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NEWS SERVICES |
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News Release
| For immediate use |
Aug. 18, 2006 -- No. 380 |
UNC leads in student accessibility, ranks 5th
among publics in U.S. News & World Report list
CHAPEL HILL - The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill remains the national
leader among public universities in promoting student accessibility, according
to the latest U.S. News and World Report rankings.
UNC ranked first among public campuses for the second consecutive year in the
magazine's "Great Schools, Great Prices" list, based on academic quality
and the net cost of attendance for a student who receives the average level
of need-based financial aid. UNC placed ninth among all public and private universities,
up from 10th last year.
These rankings are part of the annual U.S. News "America's Best Colleges"
issue and come when UNC is enrolling its third class of Carolina Covenant Scholars.
The program, a first among major public universities, guarantees a debt-free
education to qualified low-income students. Several prestigious public and private
universities and at least one state (Wisconsin) have followed Carolina's lead
in creating similar programs.
"We continue to benchmark our progress against the critical university
priorities that will determine Carolina's future success and best benefit the
people of North Carolina," said Chancellor James Moeser. "Student
accessibility and faculty resources are two examples of areas in which the U.S.
News analysis is helpful in gauging our overall position and the strength of
our positive momentum."
Moeser said Carolina was committed to maintaining its national leadership position
among public campuses in providing access to qualified students and continuing
aggressive efforts to improve faculty compensation and retention.
"With generous appropriations in the last budget from the North Carolina
General Assembly and the strong support of UNC President Erskine Bowles, we
are making great strides forward with strengthening efforts to recruit and retain
top faculty," he said. "A great faculty is the key to sustaining the
kind of learning environment that provides the best possible education to our
undergraduates."
Among public universities, Carolina ranked fifth for the sixth consecutive year
in the U.S. News rankings. The University of California at Berkeley ranked first,
followed by the universities of Michigan and Virginia (tied for second), and
the University of California at Los Angeles at fourth. These five campuses have
taken turns holding the top five spots for the past several years.
Overall, Carolina tied for 27th - the same as last year - among public and private
campuses with Tufts University and the University of Southern California. Other
top publics ranked between 21st (Berkeley) and 26th (UCLA).
The new rankings appear in the 2007 "America's Best Colleges" guidebook
and will be posted at www.usnews.com Friday
(Aug. 18) at 12:01 a.m. EDT. The Aug. 28 edition and the guidebook hit newsstands
Monday (Aug. 21).
The rankings formula considers responses to opinion surveys about academic excellence
from peer campus presidents, provosts or admissions officials. Objective data
covers student retention rates, faculty resources, student selectivity, financial
resources, graduation rates and alumni giving.
Faculty resources is the category of particular interest to UNC. Carolina held
steady - dropping from 39th to 40th - among publics and privates after advancing
a whopping 32 places the prior two years. It was still UNC's second best showing
in the past seven years; the lowest was 71st twice during that period.
In faculty resources, U.S. News examined snapshots of class size (fewer than
20 students and 50 students or more); average faculty compensation in 2004-05
and 2005-06; proportion of full-time faculty and with the highest degree in
their field; and student-faculty ratio. That the U.S. News analysis included
faculty pay from 2004-05 is significant since that data reflected a freeze on
campus-based tuition set by the UNC system during the prior academic year because
of the state's poor economy. Campus-based tuition helps support faculty salaries.
In 2003-04, with no campus-based tuition revenue available, UNC-Chapel Hill
faculty received an average 2.48 percent raise. In the prior three years and
two since, the combination of tuition revenue and state appropriations funded
increases ranging from 2.5 percent to 5.6 percent.
UNC's own measures of excellence, developed in 2002 in consultation with trustees,
emphasize indicators that the university provides an outstanding, intellectually
challenging liberal arts education for undergraduates. The university has invested
its resources based on these key priorities such as class size.
In 2005, 50 percent of UNC's course sections enrolled fewer than 20 students.
That was third among the major publics, behind Berkeley (59 percent) and UCLA
(51 percent). U.S. News considered an additional measure: only 11 percent of
UNC's course sections enrolled 50 or more students in 2005, holding steady from
the previous year and leading all top public campuses.
Another category - least debt among students - listed UNC 18th among publics
and 22nd overall, with 34 percent of all graduating seniors posting an average
debt of $13,801 in 2005. In past years, less than a quarter of UNC's graduating
students accumulated debt. Among undergraduates, 32 percent received need-based
financial aid in 2005-06. UNC met full need for undergraduates, with two-thirds
of that need coming from scholarships and grants and the remaining third from
loans and work-study jobs.
Since 1999, when UNC-Chapel Hill enacted a campus-based tuition increase, 35
percent of that revenue has been dedicated to providing grants for students
with need. Every needy student received a grant that covered the cost of a campus
tuition hike.
In other U.S. News rankings, UNC's Kenan-Flagler Business School tied for fifth
with New York University and the University of Texas at Austin among undergraduate
business degree programs. Kenan-Flagler was third among publics. In specialty
areas, Kenan-Flagler was fourth for management and tied for fifth for marketing.
U.S. News also included UNC in a category called "programs to look for,"
highlighting outstanding academic programs that lead to student success. UNC
was among 39 overall for first-year experiences programs, which include first-year
seminars and other programs bringing small groups of students with faculty and
staff on a regular basis. UNC was among 22 public campuses selected for this
list.
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Related link: http://www.unc.edu/depts/design/academic_excellence/
UNC contact: Mike McFarland, (919) 962-8593, mike_mcfarland@unc.edu
U.S. News contact: CollegePR@usnews.com