Miami University repeatedly places in the top of U.S. News & World Report's list of the best American schools, but a new ranking by Forbes puts Miami solidly in the middle of the pack.
Forbes ranked Miami at 276 on its list of more than 550 American universities, compared to Miami's spot at No. 66 among schools nationwide in U.S. News & World Report.
Claire Wagner, assistant director of university communications, explained that university administrators generally acknowledge ranking results but try not to attach too much significance to them.
"Overall, we are aware of it, but we know who we are as a strong undergraduate liberal arts education," Wagner said. "We look at what are we doing and ask 'Are our students succeeding?' and make changes based on that, not on the rankings."
The rankings may serve as a good reference for high school students, but Wagner hopes prospective students investigate further when looking at Miami.
"(The rankings are) a good vehicle for Miami to be noticed by students and parents, but by no means should it be all that they use to evaluate us," Wagner said. "Most ideally, they come visit and get a feel for the place."
Miami University tour guide Sean Wright said rankings shouldn't be blindly trusted either.
"Visiting the school gave me a much better experience of the campus," Wright said. "I can tell among the people who visit that visiting campus makes a difference in their decision."
Wright said that the discrepancy between the two scores shows that something must not be completely accurate with the ranking processes.
Senior Angie Chan also expressed concerns that ranking systems are not always accurate or all-inclusive.
"I don't think the areas they reach are indicative of enough students on the campus," Chan said. "Just taking a small handful of the elite and trying to judge against other schools doesn't always work."
Forbes' Web site claims that its list exists as an alternative to the "monopoly" that U.S. News & World Report holds on higher education and "attempts to put itself in a student's shoes" when ranking schools.
Wagner said the Forbes list is much more subjective than the older U.S. News & World Report list of top schools.
According to Forbes' Web site, schools were scored by five factors: professor evaluations on RateMyProfessors.com, the number of alumni listed among Who's Who in America, average student debt at graduation, the graduation rate and the number of students or faculty who win nationally competitive awards.
In contrast, Wagner claimed the U.S. News & World Report's rankings are a little more objective.
The U.S. News and World Report's Web site explains that its rankings come from seven categories of indicators: peer assessment, retention, faculty resources, student selectivity, financial resources, graduation rate and alumni-giving rates.
Several other schools were also smacked in the new Forbes list as compared with U.S. News & World Report's rankings.
Forbes ranked both Ohio State and Ohio University more than 200 places lower than U.S. News & World Report, while the University of Dayton's rank plummeted more than 400 spots on Forbes' list.







