Calvin Claims Top Spot in US News Rankings

From: Phil de Haan <dehp@calvin.edu>
Date: Thu Aug 17 2006 - 09:31:44 EDT

August 18, 2006 == MEDIA ADVISORY

Calvin College is the best school in the Midwest in its category of
comprehensive bachelor's colleges according to the 2007 edition of "America's
Best Colleges," the annual U.S. News & World Report rankings guide that is
slated to hit newsstands on Monday, August 21.

Calvin is tied for the top spot with St. Mary's, Ind., in the 107-school
category, which encompasses Midwest colleges and universities that focus on
undergraduate education and offer a range of degree programs, both in the
liberal arts, which account for fewer than half of their bachelor's degrees, and
in professional fields such as business, nursing and education.

That tied-for-first ranking is up one spot from both 2005 and 2004 when Calvin
was second in the category behind St. Mary's, a women's Catholic college in
South Bend that is Notre Dame's sister school.

Calvin director of admissions Dale Kuiper is pleased to see Calvin recognized
as the best school in its category.

"The number-one ranking is a positive thing," he says, "for our students and
for prospective students. And it's also encouraging news for alumni, parents,
donors and friends of the college. But rankings can be a controversial thing in
the world of higher education. Finding a college is quite a bit different than
buying a car or a fridge. The data available in guides like U.S. News can be
helpful to high school students, parents, guidance counselors and others. And it
provides a convenient collection of criteria like graduation rates, first-year
retention rates, class sizes and student-faculty ratios. But those are only a
few of the many ways that should be used to measure whether a student will fit
well with a particular college."

Interestingly the top four schools in Calvin's category all have strong
religious ties. MIAA colleague St. Mary's is a Catholic women's college, Calvin
is part of the Reformed tradition of historic Christianity, third-ranked Taylor,
Ind., is an interdenominational, evangelical college and number-four St. Norbert
is a Catholic college in the Norbertine tradition.

U.S News & World Report has been ranking colleges since 1983 and schools
annually are rated in such categories as peer assessment, freshman retention
rate, graduation rate, full-time faculty and more.

Calvin scored the best of any school in its category in peer assessment, a
rating that measures what presidents, provosts and deans of admissions at
Calvin's competitors think of the school's academic programs. Kuiper was pleased
by that, noting that to be recognized positively by one's peers is encouraging.

Calvin also scored high in its category in percentage of faculty who are
full-time (91%), freshman retention rate (87%), graduation rate (74%) and alumni
giving rate (33%). In fact Calvin was third-best in its category for graduation
rate and fourth-best in its category for alumni giving.

Contact Dale Kuiper at 616-526-6110 or ddkuip@calvin.edu
See www.usnews.com

-end-
Received on Thu Aug 17 23:59:27 2006

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