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Saturday, January 22, 2011

About private universities: USA top private universities


Definition: Examples of private universities include Harvard University, Emory University, Northwestern University, University of Notre Dame and the Vanderbilt University.

The term "private" simply means that the university's funding comes from tuition, investments and private donors, not from taxpayers.

A private university has several features that distinguish it from a liberal arts college or community college:

    * Undergraduate and graduate student focus - unlike liberal arts colleges, universities have significant masters and doctoral programs.
    * Graduate degrees - most degrees awarded from a liberal arts college are four-year bachelor's degrees; at a private university, advanced degrees such as an M.A., M.F.A., M.B.A., J.D., Ph.D., and M.D. are also common
    * Medium size - No private universities are as large as some of the huge public universities, but they tend to be larger than liberal arts colleges. Total undergraduate enrollments between 5,000 and 15,000 are typical.
    * Broad academic offerings - universities are typically made up of several colleges, and students can often choose courses in the liberal arts and sciences or more specialized fields such as engineering, business, health and fine arts.
    * Faculty focus on research - At big-name private universities, professors are often evaluated for their research and publishing first, and teaching second. At most liberal arts colleges, teaching has the top priority.
    * Residential - The majority of students at private universities live at college and attend full time. You'll find far more commuter students and part-time students at public universities and community colleges.
    * Name recognition - The most prestigious and well-known schools in the world are largely private universities. Every member of the Ivy League is a private university, as are Stanford, Duke, Georgetown and Johns Hopkins.
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Top Universities of USA....
Harvard University
 Established in 1636, Harvard University is the oldest university in America. The school is home to approximately 6,700 undergraduate and 13,600 graduate and professional students, as reported in the fall of 2009. The university is comprised of the undergraduate college, Harvard College, and 13 graduate and professional schools, including a business school, a divinity school and a law school.



In 2010, Harvard University tied with Princeton for the number one spot on the "U.S. News & World Report" list of American universities. Of the applicants who applied to Harvard College for fall 2009, only 7.9 percent were accepted.

Harvard University
Massachusetts Hall
Cambridge, MA 02138
617-495-1000
harvard.edu

Princeton University
# As of the fall of 2009, Princeton University was home to 5,047 undergraduate and 2,520 graduate students. According to the school's website, 98 percent of undergraduate students reside on the Princeton campus. In addition to the undergraduate school, Princeton includes a school of architecture, school of engineering and applied science, and the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.

In 2010, Princeton University tied with Harvard University as the best school in the nation, according to the "U.S. News & World Report" ranked list. Only 9.9 percent of undergraduate applicants for the fall of 2009 were accepted to Princeton.

Princeton University

Princeton, NJ 08544
609-258-3000
princeton.edu
Yale University
# Located in New Haven, Connecticut, Yale University was officially established in 1701. The university, which received the number 3 ranking on the 2010 "U.S. News & World Report" list of America's top colleges and universities, is home to 5,247 undergraduate and 6,169 graduate and professional students, as reported in the fall of 2009. The university system includes the Yale College, the undergraduate school, as well as a graduate school of arts and sciences and 13 different professional schools. The Yale professional schools include the School of Art, the School of Divinity, the Law School and the School of Forestry & Environmental Studies. The undergraduate acceptance rate for the 2009-2010 school year was 8.6 percent.

Yale University
100 Wall Street
New Haven, CT 06511-8913
203-432-2324
yale.edu

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