View the full results of the听Wall Street Journal/探花视频听College Rankings 2019
At Liberty University in Virginia, students would find themselves in deep trouble if they were caught with a member of the opposite sex in their dorm after hours. Sharing their room with an approved firearm, however, carries no punishment at the Christian university, which, earlier this year, opened a multimillion-dollar, 600-acre shooting range for students (although the weapon must be stored in a 鈥渟ecured safe鈥 installed by the university in the student鈥檚 room).
鈥淎ttendance at a dance鈥 or smoking a cigarette risks a $25 (拢19) fine and six 鈥減oints鈥 (22 points results in disciplinary probation while more than 30 can lead to expulsion). 鈥淧articipation in a social gathering where alcohol is served鈥 incurs 18 points, a $250 fine and 18 hours of community service. But the harshest punishment of a $500 fine and 30 points is reserved for, among other things, 鈥減ossession or consumption of alcoholic beverages鈥 and spending the night with a member of the opposite sex.
鈥淪exual relations outside of a biblically ordained marriage between a natural-born man and a natural-born woman are not permissible at Liberty University,鈥 says the institution鈥檚 19-page code of conduct, known as the . The evangelical powerhouse is led by Jerry Falwell Jr, a Southern Baptist televangelist and right-wing activist who, in 2016, that Donald Trump had offered him the job of education secretary after his presidential victory, but that he had turned it down for personal reasons.
Such 鈥渉onour codes鈥, which often apply to staff as well as students, are common across religious universities in the US, although the specific rules differ.
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At Brigham Young University, a Mormon institution in Utah, 鈥渙ne鈥檚 stated same-gender attraction is not an issue鈥, but 鈥渁ll forms of physical intimacy that give expression to homosexual feelings鈥 are deemed 鈥渋nappropriate鈥. University accommodation is gender segregated and students cannot consume alcohol, tobacco or caffeine. There are also strict dress codes for all employees and students, including a prohibition on beards in the absence of a 鈥 for medical reasons鈥.
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Several evangelical institutions also prescribe attendance of daily chapel and weekly worship at a local church.
While these examples may conform to the stereotype of US religious universities as socially 鈥 and usually politically 鈥 conservative, Matthew Mayhew, William Ray and Marie Adamson Flesher professor of education administration at Ohio State University, warns against tarring all faith-based institutions with the same brush.

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鈥淚t鈥檚 a very arbitrary way of thinking about colleges in the US these days, to try and group them by their religious commitments or their religious traditions,鈥 says Mayhew, who is co-principal investigator of the , which seeks to 鈥渂etter understand student encounters with religious, spiritual and worldview diversity across the spectrum of American higher education鈥.
鈥淚nstitutions are so nuanced in the US,鈥 he says. 鈥淓ven if an institution says it鈥檚 a Lutheran鈥nstitution, it doesn鈥檛 necessarily mean that a student who enrols in one鈥utheran institution is going to have the same experience as a student who enrols in another type of Lutheran institution.鈥
Michael Poliakoff is president of the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, a non-profit organisation that aims to support liberal arts education, uphold high academic standards and safeguard academic freedom. He says that despite their distinctive characteristics, religious universities in the US are not viewed as a separate segment of the country鈥檚 higher education sector, but are 鈥渇ully in the mainstream鈥.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a resource for the nation that is very valuable,鈥 he says. 鈥淪tudents and faculty who don鈥檛 want to be in communities like this have other options, but for people who want to be within this kind of religious community, it offers opportunities that are academically very strong [and] in keeping with their particular religious tenets,鈥 he says.
