The Denver Post

Colorado College out of U.S. News & World Report rankings

- By Jason Gonzales Chalkbeat Colorado is a nonprofit news organizati­on covering education issues.

Colorado College will no longer participat­e in U. S. News & World Report’s annual rankings of “best colleges.” In withdrawin­g, college leaders said they believe the rankings equate wealth and privilege with academic quality — and go against the values of the school.

Colorado College joins a growing list of high-profile law and medical schools that have announced they will no longer submit data to the publicatio­n. The school is one of the magazine’s highest-ranked liberal arts colleges to withdraw from participat­ion.

As one of the state’s most selective schools — for the Class of 2026, it admitted about 550 students out of 11,026 applicants, or about 5% of applicants — withdrawin­g from the rankings is probably a low-risk move for the college, though it may lower the school’s profile somewhat among outof-state students.

School leaders say the move will show prospectiv­e students the school is serious about its values of becoming a more diverse, anti- racist campus that provides opportunit­y for students from a range of background­s. Currently, the student body is twothirds white and just 8% of its students are eligible for federal Pell grants, a measure of economic status. Tuition alone is about $67,500 a year.

Pedro de Araujo, vice president and dean of the college, said the college has tried to rethink how to attract and graduate students from Colorado, including those who are from low-income families and students of color. He said the school plans to use its own data to illustrate how it helps students graduate and achieve social mobility. The U.S. News & World Report rankings have not done well in explaining that, he said.

“This is step one,” de Araujo said. “It is continuing to fulfill our anti-racism commitment, continuing to look at our internal policies and see if they’re not aligned with our values, and then start to change that.”

U. S. News & World Report will still rank the school, but based on publicly available data. That could mean the school may fall from its position as the 27th “best” liberal arts college.

The U.S. News & World Report rankings are provided as a way for families to make college decisions. But the rankings have drawn scrutiny for years.

Some college leaders have said the rankings favor reputation and institutio­nal wealth over whether an education is top notch. Critics say the rankings even influence admission policies, leading schools to prioritize students with high SAT scores whose families can pay out of pocket without incurring debt, over recruiting diverse, well-rounded students. Colorado College officials say their admission policies have not been shaped by a desire for a higher ranking.

The annual rankings judge colleges on 17 measures, including graduation and retention rates, selectivit­y, and financial resources per student.

Reputation weighs heavily into the factors compared with measures such as whether schools improve students’ long-term socioecono­mic status. Student debt also factors into the rankings, and critics say schools that admit wealthier students are more likely to rank highly on that metric.

James Murphy of the college advocacy group Education Reform Now said there’s no downside for a school to stop participat­ing in the rankings, especially if they want to diversify their campus.

“Racial and ethnic diversity play no role in the rankings as far as I can tell,” said Murphy, the group’s deputy director of higher education policy.

The Colorado College student body is about twothirds white; students from low-income families make up only a small portion. Recently the college has sought to become more representa­tive of the state, de Araujo said.

The school committed to becoming an anti-racist campus that pushes for more diversity and inclusion, such as programs and support for students and reviews of policies. It made standardiz­ed testing optional on applicatio­ns, in the hopes it can attract students from different background­s. It is committed to support students from Colorado financiall­y and so they don’t pay more than the cost of attendance at the University of Colorado Boulder.

The number of freshmen from low-income families has increased slightly, Murphy said.

Not cooperatin­g with the magazine rankings may cost the college some national visibility and outof-state applicatio­ns, Murphy said.

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