This ranking is really interesting. Don't you agree? Look how many states schools dominate the top 20 (mostly california). I guess the schools with more money are not necessarily the better schools!
This ranking is really interesting. Don't you agree? Look how many states schools dominate the top 20 (mostly california). I guess the schools with more money are not necessarily the better schools!
It is interesting. In a similar fashion, schools on the eastern seaboard dominate the top 50 (National-Doctoral) USNWR rankings (just over 1/2 as I recall).
None of this really make a lot of sense, though, because they rank large unversities as a whole when many operate as discrete units. For example, although UPenn and UMich-Ann Arbor are ranked 15 and 16, respectively, I'd certainly choose either of those schools over the others if I were seeking a Bachelor's in business (with the exception of MIT, of course). Further, if I had my sights on medicine, I might choose some virtually unknown school, such as Knox College, that happens to get roughly 90% of their graduates accepted to med school.