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Later this week, U.S. News & World Report will release its annual "Best Colleges" issue, prompting robust sales and the usual flurry of press releases by schools touting their standings on the list. The rankings will also cause heartburn for some college presidents.
This year, 62 presidents are fighting back. They have signed a letter asking colleagues across the country to refuse to fill out the magazine's survey about the reputations of their peers -- a key part of the ranking. They also asked colleges to refrain from using the results in promotional materials.
"We believe these rankings are misleading and do not serve well the interests of prospective students in finding a college or university that is well suited to their education beyond high school," the letter said. It added that the list encourages "wasteful spending and gamesmanship" among schools.
Here's how some area colleges and universities fared in last year's U.S. News & World Report rankings.
Among national universities, the major category:
Duke University: eighth
UNC-Chapel Hill: tied for 27th
Wake Forest University: 30th
N.C. State University: tied for 81st
Among liberal arts colleges:
Davidson College - 10th
Among the South's best institutions that focus on undergraduate and master's programs rather than doctoral degrees:
Elon University: third
Appalachian State University: 12th
Meredith College: 15th
UNC-Wilmington: 20th
UNC-Charlotte: 31st
Warren Wilson College: 37th
Campbell University: 44th
Western Carolina University: 52nd
Gardner-Webb: 61st
The letter was signed primarily by leaders of small universities and liberal arts schools such as Dickinson College, Kenyon College, Drew University and Furman University.
On Wednesday, U.S. News Editor Brian Kelly said survey responses had dipped this year, but there's no way to attribute that to the college presidents' letter. Kelly said responses were due the week of the Virginia Tech shooting, which preoccupied the higher education world.
Kelly said the magazine always looks for ways to improve the rankings, which put the late August issue among the 10 annual best-sellers.
"Our main audience for this is parents and students," Kelly said. "We're not writing this for college presidents."
So far, no North Carolina higher education leaders have signed the letter. College presidents might not like the rankings, but many are fully engaged in the horse-race syndrome that results. Some take a realistic approach to U.S. News, the Princeton Review, Kiplinger's and other rankings that have become part of the American way of shopping for college.
Anne Ponder, chancellor of UNC-Asheville, brought up the boycott at a senior management retreat during the summer, but ultimately decided "having rankings that help us promote ourselves to students who otherwise wouldn't know about us, was, on balance a great thing."
Ponder said UNCA, which generally does well in rankings, won't use the U.S. News logo on its marketing materials, as some colleges do. And she said she would never make a decision about university priorities based on how it would affect rankings.
Ponder does see value in them because they measure important attributes such as small class size and faculty salary levels. "Those things tell the public about higher education," she said.
Alternative measures
At a time when the federal government is calling for more transparency and accountability from higher education, alternatives to rankings are sprouting.
One that has gained momentum in recent years is the National Survey of Student Engagement, called the "Nessie," which measures how undergraduates spend their time and what they gain from their college experience.
In the past year, 610 colleges participated in the survey that takes into account active learning, academic challenge and study abroad experience. But the data is not released without each college's permission.
Opponents of the U.S. News rankings are looking for their own new system of information about colleges.
Next month, educational leaders and researchers will gather at Yale University for a conference titled, "Beyond Ranking." The event is sponsored by the Educational Conservancy, a nonprofit organization that organized the presidents' letter against the U.S. News rankings.
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