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A 2014 study ranked Washington University #1 in the country for income inequality [122] About 22% of Washington University's students came from the top 1%, while only about 6% came from the bottom 60%.
The Washington University School of Law [3] [4] (WashU Law) is the law school of Washington University in St. Louis, a private research university in St. Louis, Missouri. [5] Founded in 1867, it is the oldest continuously operating law school west of the Mississippi River .
Study comparing college revenue per student by tuition and state funding in 2008 dollars. [ 10 ] Between 2007–08 and 2017–18, published in-state tuition and fees at public four-year institutions increased at an average rate of 3.2% per year beyond inflation, compared with 4.0% between 1987–88 and 1997–98 and 4.4% between 1997–98 and ...
More than 80% of four-year colleges in the U.S. will not require students to submit SAT or ACT scores this fall. Most of those schools are test-optional. Most of those schools are test-optional.
Colleges are incentivized to admit students who are able to pay full tuition without aid. Additionally, college rankings, which have an effect on the students applying each year, penalize poor average standardized testing scores; colleges therefore admit students with higher scores, [233] who are typically also richer. [234] [235]
Name Founded Control Enrollment [1] (Fall 2022) Endowment Location Other branches University of Washington: 1861: Public: 52,319: $2.83 billion: Seattle: Bothell, Tacoma: Washington State University
The College of Arts and Sciences is the central undergraduate unit of the university with 387 tenured and tenure-track faculty, 158 non-tenure track faculty (including lecturers, artists-in-residence, and visiting faculty), and 70 research scientists, serving about 4,000 undergraduates in 40 academic departments and programs divided into divisions of Humanities, Social Sciences, Natural ...
In 2017, a federal endowment tax was enacted in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 in the form of an excise tax of 1.4% on institutions that have at least 500 tuition-paying students and net assets of at least $500,000 per student. The $500,000 is not adjusted for inflation, so the threshold is effectively lowered over time.