Mikovio wrote:RacerJoeD wrote:US News and World Report disagrees. For 26 straight years, Murray has been ranked as one of the top regional universities in the South overall, and even higher in the public school division. Also has been listed in Forbes' list of America's Top Colleges.
Murray State is ranked #34 among "Regional Universities South (tie)"
Rankings of other Valley regional schools:
Drake #3 in Regional Universities Midwest
Valpo #5 in Regional Universities Midwest
Bradley #6 in Regional Universities Midwest
Evansville #7 in Regional Universities Midwest
UNI #25 in Regional Universities Midwest (tie)
MSU #111 in Regional Universities Midwest (tie) (yikes)
Granted it's a different region but Murray would be near the bottom.
Just to comment, I agree that Missouri State's ranking deserves the elicited "yikes." But I have something to say about that, because I really wish that MO State did rank higher.
Missouri State's entire strategy right now in how to grow as an institution and grows its brand/footprint in the state is to offer a large public college feeling while doing so at as low of tuition as possible. As a part of that, Missouri State is not exactly what you would consider a selective university right now (although average entering ACT scores
are above the state average). Missouri State is recruiting and accepting as many students as it possibly can within reason. And the thing is, it's working! MSU is growing, and growing rapidly.
But the trade off for that rapid growth is that we're attracting a lot of students whose academic profile is a little bit lower. That statement isn't meant to denigrate those students, but it's simply a fact. Yes, there are admissions standards as there should be, but they are constructed in a way that makes it really hard to not get in to Missouri State (at least, that's my perspective). Considering selectivity is a component of academic rankings, that in of itself plays a role. But even further, because of the academic profiles of a lot of students may not be the best, that also results in quite a few students rotating out of Missouri State or taking longer than four years to complete their degree. Those factors also play a part in rankings, as student retention and four-year graduation rates are a part of the formula used by US News.
So this is my contention: the actual education offered at Missouri State is high quality. The professors are great, the institution offers top notch student services, the degrees are valuable, and I've personally found in my professional career that Missouri State grads fill important positions throughout the state (and I've lived in St. Louis and Columbia post graduation, not Springfield). But Missouri State is focused on pure growth right now, that is detrimental to its academic rankings. Maybe someday MSU will get to a size that it feels should be sustained and change strategies, but at the moment, we're trying to become a large public institution - and we're succeeding.