Education

Forbes releases list of ‘New Ivies,' with multiple colleges from the Midwest making the cut

The magazine's 'New Ivies" consists of 10 public universities and 10 private colleges

NBC Universal, Inc.

A group of Ivy League schools known as the “Ancient Eight” have historically churned out some of the country’s best and brightest. But college protests, some turning chaotic, coupled with canceled commencement ceremonies, reports of rising antisemtisim on campus and increasing tuition costs may lead perspective student to start looking elsewhere.

A group of Ivy League schools known as the "Ancient Eight" have historically churned out some of the country's best and brightest. But college protests, some turning chaotic, coupled with canceled commencement ceremonies, reports of rising antisemtisim on campus and increasing tuition costs may lead perspective student to start looking elsewhere.

Some of those factors and more have led Forbes editors to examine a new set of public and private universities that may have been overlooked in years past but produce the "hardest working, high achievers that employers crave."

According to editors, Forbes compiled an "exclusive survey" of hiring managers to help identify 10 public universities and 10 private ones that are "turning out the smart, driven graduates craved by employers of all types."

Editors at Forbes dubbed the lists "The New Ivies."

According to the report, the methodology looked to hiring managers to help analyze the data for more than 1,700 colleges of at least 4,000 students, taking into account admissions data, standardized test scores and more.

Forbes notes that many of the schools appearing on its report are "well known," and have long been considered "Ivy caliber."

On its list of 10 "Public Ivies," three Midwestern schools made the cut: The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, The University of Michigan-Ann Arbor and the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

"These 10 state universities, spread across the U.S., attract high-achievers and turn out hard-working, highly-regarded employees," editors wrote, noting that California schools were not included as they don't consider test scores.

Forbes' full list of "Public Ivies" can be found below:

  • Binghamton University - New York
  • Georgie Institute of Technology - Georgia
  • University of Florida - Florida
  • University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign- Illinois
  • University of Maryland - College Park
  • University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
  • University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill
  • University of Texas - Austin
  • University of Virginia - Virginia
  • University of Wisconsin - Madison

As part of the list's 10 "New Private Ivies," only two schools in the Midwest made the cut: Northwestern University in Evanston and the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana.

"These 10 private schools, located in nine states and Washington D.C., are attracting the smartest students and plaudits from employers," editors wrote. "Our analysis excluded schools with fewer than 4,000 students, the eight old Ivies and four Ivy-plus schools—Stanford, MIT, Duke and Chicago."

Forbes full list of "Private Ivies" can be found below:

  • Boston College - Massachusetts
  • Carnegie Mellon University - Pennsylvania
  • Emory University - Georgia
  • Georgetown Univeristy - District of Columbia
  • Johns Hopkins University - Maryland
  • Northwestern University - Illinois
  • Rice University - Texas
  • University of Notre Dame - Indiana
  • University of Southern California - California
  • Vanderbilt University - Tennessee

The full report from Forbes can be found here.

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