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The aspiration to excellence in the higher education system is key to the United States' future: for its continuing prosperity today and in the years to come.
It is an aspiration that New Jersey has taken on board. A 2015 report by the Governor's Council on Higher Education recommended that 65 percent of all adults complete a post-secondary degree or certification by 2025. And with four-year colleges that range from the Ivy league to a top ten research university, it is one New Jersey is well placed to achieve.
With New York on its eastern border and Philadelphia on its western side, New Jersey has three public research universities, eight state colleges and universities and 15 independent four year colleges. All are accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education. Of which 25 are detailed below.
New Jersey also has the unique distinction of being home to two of the nine colleges established in the thirteen colonies prior to the Declaration of Independence in 1776. The College of New Jersey, known today as Princeton University, was founded in 1746, Queen's College, known today as Rutgers University, was founded in 1766. The State is also adapting to the age we live in. Which is why also ranked the Best Online Schools in New Jersey.
All the colleges located in New Jersey also have easy access to a wide variety of world-class events, both cultural and sporting, that a city like New York attracts. Extra-curricular activities that many of the New Jersey colleges access on a regular basis.
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What are the best colleges in New Jersey?
College Choice has done the heavy lifting in comparing all the four-year degree colleges and universities in New Jersey. Accessing information from college and university websites, the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS), the U. S. Department of Education's College Scorecard, U.S. News and World Report and the New Jersey Office of the Secretary of Higher Education, College Choice has ranked the top 25.
Using metrics that include graduation rate, institutional reputation, student-to-faculty ratio, endowment size, tuition costs, average student indebtedness after graduation and graduates expected early career salary, College Choice has compiled the list below.
Rankings
See our rankings methodology page.
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Princeton UniversityLocation
Princeton, NJ
Tuition$61160
Graduation Rate97%
Overview
Founded in 1746 as the College of New Jersey, it was renamed Princeton University when the college moved to its present day 500-acre campus in 1896. Princeton is one of the eight world-famous Ivy League universities known for their academic excellence, selective admissions, and social elitism. Among its alumni can be counted two U.S. Presidents, 41 Nobel laureates, 12 U.S. Supreme Court Justices, along with numerous living billionaires and foreign heads of state. In 1969 this liberal arts university became coeducational. Former first lady Michelle Obama was from the Class of 1985.
Features
Providing undergraduate and graduate teaching in the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, and engineering, Princeton has a population of just over 8,000 students with a student-to-faculty ratio of 5:1. It offers Bachelor’s, Master’s, and Doctor’s degrees and from 2001 to the present-day Princeton has been ranked in the top two of national universities by the U.S. News & World Report, holding the top spot for 15 of these 17 years. Popular majors include:
- Engineering
- Social Sciences
- Public Administration
- Biological and Biomedical Sciences
- History
Notables
Over 98 percent of students live on campus with freshmen and sophomores mandated to live in residential colleges. Much of Princeton’s social life gravitates around these six residential colleges that also sponsor trips to New York to see the ballet, the opera, Broadway shows, and sporting events. And should Princeton beat Harvard and Yale Universities at football in the same season, a Ceremonial Bonfire is held in Common Green. The most recent of this was in November of 2013.
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Stevens Institute of TechnologyLocation
Hoboken, NJ
Tuition$62940
Graduation Rate82%
Overview
As the first college in America dedicated to mechanical engineering, the Stevens Institute of Technology was incorporated in 1870 from an 1868 bequest by the American engineer, inventor, and entrepreneur, Edwin Augustus Stevens. With two Nobel Prize winners amongst its alumni, one each in Chemistry and Physics, Stevens has three designated national Centers of Excellence from the U.S. Department of Defense and Department of Homeland Security. In 1971 Stevens became a coeducational institution and in 1982 it became the first major U.S. educational body to mandate the use of personal computers in the classroom.
