FBS Schools By Latest USNews 400
U.S. News & World Report publishes those annual college rankings. They're not the only ones, and they're not even necessarily the best ones, but they're the rankings people most often use when talking about how our alma mater is better than everyone elses's alma mater and...I dunno do people talk about the USNews Rankings for anything else?
In the world of marginal and overly general rankings that lose 90% of their meaning six days into your career, Michigan is awesome at everything there too. Piggybacking on the article linked by Gameboy, and because it would have been too many inches on the front page for something I don't think matters all that much, here's the FBS schools who made the Top 400.
Note: Notre Dame is listed as a Big Ten school because it annoys them, and the Big East is not listed as a BCS conference because lol they're not.
Big Ten | Rank (World) | Rank (US) | Rank (FBS) |
---|---|---|---|
Michigan | 14 | 10 | 2 |
Northwestern | 24 | 15 | 5 |
Wisconsin | 41 | 18 | 7 |
Illinois | 61 | 23 | 10 |
Purdue | 85 | 29 | 13 |
Penn State | 94 | 30 | 14 |
Minnesota | 102 | 33 | 15 |
Ohio State | 111 | 35 | 17 |
Michigan State | 164 | 51 | 27 |
Iowa | 192 | 54 | 28 |
Indiana | 216 | 55 | 29 |
Notre Dame | 223 | 56 | 30 |
NR: Nebraska |
--------------------------------------
Pac 12 | Rank (World) | Rank (US) | Rank (FBS) |
---|---|---|---|
Stanford | 11 | 7 | 1 |
California | 21 | 14 | 4 |
UCLA | 34 | 16 | 6 |
Washington | 56 | 22 | 9 |
USC | 107 | 34 | 16 |
Colorado | 142 | 44 | 23 |
Arizona | 163 | 50 | 26 |
Utah | 288 | 66 | 36 |
Arizona State | 336 | 74 | 39 |
Washington State | 354 | 78 | 43 |
NR: Oregon, Oregon State |
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ACC | Rank (World) | Rank (US) | Rank (FBS) |
---|---|---|---|
Duke | 19 | 13 | 3 |
North Carolina | 55 | 21 | 8 |
Georgia Tech | 84 | 28 | 12 |
Maryland | 113 | 36 | 18 |
Pittsburgh | 116 | 38 | 19 |
Virginia | 126 | 41 | 21 |
Miami (YTM) | 230 | 57 | 31 |
Wake Forest | 272 | 62 | 33 |
NC State | 277 | 63 | 34 |
Virginia Tech | 326 | 73 | 38 |
Boston College | 349 | 77 | 42 |
NR: Clemson, FSU, Syracuse |
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SEC | Rank (World) | Rank (US) | Rank (FBS) |
---|---|---|---|
Vanderbilt | 131 | 43 | 22 |
Texas A&M | 158 | 47 | 24 |
Florida | 161 | 48 | 25 |
Missouri | 371 | 81 | 46 |
Kentucky | 383 | 83 | 47 |
Georgia | 386 | 84 | 48 |
Tennessee | 391 | 85 | 49 |
NR: Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, LSU, Ole Miss, Miss St, SC |
--------------------------------------
Big XII | Rank (World) | Rank (US) | Rank (FBS) |
---|---|---|---|
Texas | 76 | 25 | 11 |
Iowa State | 289 | 67 | 37 |
NR: Baylor, Kansas, KSU, Oklahoma, OK State, TT, TCU, WVa. |
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Non-BCS | Rank (World) | Rank (US) | Rank (FBS) |
---|---|---|---|
Rice | 117 | 39 | 20 |
Rutgers | 236 | 58 | 32 |
Tulane | 284 | 64 | 35 |
Buffalo | 337 | 75 | 40 |
Cincinnati | 339 | 76 | 41 |
Colorado State | 363 | 79 | 44 |
Connecticut | 365 | 80 | 45 |
Items of Interest that Actually Mean Very Little:
- Texas A&M is now the second-smartest school in the SEC. Think about that for a second. We feel for you Vanderbilt!
- USN doesn't like private schools.
- What the hell does % of faculty that's international have to do with anything?
- Lol Notre Dame anyway.
The Big Ten and Pac 12 are pretty comparable, though since the last time I did this the B1G has closed the gap on a former Pac lead at the top; our bottom is still way stronger despite the drag of our only non-ranked, non-AAU program Nebraska. If USNews rankings (shown: just among FBS teams) instead of BCS rankings were used to create matchups for the future B1G/Pac Challenge or whatever they'll call the new real-game agreement, we get:
Big Ten | Vs. | Pac 12 |
---|---|---|
Michigan (2) | vs. | Stanford (1) |
Northwestern (5) | vs. | California (4) |
Wisconsin (7) | vs. | UCLA (6) |
Illinois (10) | vs. | Washington (9) |
Purdue (13) | vs. | USC (16) |
Penn State (14) | vs. | Colorado (23) |
Minnesota (15) | vs. | Arizona (26) |
Ohio State (17) | vs. | Utah (36) |
Michigan State (27) | vs. | Arizona State (39) |
Iowa (28) | vs. | Washington State (43) |
Indiana (29) | vs. | Oregon (NR) |
Nebraska (NR) | vs. | Oregon State (NR) |
Horray for feeling superior to people for silly reasons!
