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Hope's Approach Earns Top-Five Nationally
in "U.S. News"
College Guide
Posted September 19, 2002
HOLLAND -- Hope College has been ranked among the
top five colleges and universities in the nation in the
"America's Best Colleges 2003" guide published by "U.S. News
and World Report" for its success in teaching through active
learning.
Hope is tied for fourth nationally in the
"Undergraduate research/Creative projects" category, which
was presented in the guide for the first time this year.
Included as a type of program "shown to enhance learning,"
the category is described as follows: "Either independently
or in small teams, and mentored by a faculty member,
students do intensive and self-directed research or creative
work that results in an original scholarly paper or other
product that can be formally presented on or off campus."
Students in a variety of disciplines engage in
collaborative learning experiences with members of the Hope
faculty. Some 100 of them will be discussing their work
during an "Undergraduate Research Symposium" being held on
Wednesday, Oct. 2, from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in the college's
Haworth Inn and Conference Center.
In addition to Hope, the schools in the top five
are the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, Stanford University in California
and Furman University in South Carolina. Schools further
down in the field but still in the top 25 include Princeton
University, Harvard University and Amherst College.
In addition, Hope again appears in the top half of
the guide's "Best Liberal Arts Colleges--Bachelor's
(Nationally)" category. A total of 217 liberal arts
colleges are considered on the national bachelor's list, as
opposed to in the publication's regional rankings.
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