Features
With a student population of just under 5,000 graduates and undergraduates Stevens has an undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio of 10:1. The four schools, the Schaefer School of Engineering & Science, the School of Business, the School of Systems & Enterprises, and the College of Arts and Letters attracts a diverse, multi-cultural range of students from around the world. Top subject majors include:
- Engineering
- Business
- Computer and Information Sciences
- Biological and Biomedical Sciences
- Engineering Technology
Notables
As well as having alumni involved with the invention of IMAP (the modern form of email), bubble wrap, and the Gantt chart, the Stevens’ Hoboken campus abuts four of the city’s parks. This embrace of inclusion and diversity is likewise present in the hundred plus student organizations that include 18 social sororities and fraternities. All of these promote Stevens Institute of Technology as a community of learners that think critically and act responsibly.
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Ramapo College of New JerseyLocation
Mahwah, NJ
Tuition$38613
Graduation Rate72%
Overview
Located in the foothills of the Ramapo Mountains, the Ramapo College of New Jersey is a public liberal arts and professional studies university. Due to its unique interdisciplinary academic structure, size, and pastoral setting it is viewed by some as being similar to a private college. Established in 1969 as a coeducational four-year college it was accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools in 1975. Ramapo College is also a founding member of the national alliance of leading public liberal arts colleges, the Council of Public Liberal Arts Colleges.
Features
The College offers bachelor’s degrees in the arts, business, humanities, social sciences, and the sciences, along with professional studies, in nursing and social work, and teacher certification for the elementary and secondary levels. The 6,000 students can choose their studies from one of five schools that have more than 539-course offerings and 36 academic programs. With a student-to-faculty ration of 18:1, the average class size is 23 students. Popular majors include
- Business
- Psychology
- Health Professions
- Communications & Journalism
- Biological & Biomedical Science
Notables
Ramapo’s 300-acre campus has a variety of accommodation facilities for the 75% of first-year students who live on campus that ranges from dormitory-style to apartments. Based on six-year graduation rates, 72 percent of students graduate and one year after graduating 87 percent are employed or at graduate school. And for the last 11 years Ramapo has been ranked in the “100 best values in public colleges” by Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine.
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Monmouth UniversityLocation
West Long Branch, NJ
Tuition$50250
Graduation Rate67%
Overview
With two historic buildings on campus, the Woodrow Wilson Hall and the Guggenheim Cottage, Monmouth University is just one mile from the Atlantic Ocean. It is also an affiliate of the Los Angeles-based GRAMMY Museum. This private university began life as a junior college in 1933. In 1956, it started offering four-year bachelor degrees and less than a decade later master’s degrees. Monmouth was granted university status by the New Jersey Commission on Higher Education in 1995.
Features
Even with a student population of over 6,000, Monmouth maintains a student-to-faculty ratio of 14:1. The University offers 32 undergraduate and 24 graduate degree programs and a multitude of certificate programs. The programs are delivered by schools in business, education, humanities and social sciences, nursing and health studies, science and social work. Popular majors include
- Business
- Communication and Journalism
- Health Professions
- Psychology
- Social Sciences
Notables
Monmouth University has numerous on-campus clubs and organizations. They include a television station, Hawk TV, a radio station, WMCX-FM, a student-run newspaper, The Outlook, which has been published since 1933, and a student-run independent record label, Blue Hawk Records. WMCX-FM was one of the last media outlets to interview Bob Marley and the first in America to announce his death. With New York less than an hour away group excursions and class trips to theaters, Fortune 500 companies, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Fox News are regular outings.
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Rutgers University-New BrunswickLocation
New Brunswick, NJ
Tuition$45788
Graduation Rate81%
Overview
Rutgers University-New Brunswick is the oldest and largest campus of Rutgers University – The State University of New Jersey. It was founded prior to the War of Independence in 1766 as Queens College. In 1825, it was renamed as Rutgers College and became Rutgers University in 1928. It became the State University of New Jersey by acts of the New Jersey Legislature in 1945 and 1956. Rutgers New Brunswick consists of five campuses: Busch, College Avenue, Livingston, Cook, and Douglass. And along with its campuses in Newark and Camden, Rutgers University is one of the country’s top ten public research institutions.
