wrote:A bit out Of date, but shows what data is out there.
https://mup.asu.edu/sites/default/files/mup-pdf/MUP-2013-Top-American-Research-Universities-Annual-Report.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Vs. grad level research.
A lot of small schools focus on undergrad teaching (bc many don't offer grad programs). Most big schools - State Us and private Unis focus on undergrad teaching
Anonymous wrote:Lots of research universities hire professors based on the quality of their research and the amount of grant funding they can potentially bring to the university. They may teach one undergraduate course (more likely to teach graduate level courses) each semester but teaching is secondary to research. These schools sometimes have professors whose only job is to teach larger introductory type classes but they are likely nearing retirement or are only on appointments that last for a limited time.
Other schools are more focused on building their reputations as having professors who are great teachers who will interact directly with undergraduates often providing even more education.
There are a handful of schools that try to balance these attributes.