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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - The University of Alabama ranks among the top
50 public universities in the nation in the U.S. News & World
Report rankings for 2003.
UA is 45th among public national universities -- up from 48th last
year -- while UA's Culverhouse
College of Commerce and Business Administration is ranked 47th
nationally among undergraduate business programs.
“We appreciate this recognition of our academic programs,”
said Dr. J. Barry Mason, interim president. “This ranking
is a tribute to the hard work and dedication of our faculty, staff
and students. The true measure of our success is consistency. We
must continue to look for ways to retain the excellent faculty we
now have and find ways to recruit new faculty members of equal caliber.”
U.S. News cited UA's 82 percent freshman retention rate
as one of the criteria used in compiling the rankings. It also noted
that 44 percent of its classes had less than 20 students, and the
student to faculty ratio is 19 to 1.
UA’s Culverhouse College of Commerce and Business Administration
was ranked in the top 50 of all undergraduate business programs,
both public and private, for the fourth consecutive year.
In the magazine's ranking of all doctoral universities, public
and private, UA was one of two universities in the state ranked
in the second tier of the nation's top universities. The second
tier includes those schools ranked just below the top 50, and included
such schools are the universities of Georgia, Florida, Kentucky,
Nebraska, Oklahoma as well as Auburn, Purdue and Ohio State.
Last spring in U.S. News’ rankings of graduate schools,
UA’s School of Law was
ranked among the top 50 law schools for the fourth time in as many
years. Previous rankings have also placed graduate programs in the
College of Communication and Information
Sciences among the nation’s best. The nation’s communication
programs were not ranked this year.
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