Best Values
Rice ranked second only to Yale in America by national mag: A $50,000 collegebargain
With annual costs over $50,000 per year, none of the universities listed on Kiplinger's list of best value colleges are what most people would call a bargain. But when it comes to college values, according to Kiplinger, tuition rates can be deceiving.
Instead the financial publication looks not only at the sticker price, but also at each university's financial aid packages, graduation rates (you know, because college is cheaper when you finish in four years) and student indebtedness. Cost factors made up only half of the criteria; academic quality makes up 56.25 percent of the rankings for a group of universities that are both prestigious and less expensive than their peers.
A perennial list favorite, Rice University moves up to No. 2 on Kiplinger's list of Best Values in Private Universities for 2012-2013, after coming in fourth place in 2010 and 2011.
With yearly costs estimated at $50,692, Rice has the lowest "sticker price" of any school that made the Top 20, and need-based aid reduces that figure to an average net cost of $19,440. Kiplinger's adds:
Unlike many top-tier institutions, Rice also awards merit aid to a significant percentage of students, at an average of almost $16,000."
Ahead of Rice is Yale University in the No. 1 spot for a need-based aid program described as "lavish," with an average annual net cost of $13,786 and 100 percent of demonstrated needs met. Princeton, Duke and the California Institute of Technology round out the top five.