The Seattle School of Theology & Psychology has the least total student aid ($49.70K) of the 276 private colleges with at least $1.596M in equipment, including art and library collections - end of year and that are in a large city and aren't research intensive. Those $49.70K compare to an average of $17.55M across the 276 private colleges.
Visualize
Only The Seattle School of Theology & Psychology is in that area
The Seattle School of Theology & Psychology has the least total student aid ($49.70K) of the 276 private colleges with at least $1.596M in equipment, including art and library collections - end of year and that are in a large city and aren't research intensive. Those $49.70K compare to an average of $17.55M across the 276 private colleges.
Peers
after The Seattle School of Theology & Psychology ($49.70K, $1.596M), closest are Spertus College ($64.50K, $9.857M), Lexington Theological Seminary ($76.70K, $3.043M), Oblate School of Theology ($101.70K, $2.717M), and South Baylo Univ ($259.50K, $1.85M), ending with Loyola Marymount ($96.4M, $214.5M).
References
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Equipment, including art and library collections-end of year includes end of year values for equipment as a reconciliation of beginning of the year values with additions to and retirements of equipment values to obtain end of year values. Capitalized leasehold improvements should be included in this amount if the improvements are to leased equipment. 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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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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Whether a college is research intensive 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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Total student aid includes Pell grants and other federal student grants, state and local student grants, and institutional (funded and unfunded) grants. 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).