JOPO wrote:I think the difference is actually the number of doctoral programs each college or university offers.
Jet915 wrote:JOPO wrote:I think the difference is actually the number of doctoral programs each college or university offers.
Not sure about that, Creighton offers a ton of doctoral programs: PhD, MD, JD, PharmD, DDS, DPT and DOT (Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy). Other than Georgetown, that's probably the most in the Big East.
gmoser1210 wrote:Jet915 wrote:JOPO wrote:I think the difference is actually the number of doctoral programs each college or university offers.
Not sure about that, Creighton offers a ton of doctoral programs: PhD, MD, JD, PharmD, DDS, DPT and DOT (Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy). Other than Georgetown, that's probably the most in the Big East.
How many Ph.D. programs are there?
gmoser1210 wrote:Jet915 wrote:JOPO wrote:I think the difference is actually the number of doctoral programs each college or university offers.
Not sure about that, Creighton offers a ton of doctoral programs: PhD, MD, JD, PharmD, DDS, DPT and DOT (Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy). Other than Georgetown, that's probably the most in the Big East.
How many Ph.D. programs are there?
6. What are National Universities?
There are 281 national universities – 173 public, 101 private and seven for-profit – based on the 2010 Basic categories established by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
National Universities offer a full range of undergraduate majors as well as master's and doctoral degrees. In many cases, they place strong emphasis on research and receive federal money to support their research endeavors.
Like National Universities, Regional Universities offer a full range of undergraduate programs and provide graduate education at the master's level. However, they differ by offering few, if any, doctoral programs. Of the 621 Regional Universities, 262 are public, 347 private and 12 are for-profit.
The 367 Regional Colleges, including 94 public institutions, 256 privates and 17 for-profits, focus on undergraduate education but grant less than 50 percent of their degrees in liberal arts disciplines. The Regional Colleges category includes institutions where in some cases only a small number of the degrees awarded are at the bachelor's level.
The Regional Universities and Regional Colleges are placed into one of four geographic categories: North, South, Midwest and West.
Jet915 wrote:I really think it has to do with total student population. The cutoff is at Seton Hall which is national while Creighton, Xavier, Villanova, Butler and Providence are under them in total student population and as a result, are "regional." I think the USNews criteria is more of a generalization as most schools with student populations less than 10,000 don't have as many doctoral programs as Creighton does. For instance, the Creighton undergraduate population is only like 4,000 while the graduate programs total over 3,000. Almost as many graduate students at Creighton as undergraduates. As a Creighton graduate alum, I'd be curious to see where we are in the national category, probably 75-100 somewhere I would guess. Being stuck in the regional cateogory seems mid-major to me .
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