EDP Univeristy of Puerto Rico Inc-San Juan has the least long-term investments ($862.30K) of the 35 private colleges with at least $169.20K in sales and services of educational activities and that are in a large city and enroll from 1,000 to 4,999 students. Those $862.30K compare to an average of $163.1M across the 35 private colleges.
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Only EDP Univeristy of Puerto Rico Inc-San Juan is in that area
EDP Univeristy of Puerto Rico Inc-San Juan has the least long-term investments ($862.30K) of the 35 private colleges with at least $169.20K in sales and services of educational activities and that are in a large city and enroll from 1,000 to 4,999 students. Those $862.30K compare to an average of $163.1M across the 35 private colleges.
Peers
after EDP Univeristy of Puerto Rico Inc-San Juan ($862.30K, $169.20K), closest are Marygrove College ($6.622M, $844.10K), Alliant International Univ ($9.972M, $2.15M), Our Lady of the Lake Univ ($11.83M, $286.80K), and Holy Names Univ ($12.42M, $2.475M), ending with Weill Cornell Medical College ($1.152B, $279.8M).
1 out of the other 34 private colleges was ruled out due to missing, unknown, or not-applicable values for long-term investments, i.e., School of the Art Inst. of Chicago.
References
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Whether a college is rural, suburban, or in a town, city, or big city, is from the IPEDS Directory, 2012-13 (Provisional release) by the National Center for Education Statistics (http://nces.ed.gov/ipeds).
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Long-term investments includes the amount for all assets held for long-term investments. 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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Sales and services of educational activities includes all revenues derived from the sales of goods and services that are incidental to the conduct of instruction, research, or public service, and revenues of activities that exist to provide instructional and laboratory experience for students and that incidentally create goods and services that may be sold. Examples include film rentals, scientific and literary publications, testing services, university presses, dairies, and patient care clinics that are not part of a hospital. 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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The college's size is from the IPEDS Directory, 2012-13 (Provisional release) by the National Center for Education Statistics (http://nces.ed.gov/ipeds).