Calumet College of Saint Joseph has the 4th-most local grants ($190.10K) of the 277 big-city suburban private colleges that don't grant doctorates. Those $190.10K represent 12.7% of the total across the 277 private colleges, whose average is $5.40K, and 0.47% among all private colleges.
Visualize
Only Calumet College of Saint Joseph is in that area
Calumet College of Saint Joseph has the 4th-most local grants ($190.10K) of the 277 big-city suburban private colleges that don't grant doctorates. Those $190.10K represent 12.7% of the total across the 277 private colleges, whose average is $5.40K, and 0.47% among all private colleges.
Peers
beat out by American U of Puerto Rico ($381.50K), Southern Wesleyan Univ ($267.40K), and La Roche College ($264.70K).
Incidentally, all 4 offer graduate degrees. None of the 4 is research intensive. All 4 are private and nonprofit. All 4 are degree-granting.
beat Healthcare Training Inst. ($134.30K), Citizens School of Nursing ($48.00K), Academy for Nursing and Health Occupations ($44.90K), and Rabbi Jacob Joseph School ($43.90K), and 269 others, ending with Miles College ($0.00K).
References
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Local grants includes the amount awarded to the institution under local student aid programs. Private not-for-profit institutions generally report these grants as allowances when disbursed and as local grant revenues when received. 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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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).