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For institutions participating in the 1993 NRC Study—Research
Doctorate Programs in the US—this chart shows graduate enrollments
and graduate enrollments as a percentage of total campus enrollments.
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* |
Institution |
#
of PhD
Programs
in Study |
Yr
First
PhD
Conferred |
Campus
Total |
Graduate |
Percent
Graduate |
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| PUBLIC |
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R I |
UC San Francisco |
9 |
1961 |
3,746 |
2,238 |
60%
|
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R I |
U of North Carolina-Chapel Hill | 34 |
1883 |
23,977 |
7,029 |
29%
|
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R I |
UC Los Angeles |
36 |
1937 |
35,403 |
9,852 |
28%
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R II |
State University of New York-Albany |
16 |
1963 |
19,001 |
5,190 |
27%
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R I |
University of Illinois at Chicago
|
22 |
1971 |
25,335 |
6,790 |
27%
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R I |
University of Illinois at Urbana | 37 |
1903 |
38,396 |
10,118 |
26% |
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R I |
Virginia Polytechnic Institute
| 19 |
1942 |
26,003 |
6,832 |
26% |
|
R I |
Temple University |
21 |
1925 |
30,229 |
7,859 |
26% |
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R I |
Arizona State University |
26 |
1954 |
43,628 |
11,205 |
26%
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R I |
UC Berkeley |
37 |
1885 |
30,616 |
7,857 |
26% |
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R I |
West Virginia University |
16 |
1932 |
22,712 |
5,802 |
26%
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R I |
University of Wisconsin-Madison
| 39 |
1892 |
41,824 |
10,479 |
25% |
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R II |
Unviersity of South Florida |
12 |
1971 |
34,145 |
8,469 |
25% |
|
R II |
Clemson University |
15 |
1960 |
17,666 |
4,361 |
25%
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R I |
Virginia Commonwealth University
| 2 |
1974 |
21,939 |
5,257 |
24% |
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R II |
University of Idaho |
11 |
1962 |
11,435 |
2,715 |
24% |
|
R I |
University of Texas at Austin |
37 |
1916 |
49,253 |
11,689 |
24% |
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R II |
University of Rhode Island |
10 |
1960 |
15,449 |
3,664 |
24% |
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R I |
University of Miami |
18 |
1961 |
14,156 |
3,202 |
23% |
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R I |
University of Washington |
39 |
1914 |
35,552 |
7,880 |
22%
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R I |
University of Arizona |
29 |
1922 |
35,118 |
7,726 |
22%
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R II |
University of Oregon |
20 |
1926 |
17,285 |
3,684 |
21% |
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R II |
University of Wyoming |
14 |
1947 |
12,044 |
2,535 |
21% |
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R I |
University of Missouri-Columbia | 24 |
1899 |
23,418 |
4,928 |
21% |
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R I |
Florida State University |
24 |
1952 |
28,404 |
5,900 |
21% |
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R I |
U of Alabama, Birmingham |
13 |
1971 |
15,735 |
3,125 |
20% |
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R I |
Oregon State University |
20 |
1935 |
14,355 |
2,808 |
20% |
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R II |
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee |
16 |
1966 |
24,991 |
4,857 |
19% |
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R I |
University of Florida |
32 |
1934 |
36,447 |
6,972 |
19% |
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R II |
University of Houston |
22 |
1947 |
33,022 |
6,196 |
19% |
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R I |
Iowa State |
23 |
1916 |
25,695 |
4,777 |
19% |
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R I |
University of Georgia |
22 |
1940 |
28,493 |
5,285 |
19% |
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R I |
Michigan State University |
31 |
1925 |
39,138 |
7,094 |
18% |
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R I |
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
| 21 |
1896 |
24,573 |
4,381 |
18% |
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R I |
University of Cincinnati |
28 |
1909 |
34,660 |
6,165 |
18% |
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R I |
UC Irvine |
24 |
1967 |
17,181 |
3,045 |
18% |
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R II |
Oklahoma State University |
16 |
1942 |
26,313 |
4,626 |
18% |
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R I |
UC Davis |
27 |
1949 |
22,880 |
4,021 |
18% |
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R II |
UC Riverside |
19 |
1963 |
8,799 |
1,533 |
17% |
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R II |
Northeastern University |
13 |
1965 |
27,586 |
4,750 |
17% |
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R I |
Colorado State University |
16 |
1955 |
37,306 |
6,263 |
17% |
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R I |
UC San Diego |
29 |
1961 |
18,239 |
2,992 |
16% |
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R I |
