This is the figure I was referencing. 53% graduate in 6 years. Charles Murray (of The Bell Curve fame believes that most people just aren’t smart enough for college level work. Based on my experience, “college level work” isn’t very difficult, so I remain skeptical.
You’re from Illinois, right? Its graduation rate of 59% is barely higher than the US average of 56%. UIUC’s rate is 80%, ISU 60%, and NEIU 20%. NEIU isn’t very big, but there might be lots of similar schools. (ETA: actually NEIU+CSU are already pretty close to canceling out UIUC.)
Am I from Illinois? No, actually—Maryland. Checking the data, it seems I’m in a very strange statistical anomaly: 82% in 6 years. At a state university.
You are at the state flagship. 82% at College Park is roughly equal to Urbana-Champaign’s 80%. The point is that top schools pick students who can get through and/or do a better job of getting students through.
Do you have a statistic to back up the 6-years figure? The graduation rate appears higher than that to me.
This is the figure I was referencing. 53% graduate in 6 years. Charles Murray (of The Bell Curve fame believes that most people just aren’t smart enough for college level work. Based on my experience, “college level work” isn’t very difficult, so I remain skeptical.
6 year graduation rates
You’re from Illinois, right? Its graduation rate of 59% is barely higher than the US average of 56%. UIUC’s rate is 80%, ISU 60%, and NEIU 20%. NEIU isn’t very big, but there might be lots of similar schools. (ETA: actually NEIU+CSU are already pretty close to canceling out UIUC.)
Am I from Illinois? No, actually—Maryland. Checking the data, it seems I’m in a very strange statistical anomaly: 82% in 6 years. At a state university.
No wonder my impressions were skewed.
You are at the state flagship. 82% at College Park is roughly equal to Urbana-Champaign’s 80%. The point is that top schools pick students who can get through and/or do a better job of getting students through.