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UVa-Wise
students complete degrees with the least amount of debt,
according to U.S. News ranking
The Class of 2003 at The University of Virginia’s
College at Wise completed their degrees with less debt than
students at any of the nation’s other liberal arts
colleges, according to the latest issue of U.S. News and
World Report’s annual college guide
UVa-Wise ranked
first among more than 200 national liberal arts colleges
whose graduates complete their degrees while incurring the
least amount of student debt. About 67 percent of UVa-Wise
graduates leave with debt. Of those UVa-Wise graduates who
do have student loans to repay, the average amount of debt
is $7,414. That compares to an average debt load of $24,876
for students at Albright College in Pennsylvania, the liberal
arts college with the largest average student debt.
“The College’s
ranking is truly remarkable when you consider that nearly
80 percent of our students demonstrate financial need, the
largest percentage at any college or university in Virginia,”
said Chancellor Ernest H. Ern. “Through our endowment
and foundation support, we’ve been able to supplement
the federal and state monies available to assist students
with need. Our students are able to gain a quality education
without taking on sizeable student loans.”
The U.S. News
data includes loans taken out by students from financial
institutions, federal, state and local governments, and
from the colleges themselves. The average amount of debt
is the average cumulative amount borrowed by those students
who incurred debt, not the average for all students.
“Our institutional
philosophy is to package financial aid in such a way that
our students incur as little debt as possible,” said
Rusty Necessary, Vice Chancellor of Enrollment Management.
“The ranking is an affirmation of the dedication of
our donors and the hard work of our Financial Aid staff,
but most importantly our students are graduating with a
University of Virginia diploma and with a debt load they
can manage.”
UVa-Wise continues
to be listed among the nation’s top public liberal
arts colleges. The nation’s 215 liberal arts colleges
- most of which are private - emphasize undergraduate education
and award at least half of their degrees in the liberal
arts disciplines. Twenty of the nation’s liberal arts
colleges, including UVa-Wise, are publicly funded.
With only the
top five national public liberal arts colleges ranked individually
in the current report, a precise numerical ranking is not
yet available for the College. This is the fourth time the
College has been included in the national ranking. Last
year, UVa-Wise ranked eighth among the nation’s top
public liberal arts colleges.
Each school’s
rank, within its group of peer institutions, is based on
the same set of quality measures. Seventy-five percent of
the ranking is based on a formula that includes objective
measures of academic quality, such as graduation rates,
freshman retention, class size, student selectivity, student/faculty
ratios, faculty salaries, SAT scores, acceptance rates,
financial resources, and alumni giving rates. The remaining
25 percent is based on a reputational survey of peer institutions
conducted in the early spring. The magazine surveys the
president, provost and dean of admissions at each school
to rate the perceived quality of the academic programs for
schools in the same category, including their own.
For more information,
contact the Office of College Relations at 276-328-0130.
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