Utah State University |
9 |
1950 |
16,513 |
2,682 |
16% |
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R II |
University of Arkansas-Fayetteville |
10 |
1953 |
14,582 |
2,368 |
16% |
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R II |
Texas Tech University |
17 |
1952 |
25,417 |
4,086 |
16% |
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R I |
North Carolina State |
23 |
1947 |
27,766 |
4,459 |
16% |
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R II |
Kansas State University |
17 |
1933 |
20,451 |
3,277 |
16% |
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R II |
Kent State University |
18 |
1964 |
33,060 |
5,253 |
16% |
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R II |
Southern Illinois University |
11 |
1959 |
24,761 |
3,759 |
15% |
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R II |
Washington State University |
21 |
1929 |
17,871 |
2,682 |
15% |
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R I |
University of Utah |
20 |
1947 |
26,795 |
3,982 |
15% |
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R II |
University of Delaware |
13 |
1948 |
21,136 |
2,845 |
13% |
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R I |
UC Santa Barbara |
32 |
1964 |
18,651 |
2,375 |
13% |
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R II |
Ohio University |
15 |
1959 |
27,249 |
3,221 |
12% |
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R II |
University of Vermont |
10 |
1944 |
10,885 |
1,230 |
11% |
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R I |
New Mexico State |
10 |
1960 |
22,916 |
2,543 |
11% |
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R II |
UC Santa Cruz |
17 |
1968 |
10,251 |
945 |
9% |
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| PRIVATE |
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R I |
Johns Hopkins University |
34 |
1878 |
14,506 |
8,745 |
60% |
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R I |
Massachusetts Inst of Technology | 23 |
1907 |
9,798 |
5,198 |
53% |
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R II |
George Washington University |
18 |
1888 |
18,600 |
9,415 |
51% |
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R I |
Stanford University |
43 |
1894 |
15,674 |
7,870 |
50% |
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R I |
Harvard |
30 |
1873 |
25,012 |
11,626 |
46% |
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R I |
New York University |
25 |
1866 |
33,695 |
15,508 |
46% |
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R I |
Yale University |
30 |
1860 |
10,945 |
4,380 |
40% |
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R I |
University of Rochester |
28 |
1925 |
9,686 |
3,864 |
40% |
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R I |
University of Pennsylvania |
36 |
1880 |
22,418 |
8,726 |
39% |
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R I |
Washington University |
27 |
1895 |
11,572 |
4,399 |
38% |
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R I |
University of Sourthern California |
26 |
1923 |
28,586 |
10,639 |
37% |
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R I |
Northwestern University |
30 |
1896 |
17,285 |
6,245 |
36% |
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R II |
Rice University |
22 |
1918 |
4,251 |
1,446 |
34% |
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R I |
Vanderbilt University |
26 |
1879 |
9,640 |
3,031 |
31% |
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R I |
Princeton |
29 |
1879 |
6,564 |
1,913 |
29% |
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R I |
Tufts University |
11 |
1941 |
7,896 |
1,942 |
25% |
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R II |
Brandeis University |
14 |
1957 |
3,848 |
935 |
24% |
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R II |
Tulane University |
24 |
1887 |
10,869 |
2,453 |
23% |
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R II |
University of Notre Dame |
22 |
1920 |
10,126 |
1,949 |
19% |
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*R I = Carnegie Classification- Research University I
These institutions offer a full range of baccalaureate
programs, are committed to graduate education through
the doctorate degree, and give high priority to
research. They award 50 or more doctoral degrees each
year. In addition, they receive annually at least $40
million or more in federal support.
R II = Carnegie Classification-Research University
II
These institutions offer a full range of baccalaureate
programs, are committed to graduate education through
the doctorate degree, and give high priority to
research. They award 50 or more doctoral degrees each
year. In addition, they receive annually between $15.5
million and $40 million in federal support.
Note: Future Carnegie Classifications will Change-
Expected 2005
We are currently engaged in a fundamental
reconsideration of the Carnegie Classification. We plan
to develop a more flexible system that will permit
institutions to be grouped in several ways, in
recognition of the fact that a single classification
scheme can conceal the many ways that institutions
resemble or differ from one another. This work will
result in a series of distinct classification schemes,
as well as an interactive facility that will enable
users to generate their own, customized classifications.
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