To establish the set of colleges included in the rankings, we started with the 1,586 colleges in the 50 states that are listed in the U.S. Department of Education’s Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) and have a 2021 Carnegie basic classification of doctoral, master’s, and baccalaureate colleges, are not exclusively graduate colleges, participate in federal financial aid programs, and had not announced an impending closure as of June 1, 2023. We then excluded 35 colleges with fewer than 100 undergraduate students in any year they were open between fall 2019 and fall 2021, five colleges with an average of 25 or fewer students in the federal graduation rate cohort in 2019 through 2021, and an additional 23 colleges with an average of 10 or fewer Pell Grant recipients earning bachelor’s degrees during the same time period.

Next, we decided to exclude the five federal military academies (Air Force, Army, Coast Guard, Merchant Marine, and Navy) because their unique missions make them difficult to evaluate using our methodology. Our rankings are based in part on the percentage of students receiving Pell Grants and the percentage of students enrolled in the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC), whereas the service academies provide all students with free tuition (and thus no Pell Grants or student loans) and commission graduates as officers in the armed services (and thus not the ROTC program). Finally, we dropped an additional 31 colleges for not having data on at least one of our key social mobility outcomes (percent Pell, graduation rate, or net price). This resulted in a final sample of 1,487 colleges and includes public, private nonprofit, and for-profit colleges. 

Our rankings consist of three equally weighted portions: social mobility, research, and community and national service. This means that top-ranked colleges needed to be excellent across the full breadth of our measures, rather than excelling in just one measure. In order to ensure that each measurement contributed equally to a college’s score within any given category, we standardized each data element so that each had a mean of zero and a standard deviation of one (unless noted). Missing social mobility data (affecting less than 1 percent of all observations) were imputed and noted with “N/A” in the rankings tables. We adjusted data to account for statistical outliers by allowing no college’s performance in any single area to exceed five standard deviations from the mean of the data set. All measures (unless noted) use an average of the three most recent years of data in an effort to get a better picture of a college’s performance rather than statistical noise. 

The social mobility portion of the rankings also doubles as our Best Bang for the Buck rankings, with the exception that the main rankings are by Carnegie classification while the Best Bang for the Buck rankings are by region (while predicted rates are calculated by Carnegie classification). We used a college’s graduation rate over eight years for all students instead of the first-time, full-time graduation rate that is typically used but presents an incomplete picture of a college’s success. This graduation rate counted for 20 percent of the social mobility score. Half of that score was determined by the reported graduation rate and the other half came from comparing the reported graduation rate to a predicted graduation rate based on the percentage of Pell recipients, the percentage of students receiving student loans, the admit rate, the racial/ethnic and gender makeup of the student body, the number of students (overall and full-time), and whether a college is primarily residential. We estimated this predicted graduation rate measure in a regression model separately for each classification using average data from the last three years, imputing for missing data when necessary. Colleges with graduation rates that are higher than the “average” college with similar stats score better than colleges that match or, worse, undershoot the mark. A few colleges had predicted graduation rates over 100 percent, which we then trimmed back to 100 percent.

We used IPEDS data comparing graduation rates of Pell and non-Pell students to develop a Pell graduation gap measure. Colleges that had higher Pell than non-Pell graduation rates received a positive score on this measure, which was based on just the one year of available data and counted for 20 percent of a college’s score. We included the number of Pell recipients earning bachelor’s degrees, which is designed to reward colleges that successfully serve large numbers of students from lower-income families. This measure, from IPEDS, counts for 10 percent of the social mobility score. 

We also used IPEDS data for the percentage of a college’s students receiving Pell Grants to get at colleges’ commitments to educating a diverse group of students. Our measure compared actual shares of Pell students to the predicted share after controlling for ACT/SAT scores and the share of families in a state with incomes below $35,000 and between $35,001 and $75,000 per year. The Pell enrollment performance measure counted for 10 percent of the social mobility score.

We measured a college’s affordability using data from IPEDS for the average net prices paid by first-time, full-time, in-state students with family incomes below $75,000 per year over the last three years. We focused on these income categories because of our interest in affordability for students from lower-to-middle-income families. Net price counted for 20 percent of the social mobility score.

We measured post-college outcomes using actual versus predicted earnings of students 10 years after college entry (using just two cohorts of data). This captures the outcomes of graduates as well as dropouts. This metric is worth 20 percent of the social mobility score. In the past, we used student loan repayment rates as a social mobility metric, but we did not do so this year because the payment pause on federal student loans eliminated the value of this metric.

The research score for national universities is based on five measurements (from the Center for Measuring University Performance and the National Science Foundation): the total amount of an institution’s research spending; the number of science and engineering PhDs awarded by the university; the number of undergraduate alumni who have gone on to receive a PhD in any subject, relative to the size of the college; the number of faculty receiving prestigious awards, relative to the number of full-time faculty; and the number of faculty in the National Academies, relative to the number of full-time faculty. For national universities, we weighted each of these components equally to determine a college’s final score in the category. For liberal arts colleges, master’s universities, and bachelor’s colleges, which do not have extensive doctoral programs, science and engineering PhDs were excluded and we gave double weight to the number of alumni who go on to get PhDs. Faculty awards and National Academies membership were not included in the research score for these institutions because such data is available for only a relative handful of these colleges.

We determined the community service score by measuring each college’s performance across a range of measures. We compiled AmeriCorps and Peace Corps data into a combined metric. We used an indicator for whether a college currently provides at least some matching funds for undergraduate students who had received a Segal AmeriCorps Education Award for having completed national service (two points) and a standardized measure of the share of students receiving Segal Awards. We divided the number of alumni currently serving in the Peace Corps by total enrollment, using alumni data following the program’s post-pandemic resumption. 

We judged military service by collecting data on the size of each college’s Air Force, Army, and Navy ROTC programs and dividing by the number of students. We used the percentage of federal work-study grant money spent on community service projects as a measure of how much colleges prioritize community service; this is based on data provided by the Corporation for National and Community Service. Each of these three measures was standardized using a three-year rolling average.

We added a measure for whether a college received the Carnegie Community Engagement Classification, with listed colleges receiving two points. This classification, which is housed at Albion College, rewards colleges that provide documentation of their institutional mission and broader public engagement. We used a measure of voting engagement using data from the National Study of Learning, Voting, and Engagement (NSLVE) at Tufts University and the ALL IN Campus Democracy Challenge. Colleges could earn up to six points for fulfilling each of six criteria. They could receive one point for being currently enrolled in NSLVE and up to two points for making their NSLVE survey data publicly available through ALL IN in 2018 or 2020 (one point for each year). They could receive up to two points for creating an action plan through the ALL IN Campus Democracy Challenge in 2020 or 2022 (one point for each year). A college earned one point for having a student voter registration rate above 85 percent in 2020. Finally, we added a new measure of the percentage of all degrees awarded in health, education, and social work to reward colleges that produce leaders in socially valuable fields that are not always highly paid.

We compared our rankings to the U.S. Department of Education’s list of colleges subject to the most severe level of heightened cash monitoring, which indicates that a college is facing significant financial problems or has other serious issues that need to be addressed. Four colleges (Cheyney University in Pennsylvania, Ecclesia College in Arkansas, the New School of Architecture and Design in California, and Paul Smith’s College in New York) were on that list as of March 2023. We kept these colleges in our rankings, but denoted them with ^^ to draw this concern to readers’ attention. Finally, we checked a random sample of colleges to see if they had any serious issues that had been exposed in recent news coverage. No institution had concerns that rose to the level of our removing them from our rankings.

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