Features
Eighteen schools and colleges service over forty thousand students with a student-to-faculty ratio of 15:1. Offering bachelor’s, master’s and doctor’s degrees Rutgers offers over a hundred undergraduate majors amongst which the most popular are:
- Business
- Engineering
- Biological & Biomedical Sciences
- Health Professions
- Social Sciences
Notables
With over 16,000 residential students, each of the five campuses has its own individual identity based around its academic profile. There are 136 resident’s halls, four dining halls and over 30 food courts and cafes. Along with 19 libraries and a campus bus and shuttle service that operates seven days a week, 52 weeks a year. Rutgers also brings more federal research dollars to New Jersey than the combined efforts of all other New Jersey colleges and universities.
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Rowan UniversityLocation
Glassboro, NJ
Tuition$36324
Graduation Rate67%
Overview
Located in the southern New Jersey town of Glassboro, Rowan University, with its four campuses, was officially recognized by the New Jersey Commission on Higher Education in 1997. Prior to that it was known as the Rowan College of New Jersey. It was named after Henry and Betty Rowan who in 1992 gave the Glassboro State College a gift of $100 million with the understanding that the school create a College of Engineering. Today Rowan University has 14 schools offering students a wide range of professional tracks.
Features
With over 16,000 students, Rowan offers 74 bachelor’s, 51 master’s, four doctoral degrees, and two professional programs with a student-to-faculty ratio of 18:1. The average class size of 22 students ensures targeted learning along with strong student-professor networking opportunities. Popular undergraduate majors include
- Business
- Education
- Psychology
- Communication & Journalism
- Biological & Biomedical Sciences
Notables
Rowan’s 200-acre campus provides housing in halls, apartments or townhouses for over 3,600 students. Non-commuting full-time students are required to live on-campus for their first two years. Due the university’s continued growth freshman students are offered an incentive to live in tripled units (three students sharing a standard two-person room). The incentives include $1,000 off housing costs and free summer housing. Rowan University contends that students who live on campus are more likely to complete their degree within four years.
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Rutgers University-CamdenLocation
Camden, NJ
Tuition$44813
Graduation Rate53%
Overview
In the 1920’s a group of South Jersey citizens founded the South Jersey Law School and the College of South Jersey. In 1950 these two schools merged with the State University of Jersey to become Rutgers University-Camden. Since then it has expanded beyond its liberal arts program to include the School of Business–Camden. In 2007 Rutgers–Camden added a PhD degree in childhood studies, a national first. Two additional PhD degrees in integrative biology and public affairs have followed this lead.
Features
With a student-to-faculty ratio of 12:1, Rutgers-Camden’s 6,000-plus students enjoy the prestige of a major research institution with a small campus atmosphere. With over 40 major programs, 50 minors, and 29 graduate programs, the university’s four schools and colleges have an average class size of 26 students. The most popular undergraduate programs are
- Business
- Health Professions
- Psychology
- Biological & Biomedical Sciences
- Homeland Security & Law Enforcement
Notables
With over 75 clubs and organizations on campus, Rutgers-Camden’s student body comes from 29 states and 33 counties. Its diversity shines through the various ethnic and racial groups, various religious denominations, political associations, and the LGBTQ club that share the campus. And the Rutgers–Camden Center for the Arts hosts performances, exhibitions, educational programs and community events to inspire an appreciation and enjoyment of the arts.
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The College of New JerseyLocation
Ewing, NJ
Tuition$43751
Graduation Rate87%
Overview
With its seven schools: Arts & Communication; Business; Humanities & Social Sciences; Education; Engineering; Nursing, Health, & Exercise Science; and Science, The College of New Jersey (TCNJ) is a far cry from its beginnings as a teacher training institution. Mandated by an act of the New Jersey Legislature in 1855 it became the first teacher training institution in the state and the ninth in the country. Over the years TCNJ has changed its name five times and broadened its curriculum to accommodate more than 50 liberal arts and professional programs.
Features
TCNJ’s seven and a half thousand students enjoy an average class size of 21 that sees the College maintaining a 13:1 student-to-faculty ratio. Over 400 employers actively recruit on campus. Popular majors include:
- Business
- Education
- Psychology
- Social Sciences
- Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Notables
The 298-acre landscaped suburban campus is situated in the township of Ewing in Mercer County, New Jersey and is less than an hour and a half train trip from both New York and Philadelphia. But for three out of four weekends, the 95 percent of freshmen who live on campus remain at the 14 residential college apartment buildings they call home and where they are guaranteed the right to reside for their first two years. For the academically prepared student, TCNJ offers a challenging undergraduate education with a rewarding residential experience.
