Schools

U.S. News & World Report 2017 College Rankings: Where Will U-M, MSU Rank?

The much-anticipated annual college rankings will be released Tuesday. Check back with Patch for rankings as they become available.

Last year, the University of Michigan was ranked 29th and Michigan State University was ranked 75th in U.S. News & World Report’s rankings of the best colleges in America.

Did the schools go up in the rankings, remain the same or slip? We’ll find out Tuesday when the 2017 rankings are revealed.

It’s a list that parents and kids will want to pay attention to. Deciding where to attend college is often the biggest decision a high school student will have to make, and it’s one that is typically just as nerve-wracking for the parents.

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The process of college-hunting can lead to information overload, but U.S. News’ rankings are considered an important resource for many. The news organization spends months compiling data from hundreds of schools around the country. While U.S. News & World Report ended its print magazine in 2010, it still publishes online and a print version of its college rankings.

The 2017 version of the college rankings will be released Tuesday. Check back with Patch later Tuesday morning for the full rankings.

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So, how are the rankings compiled?

U.S. News will release its full methodology Wednesday. But U.S. News Chief Data Strategist Robert Morse told Patch that the publication considers objective factors such as graduation and retention rates.

“College is expensive,” Morse told Patch in an email. “In addition to considering factors like location, cost, course offerings and activities, families should pay close attention to graduation and retention rates.

“These are important indicators of how well a school supports its students academically and financially. The Best Colleges rankings measure academic excellence, and we believe that students and their families should strongly consider academic quality when choosing a college.”

Typically, the prestigious Ivy League schools have a stronghold on the top of U.S. News’s lists. Last year, for instance, Princeton University, Harvard University and Yale University took the first three slots on the national rankings.

That’s all well and good for the best of the best high school students, but what about the rest?

The rankings are broken out by state and by category. Students and parents can also look at the publication’s rankings of best value schools and best public schools and the best schools by discipline such as engineering and business.

They can also drill down and see how specific schools perform across several metrics.

“U.S. News believes that the more information that is available to students, the better,” Morse told Patch. “Rankings, done right, are a useful source of information for students. U.S. News rankings focus specifically on assessing academic quality of schools. If academic quality is a top priority, our rankings are an ideal place to start.”

Photo of Beaumont Tower on Michigan State University campus by Rory Finneren via Flickr Commons

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