Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education
The Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education, or simply the Carnegie Classification, is a framework for classifying colleges and universities in the United States. Created in 1970, it is named after and was originally created by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, but responsibility for the Carnegie Classification was transferred to Indiana University's Center for Postsecondary Research, in 2014. The framework primarily serves educational and research purposes, where it is often important to identify groups of roughly comparable institutions. The classification includes all accredited, degree-granting colleges and universities in the United States that are represented in the National Center for Education Statistics Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System.
General description
The Carnegie Classification was created by the Carnegie Commission on Higher Education in 1970. The classification was first published in 1973 with updates in 1976, 1987, 1994, 2000, 2005, 2010, and 2015. To ensure continuity of the classification framework and to allow comparison across years, the 2015 Classification update retains the same structure of six parallel classifications, initially adopted in 2005. The 2005 report substantially reworked the classification system, based on data from the 2002–2003 and 2003–2004 school years.On October 8, 2014, the Carnegie Foundation transferred responsibility for the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education to the Center for Postsecondary Research of the Indiana University School of Education in Bloomington, Indiana. The classification retained the Carnegie name after the Center for Postsecondary Research took over on January 1, 2015.
Information used in these classifications comes primarily from IPEDS and the College Board.
Basic classification
The number of institutions in each category is indicated in parentheses.Doctorate-granting Universities
Doctorate-granting Universities are institutions that awarded at least 20 research/scholarly doctorates in 2013–14. Professional doctorates are not included in this count but were added as a separate criterion in 2018–19. The framework further classifies these universities by their level of research activity, as measured by research expenditures, number of research doctorates awarded, number of research-focused faculty, and other factors. A detailed list of schools can be found in the List of research universities in the United States.- Doctoral Universities - Very High Research Activity
- Doctoral Universities - High Research Activity
- Doctoral/Professional Universities
Master's Colleges and Universities
- Master's Colleges and Universities: Larger programs are larger programs that awarded at least 200 masters-level degrees
- Master's Colleges and Universities: Medium programs are medium programs that awarded 100–199 masters-level degrees
- Master's Colleges and Universities: Smaller programs are small programs that awarded 50–99 masters-level degrees
Baccalaureate Colleges
- Baccalaureate Colleges—Arts & Sciences
- Baccalaureate Colleges—Diverse Fields
- Baccalaureate/Associate's Colleges: Associates Dominant
- Baccalaureate/Associate's Colleges: Mixed Baccalaureate/Associate's
Associates Colleges
- Associate's Colleges: High Transfer - High Traditional
- Associate's Colleges: High Transfer - Mixed Traditional/Nontraditional
- Associate's Colleges: High Transfer - High Nontraditional
- Associate's Colleges: Mixed Transfer/Career - High Traditional
- Associate's Colleges: Mixed Transfer/Career - Mixed Traditional/Nontraditional
- Associate's Colleges: Mixed Transfer/Career - High Nontraditional
- Associate's Colleges: High Career - High Traditional
- Associate's Colleges: High Career - Mixed Traditional/Nontraditional
- Associate's Colleges: High Career - High Nontraditional
Special Focus Institutions
- Special Focus Two-Year: Health Professions
- Special Focus Two-Year: Technical Professions
- Special Focus Two-Year: Arts and Design
- Special Focus Two-Year: Other Fields
- Special Focus Four-Year: Faith-Related Institutions
- Special Focus Four-Year: Medical Schools and Centers
- Special Focus Four-Year: Other Health Professions Schools
- Special Focus Four-Year: Engineering Schools
- Special Focus Four-Year: Other Technology-Related Schools
- Special Focus Four-Year: Business and Management Schools
- Special Focus Four-Year: Arts, Music, and Design Schools
- Special Focus Four-Year: Law Schools
- Special Focus Four-Year: Other Special Focus Institutions
Tribal Colleges
- Tribal colleges and universities
Not classified
Undergraduate Instructional Program
The Undergraduate Instructional Program classification combines the ratio of Arts and sciences and professional fields and the coexistence of programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels.Arts and sciences and professional fields
The framework categorizes institutions based on the proportion of undergraduate majors in arts and sciences or professional fields, based on their two-digit CIP.- Associates Only only award associate degrees.
