Liberal arts college

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A liberal arts college is an institution of higher education offering programs in the liberal arts at the post-secondary level.

Chambers Building, Davidson College, NC
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Chambers Building, Davidson College, NC

Generally, liberal arts colleges are small and thus have smaller class sizes and enrollment than universities. They usually offer a liberal arts curriculum. Liberal arts colleges focus primarily on tertiary education, and tend to emphasize interactive instruction rather than research. Full-time professors teach almost all courses, rather than graduate student teaching assistants.

Generally, a full-time, four-year course of study at a liberal arts college leads students to a bachelor's degree. Several colleges offer postgraduate programs; however, their postgraduate enrollments remain small compared to their undergraduate enrollments and to postgraduate enrollments at research universities. Liberal arts colleges are often private institutions, although a number of state-supported institutions also operate on liberal arts college models.


Contents

[edit] United States Rankings

See main article: College and university rankings
Colgate at the end of Summer.
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Colgate at the end of Summer.

[edit] U.S. News and World Report

The controversial America's Best Colleges issue of the U.S. News and World Report ranks the top 30 "National Liberal Arts Colleges" as follows in the 2007 edition [1]:

The top public liberal arts colleges are [2]:

[edit] The Washington Monthly

The Washington Monthly's "College Rankings" (an alternative college guide to the U.S. News and World Report) ranks the top 30 "National Liberal Arts Colleges" as follows in the September 2006 issue [3]

[edit] SAT optional movement in the United States

According to an 06 October 2006 article by Inside Higher Ed "the movement away from the SAT has been growing this year, particularly among liberal arts colleges." [4]. This was echoed by an 04 April 2006 article in USA Today which stated that there is "a growth spurt in the [SAT] test-optional movement" [5]. Indeed, according to an 31 August 2006 article in the New York Times, "since Bowdoin and Bates dropped their testing requirements decades ago, more than a fourth of U.S. News & World Report’s Top 100 liberal arts colleges have made admissions exams optional, and new ones are joining the list at a quickening pace." [6]

[edit] College lists

[edit] abcnews.go.com & USA Today

An 07 October 2006 article by abcnews.go.com, reported that the following "27 Top Colleges Don't Require the SAT or ACT" [7]:


An 04 April 2006 article in USA Today [8] offers a list of "12 that rank among the top 50 as rated by U.S. News & World Report " which includes many of the above schools as well as:

[edit] fairtest.org

The full list of colleges for which the SAT is optional can be found at fairtest. [9]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links