Top 20: resources
| Resources rank | Overall 2019 rank | Institution name | Resources score |
| 1 | 5 | California Institute of Technology | 30 |
| 2 | 1 | Harvard University | 29.9 |
| 3 | 2 | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | 29.4 |
| 4 | 9 | Princeton University | 28.1 |
| 5 | 19 | Vanderbilt University | 27.5 |
| 6 | =7 | Brown University | 27.4 |
| =7 | 13 | Northwestern University | 27.2 |
| =7 | 14 | Rice University | 27.2 |
| 9 | 4 | Columbia University | 27.1 |
| =10 | =14 | University of Chicago | 27 |
| =10 | 10 | University of Pennsylvania | 27 |
| 12 | 12 | Dartmouth College | 26.9 |
| =13 | 11 | Cornell University | 26.8 |
| =13 | 3 | Yale University | 26.8 |
| 15 | =7 | Duke University | 26.7 |
| =16 | 6 | Stanford University | 26.1 |
| =16 | 18 | Washington University in St Louis | 26.1 |
| 18 | 32 | Tufts University | 25.8 |
| 19 | 20 | Emory University | 25.6 |
| =20 | 16 | Carnegie Mellon University | 25.3 |
| =20 | 17 | University of Southern California | 25.3 |
The results of the 2019 Wall Street Journal/探花视频 US College Rankings show that religious universities perform very well when it comes to student engagement, which the ranking assesses on the basis of a survey of almost 200,000 students. They are asked whether the teaching at their institution supports critical thinking and applying learning to the real world; whether they have a chance to interact with faculty and their peers; and whether they would recommend their college to a friend.听
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Dordt College, a Christian liberal arts institution in Iowa, ranks first on this 鈥減illar鈥 of the ranking for the third consecutive year, and is followed by Oklahoma Baptist University, Texas Christian University, the evangelical Cedarville University in Ohio and Brigham Young鈥檚 Provo campus, all within the top six.
Poliakoff says that 鈥渧irtually all鈥 Christian universities 鈥渟tress leadership and character development鈥, and try to produce graduates with 鈥渉onour, honesty [and] integrity鈥 鈥 which may explain why students at such institutions feel more engaged and why they are so well regarded by employers.
Andrew Abela, provost at the Catholic University of America (CUA) in Washington, DC, says that this university鈥檚 business school has a 鈥渟trong focus on cultivating students to understand business as [being] not just about making as much money as you can but fundamentally about doing some good for society in a profitable way. We try to get students to realise that it鈥檚鈥ne life that you live, and you can鈥檛 have a moral side to you on Sunday and a profit side to you on Monday.鈥
And Hans de Wit, director of the Center for International Higher Education at Boston College, a Jesuit university, and co-editor of the 2018 book Identity and Internationalisation in Catholic Universities, argues that faith-based universities 鈥 and Catholic institutions in particular 鈥 tend to emphasise 鈥渟ocial justice鈥 issues, such as the environment and human rights, through their teaching and learning.

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However, one major criticism of religious institutions is that they lack diversity. This is borne out by the fact that religious institutions typically figure less highly on the 鈥渆nvironment鈥 pillar of the ranking, which measures institutions鈥 proportion of international students, the racial and ethnic diversity of their students and faculty and the prevalence of students with lower family earnings. For instance, Saint Anselm College, a Benedictine liberal arts institution in New Hampshire, and Pennsylvania鈥檚 Westminster College, which is affiliated with the Presbyterian Church, are both in the bottom quarter of the table when ranked on this pillar.
De Wit says that while many Catholic universities have an emphasis on improving the diversity of their domestic student population, most 鈥渉aven鈥檛 expanded that diversity issue to international students鈥. But Selma Botman, provost of Yeshiva University, a Jewish institution in New York City, says that the commonly held assumption that Yeshiva has a 鈥渉omogeneous student body鈥 as a result of its religious character is 鈥渘ot true鈥.
鈥淛ust like other universities, our student body is extremely multidimensional with energised and varying positions on politics, religious interpretation, modern Judaism and much more. They come to us from all parts of America and internationally,鈥 she says, adding that students and faculty of all faiths and those with no faith are welcome.
Another common concern about religious institutions is the extent to which they interfere with academic freedom. Last year, for instance, Cedarville came under fire after implementing a 鈥渂iblically consistent curriculum policy鈥, which stipulates that material that is 鈥渃learly pornographic, erotic, obscene, or graphic must be avoided鈥. Plays 鈥渨ith swearing must be avoided or modified鈥 and those with 鈥渕orals or teachings that run counter to the scriptural standard should be evaluated for what value they bring to the campus鈥. And 鈥渁s a general rule, 鈥楻鈥 rated movies [which require those under the age of 17 to be accompanied by an adult] will not be shown鈥.