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Caldwell UniversityLocation
Caldwell, NJ
Tuition$47240
Graduation Rate62%
Overview
Just 20 minutes from New York, Caldwell University is a Catholic liberal arts university. It opened its doors 1939 as the Caldwell College for Women. Almost half a century later, in 1986, it became co-educational and shortened its name to Caldwell College. In July of 2014 Caldwell University was born after the college received university status from the New Jersey Commission on Higher Education. Caldwell encourages students to use New York City as a place to learn by engaging in internships and shadowing opportunities, experience cultural events, shopping or catching a game.
Features
With around 2200 full-time, part-time and graduate students, the student-to-faculty ratio is 12:1. Caldwell offers 30 undergraduate degrees and a similar number of graduate and certificate programs. Amongst undergraduates the most popular majors include
- Business
- Psychology
- Health Professions
- Social Sciences
- Communication & Journalism
Notables
Caldwell has over 20 clubs that range from French and Italian clubs via accounting and socio-political societies to Greek life and criminal justice. As well, there is the Campus Ministry which encourages students to reach out. Caldwell’s students are invited each year to involve themselves in both their world and local communities with these and other outreach programs. Activities include volunteering at a soup kitchen, feeding the homeless in New York or assisting in repairing or building homes for low-income families in Eastern Kentucky.
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Seton Hall UniversityLocation
South Orange, NJ
Tuition$53294
Graduation Rate66%
Overview
To honor the name of his aunt who was the first American-born saint, Elizabeth Ann Seton, Bishop of Newark James Roosevelt Bayley founded Seton Hall College in 1856. Eighty-one years later, in 1937 a University College was established and in 1968 the College became coeducational. Six years short of its Centenary, in 1950, Seton Hall was organized as a University with a College of Arts and Sciences and schools of business, nursing, and education on its 58-acre campus in South Orange, New Jersey. A year later the University opened a School of Law at its Newark Campus.
Features
The nearly 10,000 undergraduate and graduate students at Seton Hall have access to over 90 programs. With an average class size of 21 students and Freshman English classes of 15, Seton Hall has a student-to-faculty ratio of 14:1. The most popular majors taken are
- Business
- Health Professions
- Social Sciences
- Biological and Biomedical Sciences
- Communication and Journalism
Notables
Situated just 14 miles from Manhattan, Seton Hall has all that a world-class city can offer on its doorstep. While on campus, there are 22 Greek Societies, 25 plus intramurals and sport clubs, and over 130 student organizations. And even today, 161 years after its founding, Seton Hall University still adheres to its founder’s vision of providing “a home for the mind, the heart, and the spirit.”
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Drew UniversityLocation
Madison, NJ
Tuition$62706
Graduation Rate62%
Overview
The “University in the Forest” began its academic life as a Methodist Seminary in 1867 which today is the Drew Theological School. A 1928 gift led to the addition of a College of Liberal Arts which became coeducational in 1942. In 1955 Drew opened a school devoted to the advanced study of the humanities, the Caspersen School of Graduate Studies. Its wooded and serene 186-acre campus is an oasis in the middle of the bustling suburban town of Madison, New Jersey, a 50-minute train ride from New York City.
Features
With its three schools Drew University offers undergraduates over 50 areas of study with its theatre program being ranked amongst the top ten in the U.S. A typical undergraduate class has less than 20 students and overall Drew’s student-to-faculty ratio is 10:1. The University reports that 93 percent of graduates have a job or are in graduate school within six months of graduation. Popular areas of study include:
- Social Sciences
- Visual and Performing Arts
- Biological and Biomedical Sciences
- Business
- Psychology
Notables
The F.M. Kirby Shakespeare Theatre at Drew University is home to the Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey which presents six to seven main stage productions of Shakespearean and other classical masterworks annually. In 2017 Drew University celebrates its sesquicentennial.
