In 2008, Forbes.com began publishing an annual list, prepared by the Center for College Affordability and Productivity of "America's Best Colleges". Student satisfaction (evaluations from RateMyProfessors.com, retention rates and targeted student satisfaction surveys on Facebook) constitutes 75% of the score. Post-graduate success (self-reported salaries of alumni from PayScale, alumni appearing on the CCAP's America's Leaders List) constitutes 32.5% of the score. Student debt loads constitute 25% of the score. The graduation rate (the proportion of students who complete four-year degrees in four years) constitutes 7.5% of the score. Academic success (the proportion of students receiving nationally competitive awards) constitutes 10% of the score. Public reputation is not considered, which causes some colleges to score lower than in other lists. A three-year moving average is used to smooth out the scoring.
Starting in 2013, four schools that had admitted to misreporting admissions data were removed from the list for two years. The four removed colleges were Bucknell University, Claremont McKenna College, Emory University, and Iona College.
2017 list
America's Best Colleges Ranked - The Princeton Review is out with its annual ranking of colleges. This year's guide covers everything from best classroom to best party school. Russ Mitchell reports.
- Harvard University
- Stanford University
- Yale University
- Princeton University
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- California Institute of Technology
- University of Pennsylvania
- Duke University
- Brown University
- Pomona College
- Claremont McKenna College
- Dartmouth College
- Williams College
- Columbia University
- Cornell University
- University of Chicago
- Amherst College
- Harvey Mudd College
- Swarthmore College
- United States Naval Academy
- Georgetown University
- Rice University
- Bowdoin College
- United States Military Academy
- Haverford College
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