Schools

Princeton Review Names 384 Best Colleges — And Top Party School

The Princeton Review rankings are based on surveys of 138,000 students at the schools. Here are the best colleges and biggest partiers.

NEW YORK, NY — The Princeton Review has named the 384 best colleges in America and nearly all of those schools appear on various “Best Of” — and “Worst Of” — lists. And you might be surprised where some colleges land. The tutoring, test prep, and college admission services company surveyed 138,000 students at the schools and asked them to rate the institutions on dozens of topics.

Although the company did not rank the top colleges — the list is in alphabetical order — it did rank them for numerous category lists, including best college theater, best science lab facilities, best party schools, most beautiful campus and even something as silly as “nobody plays intramural sports.”

Among the key findings: Bentley University had the most highly-rated career center and Vanderbilt University in Tennessee topped the "Great Financial Aid" list. Reed College in Oregon — where most class sections contain just two to nine students — ranked No. 1 on the list, "Professors Get High Marks," based on how students rated their faculty specifically in their roles as teachers.

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Here are the top performers in some of the other categories:

  • "Most Accessible Professors" — United States Military Academy (New York)
  • "Best College Dorms"— Washington University in St. Louis
  • "Best Campus Food" — University of Massachusetts-Amherst
  • "Best Health Services" — University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • "Most Beautiful Campus"— Bucknell University (Pennsylvania)
  • "Best Athletic Facilities" — The University of Alabama-Tuscaloosa
  • "Happiest Students" — College of William & Mary (Virginia)
  • "Most Politically Active Students" — American University (Washington D.C.)
  • "LGBTQ-Friendly" — Emerson College (Massachussetts)
  • "Party Schools" — University of Delaware
  • Stone-Cold Sober Schools" — Brigham Young University (Utah)
  • "Students Pack the Stadiums" — Syracuse University (New York)
  • "College City Gets High Marks" — Tulane University (Louisiana)
  • "Their Students Love These Colleges" — Clemson University (South Carolina)

Robert Franek, editor in chief at The Princeton Review and the book's lead author, said in a release that the 384 “best” colleges were primarily based on their “outstanding academics” and that the authors “highly recommend each one.” But Franek noted stellar academics aren’t the only things students — and parents — look for in a college.

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“We created our 62 ranking lists to help narrow that search,” he said. “They are based entirely on data we gather beyond academics that give insight into what the schools' enrolled students say about their professors, administrators, school services, campus culture, and student life. In the end, it's all about the fit.”

The 84-question survey asks students about their school's academics, administration, student body and themselves. You can read more about the ranking methodology here.

The Princeton Review college rankings are different from The Princeton Review college ratings. The ratings are numerical scores on a scale of 60–99 that the company gives to all colleges.

Photo credit: Shutterstock / baipooh

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