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Saint Peter's UniversityLocation
Jersey City, NJ
Tuition$50966
Graduation Rate53%
Overview
Saint Peter’s University is a private, co-educational, Roman Catholic University in the Jesuit tradition which it shares with the current head of the Catholic Church, Pope Francis. It was founded in 1878 as St. Peter’s Preparatory School. Due to a lack of enrollments it closed in 1918 and it was 12 years before the college was able to reopen in 1930. In 1936 the college admitted its first black student and in 1965 it granted an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree to Martin Luther King, Jr. The following year, in 1966, the school became a co-educational institution. Saint Peter’s offers graduate degree programs in Education, Business, Accountancy, Cyber Security, Nursing, Data Science, and Public Administration. It is accredited by The Middle States Commission on Higher Education.
Features
With a student population of around 3,400, of which over 2,500 are undergraduates, the school has more than 60 undergraduate, adult undergraduate and graduate programs. The average class size is 20 and the Student-to-faculty ratio is 13:1. Popular undergraduate majors are
- Business
- Health Professions
- Biological & Biomedical Sciences
- Homeland Security & Criminal Justice
- Education
Notables
Saint Peter’s 30-acre campus in located in Jersey City just 12 minutes by PATH train from New York City. There are over 50 student-run organizations, that include WSPR Radio, Argus Eyes Drama Society, Gannon Debating Team, Aiden C. McMullen Chorale, Voices of Praise Gospel Choir and the Pauw Wow newspaper. Around 800 students contribute over 16,000 hours of volunteer service to foster relationships with local, national and global associations.
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Montclair State UniversityLocation
Montclair, NJ
Tuition$37525
Graduation Rate64%
Overview
Founded in 1908 as a two-year teacher training college, Montclair State University today is New Jersey’s second largest higher education institution and a highly regarded research university. Its nine colleges and schools offer over 300 majors, minors, concentrations and certificate programs. Montclair State University was the first New Jersey state college to offer master’s degrees and a doctoral program at a senior public institution. And in 2016 the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education upgraded Montclair State from a Masters to a Doctoral Research University. Also in 2016 the University was ranked 15th in Money magazine’s “50 Colleges that Add the Most Value.”
Features
With over 20,000 students, three-quarters of whom are undergraduates, Montclair State’s average class size is 23 and the student-to-faculty ratio is 17:1. Undergraduate students can choose from 54 majors, 60 concentrations, 61 minors, plus dozens of certificate programs and teacher certification programs. The most popular undergraduate majors are:
- Business
- Visual & Performing Arts
- Psychology
- English Language and Literature
- Biological & Biomedical Sciences
Notables
The 252-acre main campus has over 5,000 students living in the nine residential halls, the newest of which, The Heights, opened in August 2011 and accommodates 2000 students. Montclair state has over 150 student organizations that range from the Accounting Society to the Zeta Phi Beta Sorority.
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Rutgers University-NewarkLocation
Newark, NJ
Tuition$46041
Graduation Rate66%
Overview
Rutgers University – Newark came into being in 1946 when the New Jersey State Legislature voted for the University of Newark to become part of Rutgers University – The State University of New Jersey. A decade earlier the University of Newark had come about through the merger of the New Jersey Law School, Dana College, the Newark Institute of Arts & Sciences, the Seth Boyden School of Business, and the Mercer Beasley School of Law. Today Rutgers University- Newark is known as a world-class urban research and teaching institution.
Features
With over 12,000 students and more than 500 faculty, the university has a student-to-faculty ratio of 14:1. The seven schools on campus offer over 40 undergraduate liberal arts majors and more than 50 graduate and professional programs. The most popular undergraduate majors are
- Business
- Psychology
- Homeland Security & Law Enforcement
- Public Administration
- Social Sciences
Notables
It is situated on 38-acres in the University Heights district of New Jersey’s largest city and cultural capital, Newark. The University is recognized by the U.S. News & World Report as the nation’s most diverse campus with over 100 nations represented. Rutgers-Newark has a tradition of being an educator of first-generation college students, of students whose first language is not English, of students who commute to save money and of students who work while studying. As well, its student body has a diverse mixture of racial, ethnic, and religious persuasions.