The university said at the time that the guidelines were 鈥渘ot designed to restrict the free discussion of ideologies, philosophies or schools of thought that may or may not run counter to biblical truth. Rather, this policy is focused on images, movies, songs, plays, or writing that may be considered 鈥榓dult鈥 in nature, that represent immorality, or that may be a stumbling block to students.鈥

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However, former scholars at the institution told THE that the policy 鈥渉obbles the faculty鈥檚 ability to train professionals in the field of humanities鈥 and had made them 鈥渢errified of losing their jobs鈥.
Carl Ruby, former vice-president for student affairs at Cedarville, left the institution after 30 years just months before current president Thomas White took the helm in July 2013. He says that he attracted criticism from colleagues for 鈥渂ringing in speakers who were not necessarily Republicans鈥.
While the Catholic university sector is more diverse politically and, generally, has more academic freedom, Ruby says evangelical universities still tend to be politically conservative. Only around a quarter of such institutions 鈥渇eel like they have the freedom鈥 to invite speakers with differing views.
鈥淔ear of their constituency and their alumni base is still a factor that would keep a lot of them from doing that,鈥 Ruby says.
He adds that faculty at Cedarville must sign a statement agreeing to a certain set of doctrinal beliefs, including that Creation took place in six literal days and details on when Jesus Christ will return to Earth. 鈥淪ome schools would allow faculty鈥o do research that might advocate theistic evolution 鈥 [the theory that] evolution has occurred but God was behind it and directing it 鈥 [but at] Cedarville you would lose your job if you did that.鈥
Earlier this year, a survey of about 50 student journalists from 49 institutions, all of which are members of the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities (CCCU), found that around 75 per cent had been encouraged by a university representative to change or remove an article after it was published in their student newspaper, according to .
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And last month it was that Liberty鈥檚 Falwell reviewed and rejected student newspaper stories and opinion pieces written about Trump ahead of the 2016 election and required editors to disclose who a columnist planned to vote for.
Top 20:听environment
Meanwhile, Brigham Young admits on its website that there 鈥渃an be no unlimited individual academic freedom鈥 at the institution, and a policy bars scholars from contradicting or opposing (as distinct from analysing or discussing) fundamental Mormon doctrine.
鈥淲ere there no constraints on individual academic freedom, religious universities could converge towards a secular model and lose their distinctive character, thus diminishing pluralism in academia,鈥 the institution explains. It adds that 鈥渆ven secular universities鈥o not empower individual faculty members with absolute individual freedom relative to the university mission鈥, citing examples of secular institutions censoring professors for racist 鈥渆xpression鈥.
The CUA鈥檚 Abela also says that academics at his institution cannot 鈥渁ttempt to use the university as a platform to attack or undermine [Catholic] teachings鈥. Its board of trustees (which is largely made up of bishops) approves all tenure decisions, but Abela stresses that there are 鈥渘o limits鈥 when it comes to 鈥渜uestions of inquiry, discussion and research鈥. In fact, he says, the CUA 鈥 the only US university owned directly by the Catholic Church rather than an individual order 鈥 has 鈥渕ore academic freedom鈥 than 鈥渕ost secular universities鈥. This is because 鈥渋n many universities, people are afraid to talk about things like religion, which they think of as private. Every question here is welcome鈥here are no safe spaces from ideas, no forbidden topics. We have very open dialogues.鈥
Earlier this year, for instance, the institution hosted a debate on abortion, featuring speakers from pro-life and pro-choice organisations, he says.
And while the university is required to have a majority of practising Catholics among its faculty, there are no restrictions when it comes to student recruitment. So while 80 per cent of students are Catholic, there is also a significant minority of Muslims.
鈥淭hey feel comfortable practising their faith because they know we are comfortable in ours,鈥 says Abela.
