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New England is home to many elite collegiate institutions. Several of the region’s colleges and universities were recognized in U.S. News & World Report’s latest college rankings.
New England made a strong showing on the publication’s best national universities list, with schools in the region accounting for four of the top 10 schools. The region’s top two universities, according to the publication — MIT and Harvard University — were once again beaten out by Princeton University, which has held the number-one spot for over a decade.
For the second year in a row, MIT beat Harvard for the second place slot. Harvard once again had to share third place with Stanford University.
The other New England schools which made the top 10 national universities were: Yale University, which ranked fifth, and Brown University, which ranked ninth (along with Northwestern University and John Hopkins University).
Massachusetts also kept its dominance among the country’s liberal arts colleges. Williams College and Amherst College ranked first and second, as they have for the past several years. Wellesley College wasn’t far behind, coming in fourth, and Maine’s Bowdoin College made the top 10 by coming in ninth place.
U.S. News said it evaluated nearly 1,500 four-year American institutions on as many as 19 measures for its 39th annual ranking. The most heavily weighted metrics included graduation rates, how well an institution’s actual graduation rate matched its expected graduation rate, academic reputation, and how much a school spent on financial aid per student on average.
“These statistics only pertain to measures reflecting academic quality and graduate outcomes – factors that are universally important to prospective students. But also important are considerations that vary person-to-person, like campus culture, strength in specific majors and financial aid offered,” it wrote on a webpage about its methodology. “In short, the rankings should be used as a tool for discovering the best fit schools; combined with personal considerations and additional resources.”
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