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Stockton UniversityLocation
Galloway, NJ
Tuition$35908
Graduation Rate67%
Overview
Located in Atlantic County’s Galloway Township, Stockton University is named in recognition of Richard Stockton, a New Jersey signatory of the Declaration of Independence. The University opened its doors in 1971 at Atlantic City’s Mayfair Hotel. The Galloway Township campus became operational later the same year. University status was conferred in 2015 and Stockton is accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education. The University offers fields of study that include Criminal Justice, Psychology, Environmental Science, Biology, Business, Historical Studies, Computational Science, Tourism and Hospitality Management, and Homeland Security.
Features
With a student-to-faculty ratio of 17:1, Stockton’s 8,700 plus graduate and undergraduate students, of which over 1,100 are freshmen, have access to over 50 programs offered by the University’s seven schools. Popular undergraduate majors include:
- Health Professions
- Business
- Social Sciences
- Biological & Biomedical Science
- Psychology
Notables
Stockton’s faculty include the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry winner Stephen Dunn and 2003 Guggenheim Fellowship awardee, the Distinguished Professor of Art Wendel A. White. The University also owns the 36-hole Seaview Resort & Golf Course. Students from the Hospitality and Tourism Management Studies program as well as other students may live, work and learn there from the hospitality and tourism professionals who operate the resort as a viable commercial business.
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Fairleigh Dickinson University-Florham CampusLocation
Madison, NJ
Tuition$55810
Graduation Rate56%
Overview
The Florham Campus of Fairleigh Dickinson University (FDU) is a small residential campus in Madison, New Jersey on the former Twombly estate. Fairleigh Dickinson University is a private, coeducational and non-sectarian university founded in 1942. Along with its Metropolitan Campus, FDU is the largest private higher education institution in New Jersey. Apart from its two New Jersey campuses, FDU has a campus in Vancouver, Canada and another in Oxford, England. Eighty percent of the Florham campus freshmen live in campus housing.
Features
With 2,500 undergraduate and 900 graduate students, the Florham campus has a student-to-faculty ratio of 17:1. The campus’ schools and colleges include a college of arts and sciences, a college of business, a school of pharmacy, and a nationally acclaimed graduate writing program. Popular undergraduate majors include
- Business
- Visual & Performing Arts
- Psychology
- Social Sciences
- Communication & Journalism
Notables
The Florham campus name is a contraction of the names of the 20th Century socialites Florence Vanderbilt and Hamilton Twombly whose former country estate makes up part of the 178-acre campus. There is an active Greek life with both national and local fraternities and sororities along with a diverse range of student activities, and dynamic Division III and intramural athletics programs. While the campus theater presents student-written and directed plays along with student productions of major plays.
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Centenary UniversityLocation
Hackettstown, NJ
Tuition$46899
Graduation Rate61%
Overview
Centenary University’s main campus is at Hackettstown, New Jersey. The university also has a 65-acre second campus in Long Valley, New Jersey which provides riding and education facilities for its Equine Studies Department. Founded in 1867 by the Newark Conference of the United Methodist Church, Centenary University has grown from a coeducational preparatory school into a girls’ preparatory school in 1910, a junior college for women in 1940, a four-year women’s college in 1976, a coeducational baccalaureate-degree-granting institution in 1988, a master-degree-granting institution in 1995, to a university in 2016.
Features
With a student population in excess of 2,200 of which some 1,500 are undergraduates, Centenary University has a student-to-faculty ration of 17:1. Accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education, Centenary University offers 52 academic majors along with minors in each program. The most popular undergraduate majors are
- Business
- Visual & Performing Arts
- Social Sciences
- Homeland Security & Criminal Justice
- Equestrian & Equine Studies
Notables
The University’s Long Valley Equestrian Center consists of several paddocks, an outdoor eventing course, two indoor arenas, and one outdoor arena. In 2007 and again in 2012 the Equestrian Center hosted the American National Riding Commission Championships, the Intercollegiate Horse Show Association Zone Finals, and the Intercollegiate Dressage Association Championships. And in 2009 Centenary’s Intercollegiate Horse Show Association team won the National Championships in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.