- Associates Dominant award some bachelor's degrees, but award more associates's degrees.
- Arts & Sciences Focus award least 80 percent of undergraduate degrees in the arts and sciences.
- Arts & Sciences + Professions award between 80 and 59 percent of undergraduate degrees in the arts and sciences.
- Balanced Arts & Sciences/Professions award 41 to 59 percent of undergraduate degrees in each domain.
- Professions + Arts & Sciences award between 80 and 59 percent of undergraduate degrees in a professional field.
- Professions Focus award at least 80 percent of undergraduate degrees in a professional field.
Graduate coexistence
- No coexistence —no programs coexist.
- Some coexistence —some graduate programs coexist with undergraduate programs but fewer than half.
- High coexistence —at least half of the graduate programs coexist with undergraduate programs.
Graduate instructional program
Postbaccalaureate graduate programs
Institutions that offer graduate and professional programs but do not award the doctorate are classified as having Postbaccalaureate graduate programs. These programs are classified by the fields in which the degrees are awarded.- Single postbaccalaureate —only offer graduate training in education.
- Single postbaccalaureate —only offer graduate training in business.
- Single postbaccalaureate —only offer graduate training in a field other than education or business.
- Postbaccalaureate comprehensive —offer graduate training in the humanities, social sciences, Science, Technology, Engineering, and Medicine, and one or more professional fields.
- Postbaccalaureate, arts & sciences dominant —only offer graduate training in the arts and sciences.
- Postbaccalaureate with arts & sciences —offer graduate training primarily in the arts and sciences with some training in education.
- Postbaccalaureate with arts & sciences —offer graduate training primarily in the arts and sciences with some training in business.
- Postbaccalaureate with arts & sciences —offer graduate training primarily in the arts and sciences with some training in a field other than education or business.
- Postbaccalaureate professional —offer graduate training primarily in professional fields with some training in education.
- Postbaccalaureate professional —offer graduate training primarily in professional fields with some training in business.
- Postbaccalaureate professional ''—offer graduate training primarily in professional fields with some training in a field other than education or business.
Doctoral degree programs
- Single doctoral only award doctoral degrees in education.
- Single doctoral only award doctoral degrees in a single non-education field.
- Comprehensive doctoral with medical/veterinary award doctorates in the humanities, social sciences, and STEM fields, graduate or professional degrees in one or more professional fields, and award medical or veterinary doctoral degrees.
- Comprehensive doctoral award doctorates in the humanities, social sciences, and STEM fields, graduate or professional degrees in one or more professional fields, and do not award medical or veterinary doctoral degrees.
- Doctoral, humanities/social sciences dominant award most of their doctorates in the humanities and social sciences.
- Doctoral, STEM dominant award most of their doctorates in STEM fields.
- Doctoral, professional dominant award most of their doctorates are awarded in professional fields other than engineering.
Enrollment profile
- Exclusively undergraduate two-year —students are not awarded bachelor's or higher degrees.
- Exclusively undergraduate four-year —students are only awarded bachelor's degrees.
- Very high undergraduate —fewer than 10 percent of students are graduate students.
- High undergraduate —more than 10 percent, but fewer than 25 percent of students are graduate students.
- Majority undergraduate —more than 24 percent, but fewer than 50 percent of students are graduate students.
- Majority graduate/professional —fewer than 50 percent of students are undergraduates.
- Exclusively graduate/professional —students are only awarded degrees higher than bachelor's.
Undergraduate profile
Enrollment status
The framework classifies Enrollment Status according to the ratio of part-time to full-time students.- PT2: Higher part-time two-year—more than 60 percent of students at this 2-year institution are part-time.
