In other posts and pages we compare the public and private university academic departmental rankings and list those along with U.S. News overall rankings for the universities. It is often the case that a university’s overall ranking is sharply at odds with its departmental rankings.
In this post we will list the changes in the aggregate academic department rankings for 61 public and private universities during the 2014–2018 time frame. In doing so we hope to give readers some idea whether a given university is trending up or down in the reputation of its academic offerings. A high aggregate ranking indicates that a student could have more options for a major or have the ability to change from one highly-ranked major to another that is also strong. Strong departments in public universities are especially important to honors students because they can take better advantage of the strong department via mentoring and smaller classes.
Academic departments are ranking by university academicians and administrators across the nation. Like any other rankings based on reputation, these are inherently subjective. On the other hand, few individuals are more keenly aware of the personnel changes in their professions or disciplines than members of the academy, whose careers often rely on their own recognized accomplishments, usually by means of publishing or patenting their work.
Our own approach is subjective in that we have chosen to rank only 15 academic disciplines, and most are ranked only at the graduate level. These are biology; business (undergrad); chemistry; computer science; earth sciences; economics; education; engineering (undergrad); English; history; mathematics; physics; political science; psychology; and sociology.
Not every university has ranked programs in all 15 disciplines. In such cases, we only count the ranked disciplines, and the average is based only on those; in other words, their is no penalty if a university does not offer, say, engineering.
In rare cases, a university did not have a ranked department in 2014 but did in 2018. In the list below, the rankings for Emory and Georgia Tech only include departments that were ranked in both years. For example, the history department at Georgia Tech broke into the rankings in 2018 at number 114; this was good in a sense, but the ranking, not present in 2014, had a negative impact.
There are four other special cases. We did not begin tracking Boston College and the University of Rochester until recently, so we do not have a 2014 aggregate ranking for their departments. But because their current aggregate ranking is among the top 60, we included them in the 2018 column. NYU, Carnegie Mellon, and Boston University have been tracked since 2016, so their rankings cover only a two-year period.
Although many universities below had meaningful changes in the aggregate departmental rankings (+2.0/-2.0) during the period, the mean change was only .414. Example: University A had an aggregate departmental ranking of 24.62 in 2018 (very high) but increased only .22 over the 2014 ranking of 24.40.
But University B had an aggregate ranking of 53.65 in 2014 but improved to 49.86 in 2018, a significant change.
The universities below are listed in order of their 2018 aggregate department ranking. Those with an improvement of 2.0 or greater are in bold; those with a decline of 2.0 or greater are in italics.
University | 2013-14 | 2018-19 | Chg + or – |
Stanford | 2.71 | 1.93 | 0.78 |
MIT | 4.58 | 2.73 | 1.85 |
UC Berkeley | 3.13 | 3.20 | -0.07 |
Caltech | 5.63 | 4.71 | 0.92 |
Princeton | 5.77 | 5.38 | 0.39 |
Harvard | 5.57 | 5.71 | -0.14 |
Michigan | 9.47 | 9.40 | 0.07 |
Columbia | 10.85 | 10.23 | 0.62 |
UCLA | 12.86 | 10.86 | 2.00 |
Yale | 12.00 | 10.92 | 1.08 |
Chicago | 11.92 | 11.67 | 0.25 |
Wisconsin | 12.73 | 12.93 | -0.20 |
Cornell | 11.64 | 13.79 | -2.15 |
UT-Austin | 14.27 | 14.47 | -0.20 |
Penn | 18.53 | 16.73 | 1.80 |
Northwestern | 19.00 | 17.86 | 1.14 |
Illinois | 19.33 | 20.07 | -0.74 |
Duke | 22.38 | 20.23 | 2.15 |
Johns Hopkins | 19.36 | 21.93 | -2.57 |
Washington | 21.67 | 22.20 | -0.53 |
North Carolina | 25.80 | 23.79 | 2.01 |
Minnesota | 23.07 | 24.20 | -1.13 |
NYU* | 27.13 | 25.00 | 2.13 |
Georgia Tech | 32.78 | 25.40 | 7.38 |
UCSD | 23.29 | 25.93 | -2.64 |
Ohio State | 25.47 | 26.40 | -0.93 |
Penn State | 25.93 | 27.27 | -1.34 |
Virginia | 32.47 | 27.40 | 5.07 |
Brown | 27.08 | 27.62 | -0.54 |
Carnegie Mellon* | 26.55 | 27.73 | -1.18 |
UC Davis | 30.57 | 28.14 | 2.43 |
Maryland | 27.40 | 28.80 | -1.40 |
Indiana | 29.07 | 29.93 | -0.86 |
Rice | 33.83 | 31.92 | 1.91 |
WUSTL | 29.08 | 32.29 | -3.21 |
UC Irvine | 34.31 | 32.53 | 1.78 |
Colorado | 37.00 | 33.20 | 3.80 |
UCSB | 35.64 | 35.21 | 0.43 |
USC | 37.73 | 35.27 | 2.46 |
Vanderbilt | 33.29 | 35.57 | -2.28 |
Emory | 33.00 | 38.86 | -5.86 |
Purdue | 40.33 | 40.27 | 0.06 |
Texas A&M | 43.80 | 41.60 | 2.20 |
Michigan State | 43.20 | 42.13 | 1.07 |
Arizona | 38.20 | 43.00 | -4.80 |
Rutgers New Bruns | 43.87 | 43.87 | 0.00 |
Pitt | 46.00 | 45.40 | 0.60 |
Notre Dame | 52.23 | 45.43 | 6.80 |
Arizona State | 47.27 | 45.67 | 1.60 |
Stony Brook SUNY | 47.08 | 46.46 | 0.62 |
Massachusetts | 52.14 | 48.67 | 3.47 |
Florida | 44.00 | 48.57 | -4.57 |
Boston University* | 50.20 | 48.67 | 1.53 |
Boston College | no data | 50.27 | |
Iowa | 46.93 | 50.27 | -3.34 |
Oregon | 49.36 | 51.21 | -1.85 |
Dartmouth | 48.86 | 51.38 | -2.52 |
Rochester | no data | 52.00 | |
Virginia Tech | 57.58 | 52.31 | 5.27 |
Georgetown | 59.33 | 53.75 | 5.58 |
Illinois Chicago | 58.07 | 59.80 | -1.73 |