New York Times: UH Mānoa among best for economic diversity, Pell grant recipients
The ranking measured economic diversity by analyzing the share of students receiving Pell Grants.
The ranking measured economic diversity by analyzing the share of students receiving Pell Grants.
UH Mānoa ranked highest in diversity, learning facilities and learning opportunities.
The Princeton Review’s ranking is solely based on its surveys of college students.
Forbes partnered with a market research firm to survey 70,000 workers at companies (minimum of 500 employees) in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
The rankings were curated based on votes cast by Honolulu Star-Advertiser readers.
The department was founded in 1963 as an active research and teaching unit dedicated to the scientific study of language.
UH Mānoa ranked in the No. 83–99 tier in the U.S. and in the No. 301–400 tier worldwide.
The ranking was created to help women identify companies that serve their needs and for companies to evaluate their own treatment of women in their workforce.
In addition, UH’s flagship campus ranked in 17 other narrow subject areas, all in the nation’s top 100.
UH placed No. 66 in the U.S. and No. 386 in the world.