Product Details
Best 361 Colleges, 2006 (College Admissions Guides)

Best 361 Colleges, 2006 (College Admissions Guides)
By Princeton Review

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Average customer review:
The Princeton Review is one of the guides for those "in the know".

Product Description

The Princeton Review asks college students (more than 110,000 of them) what their schools are really like, and reports the most revealing answers in this book. The "Best Party School" ranking list gets a lot of attention, but it is just one small part of this must-have guide that covers all the essentials--from professors to cafeteria food, and everything in between.

The unique rankings in The Best 361 Colleges rate the nation's top schools in more than 60 categories, including:

·Professors Get High Marks
·Best Academic Bang for Your Buck
·Dorms Like Palaces
·Most Politically Active
·Diverse Student Population
·Great College Newspaper
…and many more!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #659315 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-08-23
  • Released on: 2005-08-23
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 832 pages

Customer Reviews

Did anyone fact-check this book?2
I just received this book. The second school profile I turned to (Stanford University) was completely botched. While the narrative text seems to be about Stanford, the sidebars full of statistical information is obviously not related to Stanford. I have no idea what school it belongs to - but it lists Stanford as a "public" institution with an in-state tuition of just a few thousand dollars annually. I wish. Lucky for me I knew enough about the school to recognize these patent errors.

Now I am left to wonder what other information in this book is completely off the mark? Everything else I have read seems to fit what I know about the schools, but I don't know that much about many of the schools reviewed.

A great buy...Very well organized...Excellent for above average students5
This is the best college guide for students with SAT scores above 1100. I don't reccomend it for students will lower scores because it concentrates on schools that expect a higher SAT.
This book rates college on academic as well as social factors so you can see if you fit in to that campus. You can read about dorms, party atmosphere, and what current students are like.

One feature that I felt was great was... "if you like a certain college you may want to look at"... This allows you to add new schools to consider.

My high school son continually used this book to help make his choice. I highly reccomend this book! My daughter used an earlier version to pick her school.

You will continually come back to using this book.

Probably the best for students4
To be perfectly honest, I prefer Fiske as I feel it is the most informative in regards to the academic strengths of each school. It's positive and relatively unbiased while being just critical enough that you know it's not a mere mouthpiece for the admissions departments. I think parents will like it best.

However, students will probably not. It's pretty dry. Princeton Review is less factual, but much better reading, even providing an occasional chuckle. Still, these other reviewers are right. There is some incorrect and/or confusing information and these books cannot replace campus tours and talking to current students.

As for the other guides, I think that the Insider's Guide is gossipy, negative to the point that it portrays schools inaccurately, and provides too little information about the schools' programs. On the other extreme, Peterson's Guide to Competitive Colleges isn't very useful at all either as it offers nothing but statistics that can be found elsewhere. The possible exception to that is Peterson's inclusion of more Christian schools than the other guides would be helpful to some families who want someone to tell them which religious schools are most selective. (And by the way, Princeton Review is by far the best choice for kids researching Historically African-American universities.) Kaplan is very good as I feel it is less biased than Princeton Review while providing a bit more information on life outside the classroom than Fiske. However, I still find that Kaplan, like Fiske, is a little lifeless. So while I think Fiske and Kaplan are better, I feel that, unless you have a self-motivated and intellectual child, if you want your student to get involved in doing his or her own research on the schools, Princeton Review is the way to go.