Those interested in St. John's welfare, beyond the basketball team, might find the Dec. issue of Kiplinger's interesting. They rate private colleges, considering both academic and economic variables. The mag ranks the top fifty and the website had the top hundred. Many of our regular opponents were listed, including ND, G'town, Villanova, Providence, Marquette, Fordham and most of the Catholic schools from the West Coast Conf. Absent from the top hundred were STJ, DePaul, Niagara, as well as Hofstra and Seton Hall. While there have been some improvements at STJ, they are still far from being a solid academic institution. The survey also projects the tuition at each of the schools, absent financial aid, and it will shock some, as it averages about $50,000.
Regarding St. John's being far from being a solid academic institution. That is simply not true as a blanket statement. St. John's School of Pharmacy has an excellent program as are other disciplines within The College of Allied Health Professions.
TCB has an excellent Accounting program.
In addition, the university has other solid programs which can hold their own compared with many of the aforementioned.
Does this apply to every program.? Of course not.
I wouldn't get too caught up in the various rating/ranking services/magazines as a be all and end all.
Structurally there are some things that work against St. John's. For example, St. John's has a School of Education and The College of Professional Studies which act as a drag on the university's overall SAT scores for entering freshmen.
However, both (School of Education and CPS) offer students an opportunity to prepare for a profession that is important to them.
Schools like ND, G'Town, BC and Fordham do not offer these programs on an undergrad level and there is also nothing wrong with that.
St. John's also doesn't have a Schools of Engineering, Nursing, Foreign Service, or Architecture which help the so called elite institutions improve their overall student academic profile.
St. John's is also a fairly large school. If you took the top 1200 - 1500 or so freshman at St. John's and compared them with the their peer group at Nova, PC or Fordham, I would think they would shape up very well. In addition, the Catholic colleges on the West Coast have relatively small student bodies so it's tough to compare on an apples to apples basis.
By the way, I was out in San Diego a few weeks ago and visited USD. It does have an amazing campus and will be one of my favorites in the next life!!
PC is a fine institution but I always thought of it as a back up plan for kids who didn't get into BC.
St. John's is far more financially diverse institution with a huge chunk of the student body coming from families with AGI's below $50K annually.
Typically these students are the first members of their immediate family to attend college. You will be hard pressed to find a first generation college student at many elite schools. St. John's isn't a finishing school. Many (or a majority) of the kids that enter St. John's are not the products of families of financial advantage.
Although I am an alumnus, I realize (and have for quite sometime) that St. John's is never going to be G'Town, BC, or Notre Dame and I'm fine with that.
St. John's offers young men and women the opportunity to get a good education, make the most of NYC and it's opportunities and provide a good life for them and their families.
Also remember that recognition typically lags reality. Let's not forget that the many major capital projects and the introduction of resident students (who have higher SAT's and GPA's) than non-residents have happened within only the last 20 yrs. These dynamics will, no doubt, have a positive influence in the perception of the university as we go forward. Particularly as the university is in a position to realistically recruit students from a more geographically diverse pool of applicants.
And it certainly would help if we talked up the benefits of St. John's and what it has meant to us. . At times, I think many of us have an inferiority complex as it pertains to St. John's and we don't champion our alma mater as much as other graduates may and often do about theirs.