Monday, November 27, 2023

Top 4 Student Factors in College Search Process


There are a multitude of factors that influence students’ decisions as to where to spend their college years. In a survey, earlier this year, of undergraduate and graduate students, BestColleges.com found the top four factors to be affordability, student outcomes, flexibility and accessibility to specific programs, and college rankings/reputation.

Students are wise to focus on affordability, as more than half of graduating students this past year left college in debt; the average debt for New Jerseys students was $35,202. Cost conscious students often favor in-state public colleges and universities, such as The College of New Jersey and Rutgers, where annual tuition is currently less that $18,000 before any need-based aid. While most students seek to live on or off campus during their college years, those who choose to commute from home can avoid the additional expense of room and board which at times can even exceed the cost of tuition.

Monday, November 20, 2023

College Board’s New College Search Guide Features

A college investment is one of the largest expenses that most families will face in their lifetime.  So, the key is to do some serious homework to identify best-fit colleges where students can prepare for the careers of their dreams at a college that meets their academic and social preferences.  

College Board’s BigFuture website offers a free college search feature that is an ideal place for families to start their research. There they will find a college search database with information on more than 2,400 four-year colleges in the U.S.  As students select the specific criteria that are important to them, such as school size, location, availability of on-campus housing, choice of major, etc., the list of appropriate colleges starts to shrink.  

 

For example, if a student clicks on “location” and chooses New Jersey, Delaware and Pennsylvania as options, the list shrinks to 191 potential colleges.  If the student then clicks “majors” and indicates that he/she is seeking Business and Management, the list reduces to 153 good-fit colleges.  If the student then identifies a preference for an urban setting, the list further narrows to 31 colleges.  Without leaving their computer, students can vastly narrow down the list of colleges worthy of further investigation.

Saturday, November 11, 2023

The Actual College Graduation Rate Statistics

“What is your four-year graduation rate?” This may be one of the most important questions that college-bound students and their parents can ask when considering a potential college.  An article in Money stated, “the failure to graduate students in four years has become so commonplace that schools are now showing you their six-year graduation rate.” Unfortunately, that fact often is not very evident.

The “Best Colleges” Guide by U.S. News & World Report, considered a top resource of college information, lists the graduation rate as one of its key criteria in ranking hundreds of colleges and universities.  Readers may assume it indicates a four-year graduation rate, but it’s actually a six-year graduation rate.

A government website that provides a gamut of extremely helpful information to college-bound students and their parents is collegescorecard.ed.gov. One key category, addressing the graduation rate at U.S. colleges and universities, states, “The graduation rate for degree granting schools is the proportion of entering students that graduated at this school within 8 years of entry…”   Students and parents who are budgeting for a college diploma need to know, in advance, whether to multiply the annual cost of attendance (including tuition, fees, room, board, and books) by four or six or even eight!

Sunday, November 5, 2023

Free College Planning Search Tool

Ten years ago, the government created “College Scorecard” to be used as a type of Consumer Reports for colleges. Ever since then, data has been collected on colleges throughout the U.S. regarding the costs of attending, the graduation rates, and the actual salaries that alumni were earning, based on specific degrees, four years after graduation.  Numbers don’t lie, so students and parents can now enter the college process wide-eyed, able to compare the cost of earning a particular degree at a specific college with the salary that its alumni are earning early in their career.

The website featuring this information is collegescorecard.ed.gov  

 

By typing in Rutgers, for example, then choosing the New Brunswick campus and bachelor’s degree, data appears showing that the graduation rate (within 8 years of entering the school) is 83% with an average annual cost of $15,000 after accounting for financial aid and scholarships.  By clicking Rutgers University – New Brunswick, and expanding “Fields of Study,” one can access the median earnings of alumni sorted by major four years after graduation.  By choosing Rutgers graduates with a degree in Computer and Information Sciences, for example, you will find median earnings of $114,399 four years after earning their bachelor’s degree, while those with a degree in Psychology were earning a median salary of $49,641.