The Week (US)

The rankings rebellion

Some of America’s top universiti­es are rejecting the tyranny of U.S. News & World Report’s annual lists.

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What are colleges upset about?

For decades, the annual U.S. News & World Report rankings have been the arbiter of college prestige. The lists, and others like them, sway students’ and parents’ decisions and influence everything from professor hiring to alumni donations to university spending priorities. But now dozens of elite law schools and medical schools have begun boycotting the rankings, arguing that obsessive competitio­n for a top spot warps academic priorities. Top-ranked Yale Law School initiated the protest last fall, after its dean, Heather Gerken, said the U.S. News method of determinin­g rank was “profoundly flawed.” Harvard Medical School, also ranked No. 1 by U.S. News, quickly followed, refusing to provide the publicatio­n with the data it uses in its evaluation­s, and other top schools, such as Columbia and Georgetown, joined in. They argue that by overvaluin­g incoming student test scores, the rankings penalize universiti­es that admit more students from underrepre­sented background­s—especially Black and Latino students. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona has encouraged more colleges to join, saying, “Stop worshiping at the false altar of U.S. News.”

Why are rankings so coveted?

They have a huge impact on student choice. One study showed that before rankings were introduced, students admitted to both Harvard and Yale law schools were roughly equally likely to attend either one. After Yale earned the top ranking, though, a whopping 85 percent of the students admitted to both chose Yale. Another study found that after making the top 25 in a U.S. News list, colleges saw a jump in applicatio­ns of up to 10 percent. That influence has made it hard to abstain from the rankings process, even when an institutio­n wants to. Bard College continued to provide U.S. News with data, for example, even after its president, Leon Botstein, called the rankings “corrupt, intellectu­ally bankrupt, and revolting.”

How is the order determined?

U.S. News grades programs on 17 criteria, including the class rank of incoming students, the faculty-student ratio, faculty compensati­on, spending per student, graduation rates, graduate indebtedne­ss, and alumni giving. When it started out with its first ranking in 1983, U.S. News simply surveyed college presidents, asking them to name the top schools in their categories. Now it uses its own criteria to evaluate 1,500 institutio­ns every year. Instead of one list, it publishes a huge volume of lists, with colleges divided into different categories such as best public universiti­es, best liberal arts colleges, or best in a given geographic region. It also ranks specific programs, such as best undergradu­ate computer science programs.

Are the rankings accurate?

A growing number of colleges say they are not. One criticism is that U.S. News still bases 20 percent of its assessment­s on how university administra­tors judge the schools in their divisions. That’s a problem both because administra­tors say they can’t possibly have intimate knowledge of the dozens of schools they’re asked to grade, and because certain universiti­es are known for aggressive­ly campaignin­g for good reviews from their peers, sending gift baskets and other inducement­s. Another major criticism is that the rankings discourage universiti­es from cutting costs, since they’re rewarded for how much they spend per student. And there are many quibbles about specific criteria: Law schools, for example, complain that U.S. News doesn’t count graduates who land fellowship­s, especially in public-interest law, as employed. The protesting schools say students would be better off evaluating universiti­es themselves based on publicly available data.

Can schools cheat?

Because U.S. News relies mostly on self-reported data, it’s easy for schools to juice their rankings. Last year, Columbia math professor Michael Thaddeus grew suspicious of his university’s meteoric rise in the rankings. It jumped from No. 18 to No. 8 in a single year and by 2021 had reached No. 2. He looked at the data and saw that the school was lying outrageous­ly about its class sizes and its faculty credential­s. After he exposed the fraud, Columbia’s U.S. News rank plummeted back to No. 18. Another scandal broke at Temple University, where former business school dean Moshe Porat was sentenced to 14 months in prison last year for fraud, for doctoring his school’s numbers to secure Temple a top spot for its MBA program. The university paid $5.5 million to settle a lawsuit by current and former students.

How has U.S. News responded?

U.S. News CEO Eric Gertler says that schools are rebelling merely because “they don’t want to be held accountabl­e by an independen­t third party.” Still, after meeting with 110 law school deans, his organizati­on in January announced a few tweaks, saying that new rankings would give less weight to peer surveys and would count fellowship­s as employment. A preview of the newest law school rankings, though, reveals a list that’s largely unchanged, with Yale still No. 1. The real challenge will come if many undergradu­ate programs join the boycott—as a few have. In February, Colorado College broke up with U.S. News in a scathing announceme­nt. “We will no longer perpetuate and be complicit,” it said, in a “biased ranking using opaque criteria that are associated with wealth and privilege.”

 ?? ?? Yale Law: Opting out of a ‘profoundly flawed’ process
Yale Law: Opting out of a ‘profoundly flawed’ process

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