By Barbara Kantrowitz
Newsweek
2005 edition - Pull apart the DNA of a student's dream school and you'll find so many different strands. Perhaps it's the location, either in the rolling countryside far from anything that resembles a sidewalk, or in the midst of a hip urban neighborhood. It could be a college's unique educational mission or the array of quirky personalities on campus. Maybe it's the outstanding labs or libraries or theaters, even the fitness center. All 25 colleges on the Hot List for 2005 have one thing in common: they provide an outstanding education. But what makes them hot is their differences and special traits. Although all these schools have demonstrated continuing excellence, various qualities made many of them stand out in 2004. The Iraq war, as well as its aftermath, highlighted the importance of well-educated military leadership and made some students think of applying to Annapolis or West Point. The debate over Early Decision (ED) admissions policies prompted a number of applicants to try schools like Yale or Stanford that have led the effort to reduce ED stress on students. The controversy over affirmative action motivated other students to seek out schools like Wesleyan that celebrate diversity. Another trend has been increased attention to quality-of-life issues: good dorms, good food, an active social life, a range of student organizations. There's also a growing focus on what happens at the end of four years. Is the career center helpful? How many students get jobs or are accepted into the graduate schools of their choice? With tuition and fees at private universities topping $40,000 a year, these are serious questions. To compile this admittedly subjective list, we interviewed students, admissions officers and longtime observers of the admissions process. The applicant pool for all these schools has grown much stronger in recent years—not only in sheer numbers of students applying but also in test scores, grades and extracurricular accomplishments. Some schools on our list have international repu-tations. Others aren't widely known out-side their region. But they are all someone's dream school. Maybe yours? Herewith, America's Hottest Colleges for 2005.
HOTTEST IVY HOTTEST SCHOOL FOR THE ARTS
HOTTEST BIG 10 SCHOOL With six undergraduate schools, Northwestern attracts budding actors, journalists, engineers and teachers—along with plenty of liberal-arts students still unsure of their major. Each school has a national reputation and draws students from all over the country. Some standouts: the Medill School of Journalism, the School of Communication (which includes the drama and thea-ter program) and the engineering school, which is a center of research in nanotechnology. When they're not studying, Northwestern students can take in Wildcats football or head into Chicago, which is at the doorstep of the Evanston campus. HOTTEST LIBRARY |
HOTTEST RIDING SCHOOL
Hollins University, Roanoke, Va.
Located in the rolling hills of Virginia's horse country, Hollins
offers outstanding training for equestriennes. With fewer than 800
women undergraduates, the school is a regular winner of the Old
Dominion Athletic Conference championship, and the Hollins team has
captured seven top 10 finishes in the Intercollegiate Horse Show
Association. Many Hollins students work with horses after graduation
as trainers, riders or veterinarians. But if they decide to get out of
the saddle, the school also offers a strong liberal-arts program and a
highly regarded creative-writing curriculum with dozens of famous
grads (including Margaret Wise Brown, Annie Dillard and Lee Smith).
HOTTEST ARCHITECTURE
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
President Charles Vest is leaving his mark with an ambitious $1
billion construction program that includes Steven Holl's Simmons Hall,
a controversial aluminum-clad dormitory that opened in 2002, and
Fumihiko Maki's expansion of the Media Lab. The biggest buzz surrounds
the Stata Center, a computer-science building by Frank Gehry that
opened in spring 2004. The raucous, lighthearted exterior belies
purposeful planning inside: the center not only contains labs for the
"intelligence sciences" but also connects corridors and public spaces
in a way that encourages spontaneous collaboration. MIT calls it an
"intellectual village."
HOTTEST FOR FITNESS
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.
Long before the invention of the treadmill, Thomas Jefferson, the
founder of UVA, wrote: "A strong body makes the mind strong." UVA
follows that adage by offering both varsity competitors and weekend
warriors some of the best fitness facilities in the country. Associate
athletics director Mark Fletcher says 94 percent of all students use
one of the four indoor recreation centers, which together make up
300,000 square feet of pools, running tracks, weight rooms and
classrooms for yoga and kickboxing. The school also maintains a
23-acre park for outdoor field sports and jogging.
HOTTEST FOR DIVERSITY
Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn.
"We want to include everyone who would benefit and contribute to the
kinds of discussions we have in classes," says Dean of Admissions
Nancy Meislahn. More than a third are "students of color," and 7
percent are international students. An additional 15 percent are the
first in their family to attend a four-year college. The result,
Wesleyan officials say, is a great range of perspectives in the
classroom.
HOTTEST FOR THE TECH-SAVVY
Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H.
