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#1: John Carroll Trains You to Think

A great job requires an even better education

Employers value four skills in every college graduate, regardless of major or career path:

  1. Analysis
  2. Communications (written + verbal)
  3. Critical Thinking/Judgment/Problem Solving
  4. Decision-making

 

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#2: John Carroll Powers Big Dreams

Liberal arts colleges like John Carroll produce just 3% of America's college graduates, but those grads are twice as likely to earn a Ph.D.

Nearly 20% of the scientists elected to the National Academy of Sciences graduated from a liberal arts college.

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#4 John Carroll Loves Numbers

The World Economic Forum predicts that by 2030, 9 out of 10 jobs will require advanced data and digital skills. Smaller private liberal arts colleges like John Carroll University graduate a larger share of its STEM majors — on time and on track for high-paying careers.

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#5: John Carroll Students Graduate On Time

The Wall Street Journal estimates that graduating college on time saves close to $20,000. Your undergraduate degree typically requires 120 credits, or 15 credits a semester on average to graduate in four years. John Carroll University supports that pace with a suite of advising, counseling, residence life, student life and other resources. 

John Carroll University graduates 72 percent of its students within four years and supports that pace of completion with a suite of advising, counseling, residence life, student life, and other resources.

Sources: AAC&U. 2013. It Takes More Than a Major: Employer Priorities for College Learning and Student Success., Council of Independent Colleges. 2014. Strengthening the STEM Pipeline: The Contributions of Small and Mid-Sized Independent Colleges., Council of Independent Colleges. 2015. Access and Opportunity: How Small and Mid-Sized Independent Colleges Serve First-Generation and Low-Income Students. Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce (CEW) released an online tool with updated rankings of 4,500 colleges and universities based on new College Scorecard data.