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Plan II Honors is a major at The University of Texas at Austin, offered since 1935.It is an interdisciplinary program that grants a Bachelor of Arts degree.. The program is notable for its relative selectivity, as most students come from the top 5% of their graduating high school classes while the average SAT score is over 1400 (out of 1600) [1].
The Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs (or LBJ School of Public Affairs) is a graduate school at the University of Texas at Austin that was founded in 1970. The school offers training in public policy analysis and administration in government and public affairs-related areas of the private and nonprofit sectors.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=University_of_Texas_at_Austin_College_of_Liberal_Arts&oldid=1160117953"
Hunter College is a public university in New York City, United States. It is one of the constituent colleges of the City University of New York and offers studies in more than one hundred undergraduate and postgraduate fields across five schools. It also administers Hunter College High School and Hunter College Elementary School. [4]
The University of Texas is bringing back standardized testing as part of its admissions requirements starting for the 2025 fall semester, citing data that shows knowing students' SAT or ACT test ...
The University of Austin (UATX) is a private [4] liberal arts university located in Austin, Texas. [5] The university has established a campus in downtown Austin's Scarbrough Building, and enrolled its first undergraduate cohort in the fall of 2024. [6] [7] UATX is not accredited, [8] and its students are not eligible for Federal Student Aid ...
The University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin, UT, or Texas) is a public research university in Austin, Texas, United States. Founded in 1883, it is the flagship institution of the University of Texas System. With 51,913 students as of fall 2023, it is also the largest institution in the system. [13]
James K. Galbraith — head of the University of Texas Inequality Project at the LBJ School of Public Affairs; Barbara Jordan — the first black woman from a Southern state to serve in the U.S. House; Gretchen Ritter, professor of government at UT Austin from 1992 to 2013. [72]