Dartmouth's first computer was so expensive that only faculty and
administrators were allowed to use it. But Profs. John Kemeny and
Thomas Kurtz understood that computers were tools for everyone. Forty
years ago they created the computer language BASIC, which helped
hasten the personal-computer revolution. The school has been in the
forefront of technological change ever since, with one of the first
e-mail programs and an early campus computer network. Dartmouth was
also the first Ivy to install Wi-Fi on campus. The school offers free
software to students so they can turn their laptops into telephones
using the school's Wi-Fi—a good thing, because regular cell-phone
service on the rural campus can be spotty.
HOTTEST FOR STUDYING ABROAD
Tufts University, Medford, Mass.
Long before globalization became a cliche, Tufts administrators were
figuring out how to teach students to be citizens of the world. "Tufts
likes students who want to study abroad," says Sheila Bayne, director
of overseas programs. This translates into a strong language
requirement, and a chance to learn a new culture in one of Tufts's own
centers in such countries as Germany, Chile, China or Ghana. About 40
percent of Tufts juniors—as well as some seniors and sophomores—are
away during the academic year. For graduates who find their calling in
working overseas, there's Tufts's famed Fletcher School of Law and
Diplomacy just down the street.
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HOTTEST FOR ITS HONOR CODE
Haverford College, Haverford, Pa.
HOTTEST FOR POLITICAL JUNKIES
George Washington University, Washington, D.C.
With a campus next door to the World Bank and down the street from the
White House, GW is a poli-sci major's dream. Professors often consult
for the government, which gives their classroom perspective a
practical edge. The school also encourages internships at government
agencies, think tanks and advocacy organizations. And for a study
break, students can check out CNN's political-affairs show
"Crossfire," which is telecast live from the campus. Another plus: the
fixed-tuition plan, which keeps rates flat until graduation. You don't
need to be a policy wonk to appreciate that.
HOTTEST FOR GREEKS WITH BRAINS
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.
Michigan took the lead in the recent affirmative-action case that went
to the Supreme Court, and has been an innovator in multidisciplinary
approaches to everything from music to medicine. "A smaller university
might excel in one subject but not everything," says spokesman Julie
Peterson. "We give our students everything." That includes a lively
social life. About 15 percent of undergrads go Greek, which students
say helps them find a friendlier community within the vast student
population (23,000 undergrads). Fraternities and sororities are
especially popular with the many out-of-state students, says Mary Beth
Seiler, the Greek-life director. "If you're far away from home and
looking to connect, it provides an opportunity," she says.
HOTTEST FOR DOUBLE MAJORS
Rice University, Houston, Texas
Most schools call for students to declare a major by sophomore year,
but Rice doesn't require that commitment until junior year—which means
students have lots of time to explore different passions. That may be
one reason that nearly two thirds at Rice end up double-majoring. "We
have an extremely ambitious student body," says Ann Wright, vice
president for enrollment. The most common combination is science and
humanities. The school is best known nationally for its engineering
and science curriculum, but the social sciences are also becoming
strong. Rice stands out another way: although it's a major research
institution, it feels relatively intimate because it has only 2,800
undergraduates.
HOTTEST FOR HOT AND DRY
Pomona College, Claremont, Calif.
Students at Pomona (one of five colleges in the Claremont University
Consortium) like to say they have the best of two worlds: the
academically challenging environment of a small New England
liberal-arts college with year-round California sunshine. That
combination has been drawing more students from around the country,
and applications are up 30 percent in the last few years. Students
also can tap the academic and social resources of the other Claremont
colleges, including Pitzer, Harvey Mudd and Scripps. But none of the
colleges will be tapping a keg during "dry week," a tradition at the
start of the year during which no alcohol is allowed on campus.
"Alcohol isn't the center of the social universe at Pomona," says
Bruce Poch, dean of admissions. All those palm trees are enough of a
high.
HOTTEST STATE UNIVERSITY
University of Texas at Austin
Austin is the "live-music capital of the world" and home to the
University of Texas—a campus so laid-back it should be deemed the
capital of flip-flops as well. But don't get the wrong idea: this
isn't a place for slackers. With 50,000 students (more than any other
school in the country), UT boasts some of the nation's best business,
law and engineering schools. If football isn't your thing (that'll
change), one of the 900 student organizations should spark your
interest. Best of all, even out-of-state tuition (about $12,000) is
cheaper than at a private university, making it possible to ditch the
ramen and try the barbecue.
HOTTEST FOR GETTING A JOB
Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pa.
HOTTEST FOR ENTREPRENEURS
Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pa.
Although it's probably best known for football, Penn State is also
staking a strong claim as a training ground for future entrepreneurs.
