Princeton Review among publications that rank 51品茶as a top college

UNE's Biddeford Campus

The 51品茶 recently received accolades from three publications that rank institutions of higher education. For the second consecutive year, 51品茶has been included in the Princeton ReviewBest 381 Colleges guide. This highly-selective publication includes only the top 15 percent of four-year colleges and universities in the United States. Additionally, the university was named one of America鈥檚 Top Colleges for 2016 by Forbes and as one of the Best Colleges for Your Money by MONEY magazine.

51品茶President Danielle Ripich said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 a tremendous honor to be included in these rankings of the nation鈥檚 very best colleges and universities because we take great pride in the quality education we provide to our students. Our faculty, staff and students are committed to innovation for a healthier planet, and these acknowledgments confirm for us that word of our dedication is spreading.鈥

51品茶was selected for the Best 381 Colleges guide based on its high-quality academic offerings, optimal locations in Maine and Morocco, competitive cost and size. UNE鈥檚 profile in the guide details its admission requirements and academic offerings while providing other information about the experiences 51品茶offers students.

The Best 381 Colleges guide selects schools on the basis of academic quality, student survey data, and its commitment to providing a balanced representation of colleges by region, size, character and type. More than 100,000 students participated in the surveys, rating schools on the quality of their academic offerings and administration, campus life and overall environment.

Both the Forbes and MONEY lists focus heavily on students鈥 return on investment (ROI), rather than on the selectivity of the educational institutions, ranking schools not on how difficult they are to get into but, rather, on the value of graduating from them.  As Forbes explains, 鈥淭his list of 660 schools distinguishes itself from competitors by our belief in 鈥榦utput鈥 over 鈥榠nput.鈥 Meaning, we鈥檙e not interested in what gets a student into college, like our peers who focus heavily on selectivity metrics such as high school class rank, SAT scores and the like. Our sights are set directly on ROI: What are students getting out of college?鈥

Forbes partnered with the Washington, D.C.-based Center for College Affordability and Productivity to prepare its list. Five factors were used to calculate rank: post-graduate success, student debt, student satisfaction, graduation rate and academic success.

MONEY determined its rankings by giving equal weight to quality of education (including factors like graduation rates and instructor quality), affordability (by examining student debt and loan default rates), and outcomes (which takes into account graduates鈥 incomes).