- Mix2: Mixed part/full-time two-year—between 39 and 60 percent of students at this 2-year institution are part-time.
- MFT2: Medium full-time two-year—more than 60 but fewer than 91 percent of students at this 2-year institution are full-time.
- FT2: Higher full-time two-year—more than 90 percent of students at this 2-year institution are full-time.
- PT4: Higher part-time four-year—more than 39 percent of students at this 4-year or higher institution are part-time.
- MFT4: Medium full-time four-year—more than 60 percent but fewer than 80 percent of students at this 4-year or higher institution are full-time.
- FT4: Full-time four-year—more than 79 percent of students at this 4-year or higher institution are full-time.
Achievement characteristics/selectivity
- Inclusive —students had a 25th percentile ACT-equivalent score below 18.
- Selective —students had a 25th percentile ACT-equivalent score from 18 to 21.
- More Selective —students had a 25th percentile ACT-equivalent score greater than 21.
Transfer origin
- Lower transfer-in —fewer than 20 percent of students transfer into the institution.
- Higher transfer-in —more than 19 percent of students transfer into the institution.
Size and setting
Size
The size of institutions is based on their full-time equivalent enrollment. FTEs are calculated by adding the number of full-time students to one-third the number of part-time students. Two-year colleges are classified using a different scale than four-year and higher institutions.- Very small two-year —fewer than 500 FTEs attend this two-year institution.
- Small two-year —at least 500 but fewer than 2000 FTEs attend this two-year institution.
- Medium two-year —at least 2000 but fewer than 5000 FTEs attend this two-year institution.
- Large two-year —at least 5000 but fewer than 10000 FTEs attend this two-year institution.
- Very large two-year —10000 or more FTEs attend this two-year institution.
- Very small four-year —fewer than 1000 FTEs attend this four-year institution.
- Small four-year —at least 1000 but fewer than 3000 FTEs attend this four-year institution.
- Medium four-year —at least 3000 but fewer than 10000 FTEs attend this four-year institution.
- Large four-year —more than 10000 FTEs attend this four-year institution.
Setting
- Primarily nonresidential —fewer than 25 percent of degree-seeking undergraduates or fewer than 50 percent enrolled full-time live on campus.
- Primarily residential : —at least 25 percent of degree-seeking undergraduates live on campus and at least 50 percent but fewer than 80 percent attend full-time.
- Highly residential —at least half of degree-seeking undergraduates live on campus and at least 80 percent attend full-time.
2005 edition
The Carnegie Foundation is also developing one or more voluntary classification schemes that rely on data submitted by institutions. The first focuses on outreach and community engagement, and the second on "...how institutions seek to analyze, understand, and improve undergraduate education."
The Carnegie Foundation has no plans to issue printed editions of the classifications. Their has several tools that let researchers and administrators view classifications.
Revisions in the basic classification
The "basic classification" is an update of the original classification scheme. In addition to changing names of some categories, the 2005 revision differs from previous editions in that it:- Splits Associates colleges into subcategories. This is based on the work of Stephen Katsinas, Vincent Lacey, and David Hardy at the University of Alabama and is an update of work funded in the 1990s by the Ford Foundation.
- Categorizes doctorate-granting institutions according to their level of research activity. This level is calculated using multiple measures, financial and otherwise.
- Simplifies the measurement of doctorate degrees awarded.
- Divides Master's colleges and universities into three categories based on the number of Master's degrees awarded.
- Deprecates "Liberal Arts" terminology.
- Modified the criteria separating Master's and Baccalaureate institutions. Institutions formerly classified as Master's Colleges and Universities are now classified as Baccalaureate Colleges.
- Requires institutions to have higher levels of single-field or related-field concentration for designation as special-focus institutions and utilizes more sources of information to identify special-focus institutions.
- Splits the "Schools of engineering and technology" category into two categories and eliminates the "Teacher's colleges" category.
- Measures and classifies service academies using to the same criteria as other institutions.
Previous editions