09-15-95 Business, Engineering Rank High; U.S. News OHIO STATE'S BUSINESS, ENGINEERING COLLEGES AMONG BEST IN NATION COLUMBUS -- The Ohio State University's academic reputation and business and engineering colleges are among the best in the country, according to a survey conducted by U.S. News & World Report. The survey is published in the Sept. 18 edition of the magazine. This was the first year that the magazine rated baccalaureate programs in business and engineering. In terms of overall academic reputation, Ohio State placed 15th among national public universities and 36th among public and private institutions. The Fisher College of Business finished 16th among the best business schools in the country, and 11th among public business schools. The Fisher program in real estate was ranked second in the nation behind the Wharton School at the private University of Pennsylvania. Of those schools with both undergraduate and graduate programs, Fisher is one of 10 colleges of business that placed in the top 25 in both undergraduate and graduate school surveys published in 1995 by U.S. News & World Report. "As a public institution, we have a commitment to offer multiple programs. It's the ability to secure excellence across programs that we think is critical," said Joseph Alutto, dean of the Fisher College of Business. "We're pleased," he said. "We think this supports the direction the college has taken in the past few years with significant improvements in curriculum. It is part of the general thrust of quality among all academic programs which is essential at a major public university." Alutto added: "Although there are many good programs in Ohio, nobody else comes close to being in the top 25 in graduate and undergraduate programs. This speaks well about the value that the state gets for its investment in the Fisher College." The College of Engineering placed 17th in the overall ratings. Among public institutions, the college ranked 10th in the nation. "From a broad perspective, we have done well," said Jose Cruz, dean of the college. He noted that Ohio State's engineering programs finished in the top 6 percent of 300 public and private colleges nationally. Cruz said some of the colleges finishing ahead of Ohio State have the only state-supported engineering programs offered in their respective states. "With 12 engineering programs in Ohio, our resources are thinly distributed. With more focused resources and with all the restructuring and hard work we are putting into our education, we can be much better." In U.S. News and World Report's March 1995 rating of top graduate programs, the College of Engineering finished 19th. "One thing we can be proud of is we have a comprehensive set of quality programs at both the undergraduate and graduate levels," Cruz said. # Contact: Malcolm Baroway, executive director, University Communications, (614) 292-6895; Joseph Alutto, (614) 292-2666; or Jose Cruz, (614) 292-2836. Written by Tom Spring [Submitted by: Von Reid-Vargas (ereid@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu) Fri, 15 Sep 1995 16:41:33 -0400] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.