50-50 Highlights: Colleges With the Most Visual and Performing Arts Majors

A group of Visual and Performing Arts majors in black leotards performing a synchronized contemporary dance routine in a studio setting.

dancers representing visual and performaing arts majorsAre there any good 50-50 schools for students majoring in the Visual and Performing Arts? Unfortunately, I can’t say since I don’t really know much about what defines a quality music program or which schools have the best reputation in theater or dance. Just from the little I’ve read, I suspect that the category is too broad to be meaningful to students seriously interested in one of the art disciplines.

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36 Best Bets for Test Optional Merit Aid

dollar signs on chalk board representing best options for test optional colleges merit aidThink because you’re a miserable test taker, you don’t have a chance at merit aid? Maybe not. If you’re willing to step away from the limelight of prestige and top 50 college rankings, you can find some excellent opportunities among the growing number of test optional colleges. With just a little digging into the data, I came up with 36 possible test optional colleges for merit aid.

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50-50 Highlights: Colleges in Big Cities

Blurry image of a city skyline at night with numerous lights and illuminated buildings against a dark sky, reminiscent of bustling colleges in big cities.

View of city at night representing appeal of colleges in big citiesMany high school students are attracted to the idea of attending college in an urban environment. Never mind that most probably don’t participate in the activities unique to such environments once they move in, the desire is there. Although sometimes I suspect it’s more of an “I don’t want to go to school in the sticks because I can’t find a good bar” but let’s not be cynical.

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What Smart Parents Need to Know about Financial Aid

jar of money representing why it's important to understand financial aid

jar of money representing why you need to understand financial aidMost parents know that they will need financial aid to send their kids to college. But they don’t always understand financial aid actually comes from a variety of sources and can vary depending on the college. Do you know the answers to the following financial aid questions?

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What You Need to Know About College Recruiting: Coaching Changes

cat tangled in yarn representing college coaching changes in recruiting

Kitten with yarn is like dealing with college coaching changesIf you have even the slightest interest in college athletics, I don’t think it’s possible to have missed all the press on the college football post-season coaching changes. As coaches leave one school for another, there is the question about what happens to the players he recruited. And if you’re an existing, or hopefully soon to be, athletic recruit, the chances of finding yourself dealing with college coaching changes is more likely than you think. So keep up with the reading.

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How to Pay Less for College: Understand Supply and Demand

A pink piggy bank wearing glasses sits atop a stack of books in front of a chalkboard adorned with dollar signs and bar graphs, symbolizing ways to pay less for college.

Chalk board with money signs to show how to pay less for collegeIf you’re trying to figure out how to pay for college, if you’re looking for the best merit scholarship opportunities, you need to understand the basics of supply and demand in higher education. Why? Because we charge students to attend college. Granted, the way we pay for higher education is a complicated mixture of public finance and individual contributions but it’s still part of the market place. There’s a reason why colleges bury high school students in an avalanche of slick brochures and social media invitations–colleges are competing for students willing to pay to attend their version of the “collegiate experience.”

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50-50 Highlights: Colleges with the Best Graduation Rates

happy college graduates representing colleges with the best graduation rates

graduating students from colleges with the best graduation ratesPeople are generally a little surprised when I recommend using 50% as the minimum graduation rate for looking for colleges. It does seem like a pretty low standard but the fact is that only approximately a quarter of colleges and universities have a four-year graduation rate of 49% or higher. If you use the five-year rate for public institutions, than then number increases to about a third of all schools.

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50-50 Highlights: Colleges that Spend the Most on Teaching Students

A hand places a coin into the first of four jars, each containing coins and a small plant sprouting from it, symbolizing how colleges that spend the most on teaching students invest in their growth.

plants growing in money representing colleges that spend the most on studentsThis week we’re looking at which colleges spend the most on teaching students. Specifically, we’re going to look at the average instructional expenses per student. In some ways, you can consider it a monetary form of the student-faculty ratio. Theoretically, the more money spent on teaching the student, the better for the student.

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50-50 Highlights: Colleges with Decreases in Average Net Price

steps of money with down arrow representing colleges with decreases in average net price

Steps of money representing Decreases in Average Net PriceAnyone who spends time on this blog should realize that very few people pay the actual published price for college. This makes it difficult to judge the significance of the rising prices of college tuition. A lot of schools, especially public institutions, justify increasing tuition by pointing out that a certain percentage of the increase will go to financial aid.

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