Oso planning to go pro
From the daily digest I received this afternoon from the WSJ:7,713 -- The number of lower-income students that top U.S. universities enrolled between 2015 and 2021. A group of more than 125 high-performing schools set a goal several years ago to increase that number to 50,000 by 2025. A progress report found that the Covid-19 pandemic partly wiped out early gains.
How are they defining lower-income?
Looks like the Business School is carrying the day.Marquette University’s College of Business Administration earned high marks for four undergraduate programs in the U.S. News & World Report 2022-23 Best Colleges Rankings:Accounting — No. 32Finance — No. 22Real Estate — No. 15Supply Chain Management — No. 18
It's great that MU is maintaining their overall National ranking but these business school rankings seem highly suspect to Porky. An undergraduate business school with 4 different majors ranked in the top 35 programs, 2 of which are Finance and Accounting, would have an overall undergraduate business school ranking that's way higher than 108, which is where MU's college of business ended up this year. Porky is no data scientist nor mathematician, but that seems like a huge discrepancy. What say you engineering and computer science types about this?
US News undergraduate business school program rankings are based solely on peer assessment surveys.