
Rankings in the health professions are based on the results of surveys sent to deans, faculty and administrators of accredited graduate programs. The individuals rated the academic quality of programs as distinguished (5); strong(4); good (3); adequate (2), or marginal (1), depending on the scholarship, curriculum, and the quality of faculty, and graduates. Individuals who were unfamiliar with particular programs were asked to select "don't know." Score for each school were averaged across all respondents who rated that school.
WVUPharm2007 said:So they don't use NAPLEX scores, graduation rates, and other emperical measures of graduate competency to determine how good a pharmacy school is, just opinions of faculty?
WVUPharm2007 said:So they don't use NAPLEX scores, graduation rates, and other emperical measures of graduate competency to determine how good a pharmacy school is, just opinions of faculty?
They all use NAPLEX now.Samoa said:Well, not every state uses the NAPLEX (which would eliminate UCSF),
Samoa said:Well, not every state uses the NAPLEX (which would eliminate UCSF), and no school that I know of publishes their average score. It's hard enough just to get the percentage of graduates who PASSED on the first try. And the numbers will be close to 100% for all the top schools, anyway (judging by the fact that it was a huge scandal at UT the year that we didn't have 100% passing). Graduation rates are also usually near 100% for all of those schools, the only real attrition being from those students who decide pharmacy is not for them.
The problem with any rankings in pharmacy is that there simply is not an objective standard to use. So reputation is used instead, which is completely self-perpetuating, since a large number of the faculty at various schools are graduates of the top 5-10 on that list.