February 23rd, 2012 at 11:30 PM ^
It's the usnews ugrad prestige rankings that people most often cite to. In those we are behind Stanford, Northwestern, Cal, UCLA, Duke, Notre Dame, UVA and USC.
February 23rd, 2012 at 11:42 PM ^
We were dropping like a stone for the past 3-4 years... from low 20s to high 20s, but the Common App might reverse that. Or Mary Sue's smoking ban she worked so tirelessly on...
February 24th, 2012 at 10:06 AM ^
...is that when I was at ND, Domers LOVED making jokes about Michigan academics. They didn't make those jokes about Sparty or USC or Pitt. The only other school they joked about like that was Boston College.
My confusion was great. But Denard kept running, so my concern was lessened.
February 23rd, 2012 at 11:28 PM ^
Thanks for this. Really interesting to see. Interesting how the PAC-12 is close to the Big 10 on the top side, but the Big 10 makes up the difference with the lower-level Pac-12 programs.
February 23rd, 2012 at 11:40 PM ^
"What the hell does % of faculty that's international have to do with anything?"
Diversity.
February 24th, 2012 at 9:22 AM ^
They came here on an old wooden ship?
February 24th, 2012 at 12:38 PM ^
But pretty arbitrary diversity, right? You could have a faculty with a low % from abroad that was very diverse, or you could have a faculty with a high % all from the same country, which happens a lot. Which is more diverse?
Fact is, the Unites States is pretty diverse, and having faculty who are Hispanics from Phoenix, Asians from San Francisco, Irish-Catholics from Boston, Jews from Long Island, African Americans from Chicago, Southern Baptists, Texans, Midwesterners, etc - that would be quite diverse, but would score low on the "International Faculty" score, as opposed to a school with a ton of Korean-born profs in a couple departments.
Point is, if you want "diversity" to be a part of your criteria, find a better way to measure it, or don't include it.
February 24th, 2012 at 10:42 PM ^
Tell that to the Supreme Court... my post really should've ended with a /s.
February 24th, 2012 at 1:24 AM ^
February 24th, 2012 at 7:59 AM ^
Any reason why you included Missouri with the SEC and Texas A&M with the Big 12?
February 24th, 2012 at 8:49 AM ^
oops. The way I did the html was a pain in the butt and after I already had them posted I realized I hadn't accounted for the changes so I was going through and doing them by memory. Fixed.
February 24th, 2012 at 9:33 AM ^
Having worked abroad it is always nice to hear "Michigan? That's a good school."
The ranking is also a reminder of the responsibility we have to uphold the qualities this degree represents as Michigan Women and Men.
February 24th, 2012 at 9:58 AM ^
I'm working abroad now and the academic recognition is very satisfying - although few things warm my heart like seeing a Block M t-shirt randomly across the ocean.
February 24th, 2012 at 10:11 AM ^
February 24th, 2012 at 11:57 AM ^
Those are different rankings. The USNWR undergrad rankings have Michigan at #28. In the world university rankings, Michigan is the 10th highest rated US-based school, and 14th overall.
February 24th, 2012 at 10:30 AM ^
Call me when the metrics they use actually matter (or have generlizable validity).
February 24th, 2012 at 11:12 AM ^
Wow the big 12 sucks.
And I know its funny to go LOLNotreDame but I have a hard time believing they would've been the worst school in the big ten as of about a year ago. Seriously, someone try to convince me that MSU or OSU is a better school than Notre Dame
February 24th, 2012 at 12:07 PM ^
Better "schools"? Maybe not... though it really depends on what you want to study.
Better research institutions? Easily.
Personally, I think Notre Dame is highly overrated. It's not terribly hard to get into. It's just expensive.
February 24th, 2012 at 11:59 AM ^
"What the hell does % of faculty that's international have to do with anything?"
Because these are world rankings, which are heavily biased toward reputation by global employers and international academics, as well as opportunity and support for visiting international faculty and international students.
As I said in the other thread, Michigan has always had very robust international faculty and student populations. A lot of this also has to do with scope and breadth of learning and research partnerships globally. Michigan is definitely a leader in these areas.
Others, like the schools in the SEC and Big 12, tend to be more US-focused. While they have some international programs and research opportunities, it's not as strong a focus for them.
