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Published: August 10, 2009
“No one cheats, dorms are like palaces”
Princeton Review says Thomas Aquinas College in Santa Paula among best in U.S.
News Release from Thomas Aquinas College
SANTA PAULA -- Thomas Aquinas College is one of the country's best institutions for undergraduate education, according to The Princeton Review, and it ranks #1 in the country for “most religious students.” The education services company features the 4-year, Catholic school in the new 2010 edition of its popular guidebook, The Best 371 Colleges (Random House / Princeton Review, July 28, 2009, $22.99).
Of special note in this year’s report on Thomas Aquinas College is that the school is one of only 13 in the country to be named to the first-ever “Financial Aid Honor Roll,” receiving a highest possible rating of 99. It also received a rating of 99 for its academics, and is one of the “Top 50” institutions in the country. Further, it is ranked in the Top 20 in 8 of 62 additional categories.
Noting that the report is based heavily on what students themselves say about the institutions that are profiled, Thomas Aquinas College President Peter L. DeLuca said, “It is gratifying indeed to see how pleased our students are with their educational experience on account of both our rigorous academic program and our generous financial aid policy. I am also delighted to see the spiritual fervor of these young people recognized by The Princeton Review.”
This flagship annual college guide by The Princeton Review profiles only the best of America’s 2,500 four-year colleges – about 15% of them. It includes detailed profiles of the colleges with school rating scores in eight categories, plus ranking lists of top 20 schools in 62 categories based on The Princeton Review's surveys of students attending the colleges.
Says Robert Franek, Princeton Review's V.P., Publishing and author of The Best 371 Colleges, “We commend Thomas Aquinas College for its outstanding academics, which is the primary criteria for our choice of schools for the book… We make our choices based on institutional data we gather about schools, feedback from students attending them, and input from our staff who visit hundreds of colleges a year."
In its profile on Thomas Aquinas College, The Princeton Review quotes extensively from Thomas Aquinas College students who were surveyed for the book. Among their comments about their campus experiences is this one about their teachers: “The academic experience is amazing… This journey, when it is not self-inspiring, receives the infallible impetus from all the professors at the school, who are inspiring models of inquiry, wonder, and disciplined understanding.” And there is this comment about the program as a whole: “The goal here is ‘to discover the truth by studying the greatest minds of Western thought,’ and students agree that this approach ‘far out-strips most others because eternal truth is the end goal, not just some credentials for a job later. Not accidentally, this does actually produce more capable, honest, and self-giving individuals.’”
The Princeton Review's 62 ranking lists in The Best 371 Colleges are entirely based on its survey of 122,000 students (about 325 per campus on average) attending the colleges in the book. The 80-question survey asks students to rate their schools on several topics and report on their campus experiences at them. Topics range from student assessments of their professors, administrators, financial aid, and campus food.
In a "Survey Says…" sidebar in the book's profile on Thomas Aquinas College, The Princeton Review lists topics that Thomas Aquinas College students surveyed for the book were in most agreement about in their answers to survey questions. The list includes: “Class discussions encouraged,” “No one cheats,” and “Dorms are like palaces.”
The school profiles in The Best 371 Colleges also have ratings that are based largely on institutional data The Princeton Review collected during the 2008-09 academic year. The ratings are scores on a scale of 60 to 99 that are tallied in eight categories. Among the ratings in the profile on Thomas Aquinas College are scores of 94 for “quality of life” and 98 for “admissions selectivity.”
The Princeton Review posts the school profiles and ranking lists in The Best 371 Colleges on its site www.PrincetonReview.com, at which users can read FAQs about the book, the survey, and the criteria for each of the ratings and rankings.
The schools in The Best 371 Colleges are also part of 640 colleges and universities that The Princeton Review commends in its website feature, "2010 Best Colleges: Region by Region - Northeast / Midwest / Southeast / West."
Posted Monday, August 10, 2009 8:24 AM By TotaTua
and as a local employer, TAC grads go into the most likely to hire pile. they are brighter and understand Catholicism better than any other college grad. The downside, they usually have higher aspirations and only stay long enough to make $ for grad school.
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Posted Monday, August 10, 2009 8:31 AM By Thomas Edward Miles
Great News, let's keep it that way! There must be a least one JESUIT on staff in order to receive this august rating!
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Posted Monday, August 10, 2009 10:10 AM By WOODY GUIDRY
WOW! WHEN I LIVED IN SANTA PAULA IN THE 1950'S, THE THING THAT ATTRACTED ATTENTION WAS THAT ONE OF THE MANY SMALL CHURCHES GAVE "GREEN STAMPS" FOR ATTENDING. MR. MILES, I GRADUATED FROM LOYOLA IN NEW ORLEANS-AND THE JESUITS DID NOTABLE THINGS THERE! HOWEVER, THERE ARE SOME OTHER ORDERS WHICH COULD BE IN SANTA PAULA CONTRIBUTIING TO AUGUST RATINGS-ALSO IN SEPTEMBER AND THE MONTHS OTHER THAN AUGUST!
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Posted Monday, August 10, 2009 11:41 AM By Joe
I congratulate St. Thomas Aquinas College for the Princeton rating. I am a senior senior citizen and a Catholic. My kids are middle aged now. If I could do it over again, and if the Santa Paula. college were in existance, that is where they would have gone for their college education. God is looking down on this Catholic institution of higher learning near Ojai, California.
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Posted Monday, August 10, 2009 2:20 PM By Katherine
No Jesuits. In fact, all the teachers are laymen. The three chaplains do not teach. Thomas Aquinas is a lay run institution, which is probably what has kept it sane all these years.
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Posted Tuesday, August 11, 2009 4:35 AM By Mary
There are no Jesuits on staff at TAC. The school is run by lay people.
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Posted Tuesday, August 11, 2009 3:03 PM By Rick Gibson
What a sad commentary on the American Church! One of the most zealously orthodox Catholic colleges in America is able to stay orthodox because it is run by lay people and not by the Jesuits!!!
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Posted Wednesday, August 12, 2009 2:21 PM By Francesca K
Although there are no Jesuit teachers, one of the chaplains is a Jesuit.
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Posted Friday, August 14, 2009 9:17 PM By Anne T.
Yes, Thomas Edward Miles, a FAITHFUL Jesuit such as Fr. Joseph Fessio.
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Posted Saturday, August 15, 2009 8:45 AM By Richard Flores
I want to praise ALL of those associate with this fine institution! It would be wonderful IF other Catholic colleges would take the hint! There is NO conflict between academic excellence and orthodox teachings. In fact, they are totally compatible! Because of the problems with liberal seminaries in the US and the critical shortage of quality priests, it is true that it is better for this school to be lay-administered. However, I know that we and many other Catholic Charitable groups have built a seminary in Nigeria to develop priests with orthodox values! (We had a huge amount of money to "invest" in the future of the church and as the seminaries we trusted in the US had closed, we went outside of the country! We presently have 120 seminarians and with those numbers, hope to have a positive influence on the church in the US soon!)
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Posted Saturday, August 15, 2009 8:56 AM By Richard Flores
While I certainly LOVE this college, the only issue is that there is NO place to go that has a "hard" science or engineering emphasis! STA does NOT offer degrees in science, math, or engineering. (For good reason at this point!) However, we NEED good Catholics with technical backgrounds to teach at Catholic schools! (Most Catholic schools are notoriously weak in teaching science.) Since Santa Clara went over to Satan's side, there are NO good options within California either! In fact, I have searched all over the country and NOT found a "quality" yet truly Catholic school that has a decent engineering or science department! Perhaps STA will consider expanding at some point! They obviously have broken the code on running an outstanding facility!
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