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Benchmarking Houston Graduate School of Theology against
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Houston Graduate School of Theology has the least total assets ($552.20K) of the 1,128 private colleges that offer graduate degrees and have at least $525.10K in accumulated depreciation. Those $552.20K compare to an average of $571.6M across the 1,128 private colleges.
after Houston Graduate School of Theology ($552.20K, $525.10K), closest are Southern California Seminary ($654.30K, $1.08M), Pacific Islands Univ ($726.80K, $572.90K), Talmudical Inst. of Upstate New York ($1.088M, $634.90K), and Trinity International Univ-Florida ($1.107M, $558.90K), ending with Harvard ($74.21B, $3.669B).
- Accumulated depreciation The total depreciation charged as expenses as of the reporting date (in the current year and in prior years) on the capital assets of the institution. FASB Statement No. 117 and GASB Statement No. 34 require that accumulated depreciation to date be recognized. The source is the IPEDS FY 2013 finance data file F1213_F2 of private not-for-profit institutions and public institutions that use accounting standards established by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB).
- Information on types of degree granted is from the IPEDS Directory, 2012-13 (Provisional release) by the National Center for Education Statistics (http://nces.ed.gov/ipeds).
- Total assets is the sum of the following amounts: cash, cash equivalents and temporary investments; receivables (net of allowance for uncollectible accounts); inventories, prepaid expenses, and defereed charges; amounts held by trustees for construction and debt service; long-term investments; plant, property, and equipment; and other assets. The source is the IPEDS FY 2013 finance data file F1213_F2 of private not-for-profit institutions and public institutions that use accounting standards established by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB).

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