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RateMyRankings: Ridiculous!

August 28, 2008

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Rankings mania reached a new low recently when Forbes magazine entered the “best college” sweepstakes. Exalting RateMyProfessors.com and Who’s Who in America as dubious measures of academic quality, the Forbes list comes off more as a parody than any real competition for the U.S. News & World Report “Best Colleges” edition, which has its own well-publicized problems with credible outcomes data.

Once again, greed trumps truth while masquerading as a consumer service. Publishers of these news magazines perceive a large captive market with millions of ignorant parents craving some magical divining rod to help them figure out where to send Jasmine and Jason to college. These publishers completely miss the mark, patronizing the parents and students while maligning many terrific colleges and universities by claiming to measure “academic quality” through using variables that have little to do with teaching and learning.

What’s a “best college” for an aspiring special ed teacher may well be a very different choice from a student who wants to become a mechanical engineer or an artist or a fashion designer or a manager of political campaigns. Many colleges have academic specialties that align with the interests of students who seek out just that kind of program; other colleges have environments where women can flourish, or black students, or Hispanic students, or Catholic or Baptist students.

But the insidious message running through every single one of these lists is that the student’s entire life’s worth (translate: net worth) depends on “getting into” a top tier school --- with the tiers measured by some elite editor’s weird notions of quality --- and the heck with the millions of students who choose colleges that are actually right for them academically, socially, financially and spiritually. What will become of you if you go to a college ranked down in the 400’s in the Forbes list or in the Fourth Tier of U.S. News? The implicit message is that your investment in education in lower-ranked colleges is nearly worthless; better to drop out now and learn how to bag groceries.

The Forbes methodology, like that of U.S. News, reveals a profound bias in favor of wealth and class, and against institutions that have distinctive missions --- especially those that serve low income students and significant populations of minority students. Two notorious pieces of data --- average student debt load at graduation, and the percentage of students graduating in four years --- favor institutions that enroll large proportions of wealthy families. Such families tend to borrow little for college expenses, and students from more privileged backgrounds are the ones most likely to complete college in four years.

Consider the self-supporting 19-year-old, like many of my students at Trinity in Washington, who takes classes by day and works through the night, often while supporting her siblings or children of her own. She might well change from full-time to part-time status during her collegiate years, sometimes taking a semester or two off to recover from her struggle to meet her goals, and often she finishes her degree in six or more years. There’s no ranking category for the number of young single mothers who eventually earn degrees outside of the traditional four-year patterns set by the leisure class generations ago. Neither Forbes nor U.S. News can quantify the profound importance to families and to our nation of the work of colleges and universities that serve working-class students like mine who become staunch pillars of their communities and workplaces with their hard-won education.

Pretending to measure instructional quality, Forbes uses the profoundly scurrilous RateMyProfessors.com for 25 percent of its scoring method. Why stop there? Why not add a category for the number of campus sluts outed on JuicyCampus.com? RateMyProfessors invites just as much vicious gossip and cruel slander while providing no legitimate assessment of excellence in teaching (except for those who think that ratings of “Easy” or “Hard” or “Hot” or “Not” are good ways to judge the quality of collegiate instruction!).

RateMyProfessors.com is a Viacom product through its MTV Networks subsidiary. Seems that Forbes is trying to give a boost to other media companies. Even more questionable is the choice to base another 25 percent of its score on the relative proportion of a college’s alumni listed in Who’s Who in America, one of the greatest sales gimmicks of the publishing world. Mailings to the tens of thousands of people listed in the various Who’s Who directories rank right up there with Publishers Clearinghouse Sweepstakes for most annoying junk mail -- the kind that hints at something vastly more important than the reality of the product. (For a defense of the Forbes rankings, see the related essay today by Richard Vedder.)

Perhaps trying to be a bit more serious, Forbes also takes into account such rare awards as Rhodes Scholarships or Nobel Prizes. While such achievements provide momentary bragging rights among institutions, the stunning elitism of the Forbes editors cavalierly dismisses any student who pursues an unsung career in public service, teaching or health care, ministry or faithful daily service to the economy in corporate life.

We Americans love our lists, and in the right perspective the list-making game can be much fun --- the AFI top 100 movies of all time; Kasey Kasem’s American Top 40; our favorite snack foods. But choosing a college is not like deciding between hot dogs or hamburgers.

Evaluating the best college for any given student is a process that starts with a clear understanding of the student’s own intellectual talents, academic interests and social needs. One of the most important parts of the process occurs when the student has an opportunity to visit the campus, talk with students and faculty, observe courses and get a feel for the “fit” of the campus environment. No list rank-ordered by someone else’s idea of “best” can substitute for the student’s own judgment, after in-person research, of what will really be the best place to learn, live and grow successfully.

One of the greatest strengths of American higher education is its broad diversity of institutional types, from large public campuses to cozy liberal arts colleges, from great historically Black colleges to exceptional community colleges, from colleges specializing in women’s education to remarkable art institutes and universities specializing in science and technology. The perverse tyranny of the list makers tries to homogenize all of us, bleaching out the very different strengths that offer American academic consumers remarkable choices. Rather than promoting quality, the rankings deflate and degrade what’s best about each college by trying to make us all the same.

