The New York Times has released a new ranking of America’s “Most Economically Diverse Top Colleges,” and Denison is included among the leaders.
Denison is ranked at No. 11 in the list of the nation’s top colleges and universities, just behind such schools as Harvard (No. 5) and Columbia (No. 7), and just ahead of Stanford, Brown and Williams (all tied at No. 16). Also included on the Times’ list of the nation’s top 100 schools are Ivy League colleges Penn (No. 27), Dartmouth (No. 28), Cornell (No. 32), Princeton (No. 34), and Yale (No. 41). Vassar led the ranking of the top 100 at No. 1, and Denison is far and away the top school on Ohio (Kenyon, the only other Ohio school on the list, is ranked at No. 80).
“Denison is an economically diverse community, which is just one aspect of Denison’s extraordinary depth of diversity,” said Denison University President Adam Weinberg. “Our students bring viewpoints and experiences here from all backgrounds and walks of life. They come here from big cities, small towns, agricultural and international settings, creating a geographical, multicultural and political richness of diversity in a residential environment that adds to the high value and extreme relevance of a Denison education in a fast-changing world.” He added, “Learning to work well with an extremely diverse group of people gives our students a significant leg up in preparing for life after college.”
To measure colleges’ commitment to economic diversity, The Times developed its College Access Index, which is “based on the share of freshmen from low-income families (measured by the share receiving a Pell grant) in recent years and on the net price of attendance for low- and middle-income families.”
At Denison, one in five students comes from a low-income family and a similar number are the first in their family to attend college. For many years, Denison has made a commitment to accessibility and affordability. As a highly selective liberal arts college, it is Denison’s pledge to make its rigorous educational experience affordable to all who qualify, regardless of economic circumstances.
At a time when some other elite colleges are finding it necessary to consider “ability to pay” when deciding whether to admit applicants, Denison remains wholly committed to a need-blind admissions policy, which admits students based on merit only. Denison’s endowment-per-student ranks on par with Columbia, Vanderbilt and Carleton; and ahead of Northwestern, Middlebury, Penn, Cornell and Wake Forest. In addition, Denison works to reinvest its resources in scholarships for students. In the most recent figures available, only 52 percent of Denison students graduated with any debt, and of the remainder who had debt, the average amount after four years was only $21,252—well below state and national averages.
Denison has been recognized widely as a higher education pioneer in placing importance on the fostering of a diverse community of scholars from across the country and around the world. The college’s mission as a residential undergraduate liberal arts institution includes connections with—and challenges from—multiple, differing perspectives, which stimulate critical thinking, social responsibility and civic engagement.