Can College Rankings Be Believed?

The article summarizes literature on college and university rankings worldwide and the strategies used by various ranking organizations, including those of government and popular media. It traces the history of national and global rankings, indicators used by ranking systems, and the effect of ranki...

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Main Author: Meredith Davis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier
Series:She Ji: The Journal of Design, Economics and Innovation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405872616300570
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spelling doaj-c27c3d36e6fd48708f3882a8390f6e702020-11-25T00:18:25ZengElsevierShe Ji: The Journal of Design, Economics and Innovation2405-87262321523010.1016/j.sheji.2016.11.002Can College Rankings Be Believed?Meredith DavisThe article summarizes literature on college and university rankings worldwide and the strategies used by various ranking organizations, including those of government and popular media. It traces the history of national and global rankings, indicators used by ranking systems, and the effect of rankings on academic programs and their institutions. Although ranking systems employ diverse criteria and most weight certain indicators over others, there is considerable skepticism that most actually measure educational quality. At the same time, students and their families increasingly consult these evaluations when making college decisions, and sponsors of faculty research consider reputation when forming academic partnerships. While there are serious concerns regarding the validity of ranking institutions when so little data can support differences between one institution and another, college rankings appear to be here to stay.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405872616300570College rankingsUniversity rankingsGlobal rankingsHigher education assessmentRanking systemsProgram evaluation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Meredith Davis
spellingShingle Meredith Davis
Can College Rankings Be Believed?
She Ji: The Journal of Design, Economics and Innovation
College rankings
University rankings
Global rankings
Higher education assessment
Ranking systems
Program evaluation
author_facet Meredith Davis
author_sort Meredith Davis
title Can College Rankings Be Believed?
title_short Can College Rankings Be Believed?
title_full Can College Rankings Be Believed?
title_fullStr Can College Rankings Be Believed?
title_full_unstemmed Can College Rankings Be Believed?
title_sort can college rankings be believed?
publisher Elsevier
series She Ji: The Journal of Design, Economics and Innovation
issn 2405-8726
description The article summarizes literature on college and university rankings worldwide and the strategies used by various ranking organizations, including those of government and popular media. It traces the history of national and global rankings, indicators used by ranking systems, and the effect of rankings on academic programs and their institutions. Although ranking systems employ diverse criteria and most weight certain indicators over others, there is considerable skepticism that most actually measure educational quality. At the same time, students and their families increasingly consult these evaluations when making college decisions, and sponsors of faculty research consider reputation when forming academic partnerships. While there are serious concerns regarding the validity of ranking institutions when so little data can support differences between one institution and another, college rankings appear to be here to stay.
topic College rankings
University rankings
Global rankings
Higher education assessment
Ranking systems
Program evaluation
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405872616300570
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