None of this means that any of the schools which are not ranked, or are ranked relatively low, are not good schools. It just means they don't have as much of an international focus. For instance, Vandy is a FANTASTIC school, but not ranked particularly high.
February 24th, 2012 at 12:13 PM ^
Suck it, world. Hail!
February 24th, 2012 at 12:28 PM ^
I think U of Chicago should be included in Big 10, when we are talking about academic rankings. They are part of BIG10 academic consortium
February 24th, 2012 at 1:06 PM ^
I love that Michigan is ranked so high, but these rankings seem completely flawed.
- Academic reputation is most important, but every school has a 99.something, making reputation fairly meaningless as a discriminator
- Faculty-student ratio is obviously assessed in a bizarre and inconsistent manner (e.g. Michigan's ratio is significantly better than Princeton's?)
- Ditto employer reputation (again, I'm sure employers love us, but much more than they love Princeton grads?)
- % of International students and faculty -- this does seem important to me...if you're trying to boost the standing of schools from a small country closely connected to several other small, nearby countries (i.e. the UK)
Like I said, no complaint with the results, but if you look at the methodology and the scores they came up with...doesn't make a lot of sense.
February 24th, 2012 at 1:45 PM ^
(except for newcomer Texas A&M)
Yet another reason, albeit an insignificant one, why the 2012 MNC was a joke.
February 24th, 2012 at 3:19 PM ^
Oregon not ranked. Me dumb.
February 24th, 2012 at 5:41 PM ^
This also gives a good picture of who might be good candidates for B1G expansion, based on AAU and CIC membership, etc. And the likely candidates are ... no one. Nebraska was already a major reach, and now look at where we are. From an academic prestige standpoint, the B1G should have grabbed Missouri (still a reach) and Pitt when they had the chance. I still canNOT beLIEVE they let Pitt out of their grasp.
February 24th, 2012 at 9:03 PM ^
Pitt didn't really add anything they didn't get with Penn State. This conference last expanded by adding Nebraska this year, Penn State in the early '90s and Michigan State in the 1950s. That's the effin standard. MSU was possibly the biggest reach the conference has ever taken and except for us, that has worked out.
Remember CIC membership is just Big Ten.
The conference won't add any school that doesn't add more than 1/13th to the pot, because they'll be losing 1/13th of their pot to that school. Texas or Notre Dame, unless they do something creative with the ACC.
February 25th, 2012 at 2:04 AM ^
Love me some Pitt (I went there), but Pitt is basically a perfect option to bring along with a school like ND, and couldn't have carried the twelve spot by itself. Pitt plus ND would keep the conference even while adding revenue, plus the academics are great and it's geographically contiguous. One big difference (IMO) is the campus environment; Pitt is a pretty damn urban school in a way no Big Ten school that I've been to is. Even so, I think the campus culture is pretty similar to a lot of B1G schools.
Also, Seth, I wanted to ask you about my new signature. I'd appreciate being able to keep it, as I'm trying to help out a family business and it's a service I believe in. However, I understand if there's a policy against linking to for-profit businesses; I just haven't seen a mod address anything like it before.
February 25th, 2012 at 8:12 AM ^
I think linking to your aunt's business is fine in a vacuum, but I don't like the precedent it sets. I mean, every post you write is an advertisement, and we have people who pay to get those kinds of impressions.
I'll ask brian when he gets back what he thinks.
February 25th, 2012 at 2:08 PM ^
If Brian has a problem with it, maybe it would be possible to come to some type of advertising arrangement, although my bet would be that Moe's, the parking service and the companies on Google ads have more of a budget than I do.
Either way, thanks for the response; I don't want to upset the powers that be.
February 25th, 2012 at 8:50 AM ^
These USNWR rankings are always clusterfracks, but it is interesting to see how a number of those highly-regarded US schools struggle when viewed internationally (and the focus shifts beyond undergrad).
February 25th, 2012 at 9:02 AM ^
The SEC's rankings gave me the best laugh I have had for awhile. They look really funny in the "pure" rankings because they are all in triple digits. I'm not the least bit surprised, either.
February 27th, 2012 at 7:45 PM ^
I'm a UofM grad and really the only reason why I like the high rankings is the benefit to my resume. I think that we get too caught up in the prestige of a degree that we take it to mean education. The fact is a degree is a simply a degree. Education is what an individual makes of his or her opportunities. To say a school is prestigious means nothing about the individual graduating. Sure, there can be a good reputation associated with a presigious school, but in the end it's what the individual does that counts. Picking a college should not be about which one offers the highest ranking, but rather which one offers the best fit for the individual and can provide the best motivation to become a self starter.
An additional critique could be that peer review drives these rankings making it somewhat of an insider game rather than a more objective (impossible) analysis.
I apologize for my cynicism, but I don't like it when I hear bragging calling our education superior, when, in fact, it isn't our education that is superior but our reputation that is.
Go Blue.
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