Patricia McGuire is president of Trinity Washington University.

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Comments on RateMyRankings: Ridiculous!

  • Visiting schools also costs money
  • Posted by SW on August 28, 2008 at 9:10am EDT
  • President McGuire makes some excellent points in this piece and it's nice to see it appear here with the other article.

    That said, ironically, at the end the piece the author makes precisely the type of class-based assumption that she would like to counter by suggesting that students should visit schools to figure out whether there is a good fit. Visiting schools is a very expensive undertaking. Not only does it take lots of money, potentially, but it requires time off for parents (or other guardians) to help prospective students go from place to place. I can't imagine that many of the underprivileged populations the author speaks about could possibly have the resources to do this.

  • Corrupting American Higher Education
  • Posted by Sol Gittleman , University Professor at Tufts University on August 28, 2008 at 9:50am EDT
  • President McGuire has it all right, alas. She takes note of the danger of corrupting one of the few authentic American exports that the world benefits from: our higher education system. Make no mistake, these lists are corrupting presidents and boards of trustees, who hold their administration accountable for the ups and downs of these insidious lists.

  • Let's rank houses!
  • Posted by Dr. K on August 28, 2008 at 9:50am EDT
  • It would have been nice if along with these two commentaries there had been a breakdown of all the elements (including sources and weights) factored into the two ranking systems. But I suppose that to compare the approaches would be to miss Patricia McGuire's most valid point: the college that is best for one student may be completely wrong for another.

    Richard Vedder compared college rankings to consumer comparisons of cars or television sets, but he mentions that the investment in higher education is as significant as a family's investment in a home. Can you imagine buying a house based on rankings? Someone else's top pick might be unbearable for my household. Even if I had a lot of information about a ranked house, I would want to check it out in person. And then, after all my earnest attempts at research, there is still a chance that I won't enjoy living in the house I eventually pick or that it will turn out to be a poor investment.

  • Missed the Target
  • Posted by Tony on August 28, 2008 at 12:40pm EDT
  • But this doesn't address the point: How do students (especially low-income, first-generation, etc.) know which institution is right *FOR THEM*? As an enterprise, we trip over ourselves to deceive, inveigle, and obfuscate that our consumers don't know how to make value judgments about what will work best for them.

  • The Rankings Game
  • Posted by Renee Jones , Executive Vice President at Stratus Communications on August 28, 2008 at 1:05pm EDT
  • What a thoughtful article on RateMyRankings: Ridiculous.

    It's all a game that began as a publisher's way to obtain more advertising dollars. We are now taking these rankings as the gold standard in the first line of research on colleges for our children.

    This stupidity needs to stop and we parents and students need to take back the complete responsibility for driving the college search. Only then will we find the "right fit" for our children.

    Renee Jones, Philadelphia

  • Redux
  • Posted by Ryan Martinez on August 28, 2008 at 8:35pm EDT
  • It's the same thing every year. College rankings are published and college presidents (usually from lower ranked colleges) denounce the ranking methodology.

    The rankings will not be going away anytime soon, so just ignore them if it suits you.

  • Visiting Colleges
  • Posted by Pat McGuire , President at Trinity Washington on August 28, 2008 at 8:35pm EDT
  • Just a quick note to SW on campus visits --- a campus visit can be as convenient as walking up the street or taking a short metro ride for many students. Most college students today are commuters, choosing institutions in relatively close proximity to their homes and neighborhoods. While some rural locations may, in fact, be far from any university campus, most metropolitan areas have at least several colleges and universities, public and private, two-and-four year. The campus visit need not be a family caravan to a far-away place. In fact, in many places the universities work with local high schools and college awareness programs to encourage campus visits particularly for at-risk students. At Trinity, we've hosted thousands of students each year from programs like the Hispanic Youth Symposium, Upward Bound, College Summit, DC Achievers and other programs specifically designed to open up college opportunities to all students. The leaders of most programs serving at-risk high school students go to great lengths to get these students onto as many college campuses as possible because, for some students, the campus visit is the best motivator to finish high school successfully.

  • Posted by Bob on August 29, 2008 at 4:55pm EDT
  • Another potential problem with rankings is the assumption that only one school will fit the needs of a particular student when in reality many schools should be satisfactory. It is not good if a student is so inflexible that he or she feels that there is only one fit. Students should be expected to adjust to maximize the opportunities that are available at many colleges.

  • Posted by Tracy on September 2, 2008 at 4:55am EDT
  • Ranking systems are here to stay. As mentioned in an earlier comment, students should be adaptable to most environments.

    When a student is accepted to several different colleges, it is good to know which colleges are looked on more favourably by future employers. Ranking systems can help students with this difficult choice. After all, college is few years experience whereas finding a good job at a good employer can affect the rest of your working life.