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Fairleigh Dickinson University-Metropolitan CampusLocation
Teaneck, NJ
Tuition$53752
Graduation Rate48%
Overview
The Metropolitan Campus of Fairleigh Dickinson University (FDU) has a strong career focus and is home to many of FDU’s business, professional, science, and health care programs. Fairleigh Dickinson University is a private, coeducational, and non-sectarian university founded in 1942. Along with its Florham Campus, FDU is the largest private higher education institution in New Jersey. Apart from its two New Jersey campuses, FDU has a campus in Vancouver, Canada and another in Oxford, England. Seventy-five percent of the Metropolitan Campus students commute with many finding part-time work in the surrounding shopping malls, community groups, restaurants, and office and professional buildings.
Features
With over 6,000 students, of which two-thirds are undergraduates, the Metropolitan campus has a student-to-faculty ratio of 13:1. Undergraduate studies are offered by three colleges: University College for Arts, Sciences and Professional Studies; the Silberman College of Business; and the Petrocelli College of Continuing Studies. The most popular undergraduate majors are
- Liberal Arts & Sciences
- Business
- Psychology
- Health Professions
- Homeland Security & Criminal Justice
Notables
With its large number of commuters, the Metropolitan Campus has a dedicated Commuter Lounge, located in its Fitness Center. With its comfortable chairs and sofas along with its 24 hour Wi-Fi internet access it is a popular place to relax between classes. And most campus groups and activities try to plan their meetings and events with a commuter-friendly schedule.
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Kean UniversityLocation
Union, NJ
Tuition$35163
Graduation Rate48%
Overview
As the third largest public university in New Jersey, Kean University is the foremost producer of teachers in the state. With its main campus, just 30 minutes away from New York City, in Union, New Jersey, the University is home to the New Jersey Center for Science Technology and Mathematics (NJCSTM). The NJCSTM hosts New Jersey’s first program dedicated to mathematics, science and technology teaching and research. Kean also has a full-scale campus in Wenzhou, China and has partnered with Ocean County College for the study of bachelor’s degrees.
Features
Kean’s seven colleges offer 52 undergraduate majors and 35 graduate programs. With a student population of over 15,000, the average class size is 21 and the student-to-faculty ratio is 17:1. Popular undergraduate majors include
- Psychology
- Business
- Education
- Biological & Biomedical Sciences
- Health Professions
Notables
As well as the NJCSTM, the University also hosts the Kean University Human Rights Institute, the Holocaust Resource Center, the Wynona Moore Lipman Ethnic Studies Center, and Liberty Hall Museum. The University’s five on-campus theaters are augmented by a professional Equity theater company, Premiere Stages. Since 2004, Premiere Stages has presented an annual season of two main stage plays and a staged reading of a new play. The campus is also home to 13 Division III varsity teams.
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Bloomfield CollegeLocation
Bloomfield, NJ
Tuition$43496
Graduation Rate32%
Overview
The 11-acre tree lined Bloomfield College campus is just 15 miles from New York City and is easily reached by train, bus, and car. It was founded by the Presbyterian Church in 1868 as the German Theological Seminary of Newark, New Jersey. In 1923, the State Board of Education approved a four-year college course leading to the Bachelor of Arts degree and eight years later its name was changed to Bloomfield College and Seminary. In 1961 the term seminary was dropped and it became Bloomfield College. Around 65 percent of the college’s students commute and its seven divisions offer 26 academic majors. Bloomfield College is accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools.
Features
While mainly offering undergraduate studies, the College does offer master’s programs in Accounting, Fine Arts, and Education. With approximately 2000 students, Bloomfield has a student-to-faculty ratio of 16:1. The popular undergraduate majors include
- Business
- Visual & Performing Arts
- Social Sciences
- Psychology
- Health Professionals
Notables
Bloomfield College was recently ranked the 14th most diverse National Liberal Arts College in the United States by U.S. News & World Report. Over half of Bloomfield students identified as first-generation and are the first of their family to attend a college. The College’s Division of Nursing boasts a 94 percent licensure exam pass rate, while the Computer Science and Network Engineering programs report that 70 percent of graduates are employed upon graduation.
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