The American Council of Trustees and Alumni鈥檚 Poliakoff agrees that academic freedom and censorship is not an issue that is confined to religious institutions, citing the rise of trigger warnings across the US sector: 鈥淎 religious institution that worries about students viewing in class a film that has sexually explicit material has a mirror image in a secular institution that censors things it either deems to be racially insensitive or somehow triggering in students bad memories about a sexual encounter.鈥
And, at Cedarville at least, concerns about academic freedom do not seem to be harming enrolment, according to Ruby.
Top 20:听engagement
| Engagement rank | Overall 2019 rank | Institution name | Engagement score |
| 1 | 365 | Dordt College | 18.2 |
| 2 | 501鈥600 | Oklahoma Baptist University | 17.9 |
| =3 | 422 | Cedarville University | 17.8 |
| =3 | 501鈥600 | Harding University | 17.8 |
| =3 | 205 | Texas Christian University | 17.8 |
| =6 | 135 | Brigham Young University-Provo | 17.7 |
| =6 | 7 | Brown University | 17.7 |
| =6 | 358 | Indiana Wesleyan University-Marion | 17.7 |
| =6 | >800 | Lee University | 17.7 |
| =6 | 17 | University of Southern California | 17.7 |
| =6 | 94 | Texas A&M University-College Station | 17.7 |
| =12 | 171 | Baylor University | 17.6 |
| =12 | 186 | Bradley University | 17.6 |
| =12 | 28 | University of Michigan-Ann Arbor | 17.6 |
| =12 | 203 | Samford University | 17.6 |
| =16 | 501鈥600 | California Baptist University | 17.5 |
| =16 | 25 | University of California, Los Angeles | 17.5 |
| =16 | 16 | Carnegie Mellon University | 17.5 |
| =16 | 406 | University of Cincinnati-Uptown | 17.5 |
| =16 | 251 | Concordia College at Moorhead | 17.5 |
| =16 | 501鈥600 | University of Northern Iowa | 17.5 |
| =16 | 126 | Ohio Northern University | 17.5 |
| =16 | 289 | Oklahoma City University | 17.5 |
However, that healthy picture may not endure for ever, he concedes. With US student debt approaching $1.5 trillion, potential applicants to religious universities are becoming 鈥渕uch less likely to view the debt that they have to incur to go to a more expensive private school as worth the investment鈥, Ruby admits.
Like other private universities, religious institutions are ineligible for public funding for teaching, and the rankings data show that faith universities are among the most expensive institutions in the US.
Trinity College in Connecticut, which was founded in the Episcopal tradition but says it is 鈥渞ooted in principles of religious and academic freedom鈥, charges $52,760 a year in out-of-state tuition and fees, making it the second most expensive college in the table. Boston College charges $51,296; Southern Methodist University in Texas costs $50,358; and College of the Holy Cross in Massachusetts charges $48,940. Such fees can be all the more burdensome to students given that there are restrictions on religious colleges鈥 access to federal student aid 鈥 although the government is those regulations.
According to Ruby, such high fees are partly a result of the fact that most Christian universities receive only small amounts of funding from their associated churches. Another reason is that for large parts of their history many of them primarily produced relatively low-paid pastors and teachers, limiting their scope to raise funds from rich alumni donors and grow their endowments. Their typical focus on teaching, meanwhile, means that they receive low amounts of federal research income.
Craig Goebel, principal at Art & Science Group, a higher education consulting firm in Baltimore, says that students are also questioning the role of religion in higher education. 鈥淲e hear many students say: 鈥業鈥檓 very engaged in my church and my religious life. I鈥檓 also looking for strong academics in preparation for a job.鈥 Some of those latter elements may get overshadowed by the faith-based components鈥 at religious institutions, he says.
Figures from the Pew Research Center also raise the question of whether religious universities are still relevant. A found that 41 per cent of millennials think that religion is very important, compared with 59 per cent of baby boomers and 67 per cent of the preceding 鈥渟ilent generation鈥. And just 27 per cent of millennials attend religious services at least once a week, compared with 51 per cent among the older generation.
