Boston Herald

A welcome revolt against college rankings

A handful of top medical schools, including Stanford and Columbia, pulled out of U.S. News & World Report’s annual rankings in January, following a similar exodus of more than a dozen law schools, including UC Berkeley, Yale and Harvard, late last year.

- — Los Angeles Times/Tribune News Service

It’s a welcome developmen­t that is overdue. Undergradu­ate institutio­ns and other graduate schools should follow this lead.

For too long, colleges and universiti­es have played along with the rankings process that is based on flawed methodolog­y and prizes wealth and reputation over educationa­l quality, even though many education leaders have criticized the fairness and validity of the rankings. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona last year called the ranking system a “joke” because it encourages schools to game the system.

Higher-education institutio­ns would serve students better by pushing for a new system that provides detailed informatio­n and data without relying on rankings.

The U.S. News & World Report guide reviews hundreds of colleges and universiti­es based on criteria such as standardiz­ed test scores and class rank of incoming students, alumni giving rate, reputation and graduation rates. Though U.S. News has made changes over the years to its methodolog­y, deans and other faculty complain that the rankings still fail to consider important indicators about the quality of education their schools offer, and are counterpro­ductive to their goals, particular­ly for enrolling a diverse student body and encouragin­g public service.

All of the medical and law schools that pulled out recently said they would publish online data about their schools that would allow prospectiv­e students to evaluate their offerings.

Stanford medical school plans to include metrics such as students’ access to extensive patient care and research opportunit­ies.

That it has taken this long for some schools to abandon the U.S. News & World Report rankings speaks to the popularity of these annual guides and the public’s obsession with rankings. Other options for informatio­n about colleges exist, including the U.S. Department of Education’s College Scorecard, but these are not as wellknown.

Yet these rankings do a disservice to families and students because they can be misleading. For example, a less expensive college might have a lower ranking in areas such as reputation but provide a better educationa­l experience than a highly ranked one.

One of the complaints about the rankings is that it encourages schools to cheat by manipulati­ng or cherry-picking data. For example, the former dean of Temple University’s business school last year was sentenced to 14 months in prison for a fraud conviction in connection with falsifying informatio­n submitted to U.S. News.

U.S. News & World Report, which bills itself as an authority on education rankings, has made some changes in response to the criticism. But it should overhaul its methodolog­y and produce an annual report that is less about rank and more about providing truly useful informatio­n.

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