Six of the campus's 10 undergraduate colleges offer entrepreneurship
courses. The Smeal College of Business and the College of Engineering
are the most natural partners, with joint programs to show engineers
how to run businesses and to teach business students the latest
technology. Hotel-management students operate two on-campus hotels and
conference centers where they're involved in everything from food
service to staffing the front desk. The College of Communications
focuses on entrepreneurship in the Information Age. But the creme de
la creme (literally) is the Creamery, officially a "working
laboratory" for food-science students in the College of Agricultural
Sciences. While those students learn the basics of product development
and marketing, other Penn Staters savor some of the best ice cream
around, like Peachy Paterno (named after the legendary football
coach).
HOTTEST FOR HEALTH CAREERS
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C.
One of the top public universities in the country, UNC-Chapel Hill
offers students a choice of more than 50 majors. But what really draws
future doctors, nurses and other health professionals is the
opportunity to study at a campus with all health disciplines in one
place. The School of Nursing and the School of Public Health both have
undergraduate programs. At the School of Medicine, undergrads can earn
degrees in radiologic science or clinical laboratory practice. With
all these resources, it's not surprising that biology, psychology and
nursing are among the top majors. Linda Cronenwett, dean of the School
of Nursing, says "a history of collaboration grew up that enhanced the
work of all our disciplines."
HOTTEST FOR INDIVIDUALISTS
Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio
Two schools make up Oberlin—the College of Arts and Sciences and the
Conservatory of Music—and an idiosyncratic approach to life and
learning is a virtue throughout the campus. Consider the innovative
subject matter of some first-year seminars: Death and the Art of
Dying, American Mixed Blood, and Destination: L.A. The student-run
Experimental College lets undergraduates teach courses of their own
creation, like Making Your Own Mobile or Mythology and Epic
Storytelling in "Lord of the Rings." This eccentricity gets results:
Oberlin graduates have more Ph.D.s than alumni of any other
liberal-arts college. They also include comic-strip artist David Rees,
New York Magazine editor Adam Moss and opera singer Indira Mahajan.
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Mark Defeo / UCSB
The 989-acre UCSB campus looks out over the waters of the
Pacific
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HOTTEST FOR CITY HATERS
Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y.
HOTTEST FOR CITY LOVERS
New York University, New York, N.Y.
The erstwhile TV show "Felicity" helped make NYU a TV star, but in
2004-05 the campus will be home to some real-life celebrities: the
Olsen twins, Mary-Kate and Ashley. Not that NYU needs extra star
power. Even after September 11, the school continued to draw
applications from more than 17,000 talented students. One of the top
attractions is the Tisch School of the Arts, which nurtures future
actors, dancers and screenwriters. The business school is also highly
rated, and students can take advantage of internships on Wall Street,
just a subway ride away. Although NYU doesn't have a campus in the
traditional sense (the buildings are scattered throughout Greenwich
Village), few students complain. Instead of a single grassy quad,
they've got a whole city to explore.
HOTTEST MILITARY SCHOOL
U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md.
At Annapolis, getting in is the easy part—even though that means
winning one of about 1,200 coveted tuition-free spots from among more
than 14,000 applicants. The four-year curriculum is tough and
technically oriented, with core requirements in engineering, natural
sciences, humanities and social sciences. Traditions play a huge part
in campus life. "When you first show up for classes in the fall,
students begin counting down the number of days until the Army-Navy
game," says Cmdr. Tim Disher, admissions officer. Graduates become
commissioned officers in the Navy or the Marine Corps.
HOTTEST FOR SCHOLARSHIPS
Berea College, Berea, Ky.
Berea's mission is unique among American colleges. The 1,500 students
come from families with average household incomes of only $30,000, and
80 percent have grown up in southern Appalachia, a region that spans
nine states with some of the most remote and poverty-stricken rural
communities in the country. All students get full-tuition
scholarships, although they do have to pay for as much of their room,
board and books as they can afford (scholarships are available for
those as well). Students are required to work—many of them at jobs on
campus that are critical to keeping Berea's costs down. Many students
are also active in community service and go on to be doctors, nurses
or social workers in the region.
HOTTEST FOR SURF-AND-SKI
University of California, Santa Barbara
If there's a more beautiful campus than this one at the edge of the
Pacific, we haven't seen it. For many students, that would seal the
deal, but UCSB also boasts Nobel Prize winners on its faculty, top
research centers in science and technology and an extensive
study-abroad program. The number of applicants has doubled in the past
decade, with 36,651 applying for admission to the class of 2008
(19,325 were accepted). Aside from the top academics, a big draw for
many is the variety of recreation. The campus has its own beaches
where students can surf, and the Big Bear ski resort is just a few
hours' drive away.
With Jordana Lewis, Cathleen McGuigan and Vanessa Juarez
Editor's Note: In "America's 25 Hot Schools," the 2005 edition of the Newsweek-Kaplan College Guide erred in reporting that New York University draws "more than 17,000" applicants a year. The correct figure is more than 33,000 applicants.
URL of original article: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5626574/site/newsweek