John Jenkins, president of the research-intensive, Catholic University of Notre Dame 鈥 the top religious university in the ranking, at 26th place 鈥 admits that there is 鈥渁 secular trend in the wider society that has a tendency to isolate us in the world of higher education, as well as in society at large鈥. But he also believes that religious universities have a unique role to play in today鈥檚 political climate in the US. He told THE in July that he was concerned by the tendency of the president and others to 鈥渃apitalise on fears and anxieties鈥, and believed that religious institutions have a 鈥渞esponsibility and an opportunity to highlight those broader issues of morality and hope鈥.
Ruby adds that many Christian universities have evolved in recent years to reflect changing views among young evangelicals and to offset any actual or potential declines in enrolment. While older evangelicals tend to 鈥渨rap Christianity and Republican politics really tightly together鈥, the younger generation are much more concerned about social justice issues and tend to have 鈥渕uch more open views鈥 on topics such as immigration and racial inequality, he says. As a result, some evangelical universities are increasingly hosting conferences on such topics and some are relaxing their restrictions on student and academic behaviour.

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But such liberalisation can cause considerable strain within Christian higher education. For instance, in 2015, Union University in Tennessee, an evangelical liberal arts institution, quit the CCCU after Eastern Mennonite University and Goshen College became the first members to express a willingness to hire faculty members in same-sex marriages. A month later, the latter institutions announced they would resign from the council to avoid splitting it. The council said that if any other members changed hiring policies in ways that conflict with 鈥渢he historic Christian view of marriage鈥, then their membership status would be changed to 鈥減ending鈥 and they would be referred to a task force for review.
Timothy Gombis, professor of the New Testament at Cornerstone University, an evangelical institution in Michigan, says such divisions are mirrored within individual colleges. While many such institutions have academics and student populations that are 鈥減rogressive and want to address issues of justice鈥, governing bodies still tend to consist of 鈥渨hite men who believe in the Protestant work ethic. Presidents must raise money from these people, so with a few exceptions, including my own institution, there is a divide between the governing bodies and the people who inhabit the schools day in and day out.鈥
Art & Science Group鈥檚 Goebel adds that institutions often wrestle with the question of whether they should adapt to the market by watering down or abandoning their religious ethos. But, for him, this is a 鈥渇alse dichotomy鈥 since many of the religious colleges that have done 鈥渞eally well in recent years have not abandoned their mission of faith-based education, but have instead expanded their [sales pitches] to include other aspects of what they鈥檙e providing 鈥 namely, strong academics, strong research and preparation for careers. You don鈥檛 have to full-out abandon a faith-based education in order to accomplish this,鈥 he says.
Ruby adds that while many religious universities are indeed adapting, there is 鈥渁lways going to be a niche for the more conservative, hard-line traditional evangelicals鈥.
An uncompromising approach, he says, is part of what helps evangelical universities thrive. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not trying to be a school that appeals to everyone,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e appealing to a student who is looking for something that is distinctly different.鈥澨
Top 20: outcomes
| Outcomes rank | Overall 2019 rank | Institution name | Outcomes score |
| =1 | 7 | Duke University | 39.6 |
| =1 | 1 | Harvard University | 39.6 |
| =1 | 3 | Yale University | 39.6 |
| 4 | 9 | Princeton University | 39.5 |
| =5 | 4 | Columbia University | 39.2 |
| =5 | 2 | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | 39.2 |
| =7 | 5 | California Institute of Technology | 39.1 |
| =7 | 12 | Dartmouth College | 39.1 |
| 9 | 6 | Stanford University | 39 |
| 10 | 10 | University of Pennsylvania | 38.9 |
| 11 | 11 | Cornell University | 38.8 |
| 12 | 14 | University of Chicago | 38.4 |
| =13 | 22 | Amherst College | 38.1 |
| =13 | 16 | Carnegie Mellon University | 38.1 |
| 15 | 7 | Brown University | 38 |
| 16 | 23 | Williams College | 37.9 |
| 17 | 13 | Northwestern University | 37.8 |
| 18 | 60 | Georgia Institute of Technology | 37.7 |
| 19 | 21 | Johns Hopkins University | 37.6 |
| =20 | 28 | University of Michigan-Ann Arbor | 37.4 |
| =20 | 18 | Washington University in St Louis | 37.4 |
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