Where the top 1% and the bottom 20% go to college

University of Phoenix

Top 1%

Bottom 20%

Johns

Hopkins

Middle- bury

Ford-

ham

Dart-

mouth

Lehigh

Denver

George-

town

Stanford

Syracuse

N.Y.U.

Villanova

G.W.

T.C.U.

U.S.C.

Emory

North-

western

Private Nonprofit

Schools

WashU

Harvard

Penn

Notre

Dame

Brown

Colleges

with

insufficient data

Not Attending College

at ages 19−22

Tufts

Boston

College

B.Y.U.

Cornell

Yale

Univ. of

Miami

Vanderbilt

S.M.U.

Tulane

Wake

Forest

 

Boston

University

Duke

Baylor

Florida

Virginia

Colorado

Indiana

U.C.

Berkeley

Georgia

Texas

Arizona

A&M

Ohio

State

Auburn

Penn

L.A. Com. College District

State

Public Schools

Michigan

South

Carolina

Public Schools

Private

Maryland

Michigan

State

Wisconsin

Miami

(Ohio)

Full

Sail

Illinois

Iowa

For-profit

Texas

Alabama

U.C.L.A.

L.S.U.

Where the top 1% and the bottom 20% go to college

University of Phoenix

Top 1%

Bottom 20%

George-

town

Stanford

Syracuse

N.Y.U.

U.S.C.

Emory

Private Nonprofit

Schools

North-

western

WashU

Harvard

Penn

Notre

Dame

Brown

Not Attending College

at ages 19−22

Colleges

with

insufficient data

Tufts

Boston

College

Cornell

Yale

Univ. of

Miami

Vanderbilt

Tulane

Wake

Forest

 

Boston

University

Duke

Baylor

Virginia

Colorado

Indiana

Georgia

Texas

A&M

Arizona

Penn

L.A. Com. College District

State

Public Schools

Michigan

Public Schools

Private

Maryland

Miami

(Ohio)

Wisconsin

Illinois

Iowa

For-profit

Alabama

Where the top 1% and the bottom

20% go to college

Top 1%

N.Y.U.

T.C.U.

G.W.

U.S.C.

Emory

Private Nonprofit

Schools

WashU

Penn

Notre

Dame

Brown

Tufts

B.Y.U.

Cornell

Yale

Univ. of

Miami

S.M.U.

Tulane

Wake

Forest

 

Duke

Baylor

Virginia

Indiana

Colorado

Georgia

Texas

Arizona

A&M

Penn

State

Public Schools

Michigan

Maryland

Miami

(Ohio)

Wisconsin

Illinois

Iowa

For-profit

Texas

Alabama

University of Phoenix

Bottom 20%

Not Attending College

at ages 19−22

Colleges

with

insufficient data

Private

Public Schools

Ivy Tech C.C. of Indiana

Students at elite colleges are even richer than experts realized, according to a new study based on millions of anonymous tax filings and tuition records.

At 38 colleges in America, including five in the Ivy League – Dartmouth, Princeton, Yale, Penn and Brown – more students came from the top 1 percent of the income scale than from the entire bottom 60 percent.

38 colleges had more students from the top 1 percent than the bottom 60 percent

These estimates are for the 1991 cohort (approximately the class of 2013). Rankings are shown for colleges with at least 200 students in this cohort, sorted here by the ratio between the two income groups.

Add your favorite colleges to the tables in this article:

Schools added:

Roughly one in four of the richest students attend an elite college – universities that typically cluster toward the top of annual rankings (you can find more on our definition of “elite” at the bottom).

In contrast, less than one-half of 1 percent of children from the bottom fifth of American families attend an elite college; less than half attend any college at all.

Where today’s 25-year-olds went to college, grouped by their parents’ income

About four in 10 students from the top 0.1 percent attend an Ivy League or elite university, roughly equivalent to the share of students from poor families who attend any two- or four-year college.

Colleges often promote their role in helping poorer students rise in life, and their commitments to affordability. But some elite colleges have focused more on being affordable to low-income families than on expanding access. “Free tuition only helps if you can get in,” said Danny Yagan, an assistant professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley, and one of the authors of the study.

The study – by Raj Chetty, John Friedman, Emmanuel Saez, Nicholas Turner and Mr. Yagan – provides the most comprehensive look at how well or how poorly colleges have built an economically diverse student body. The researchers tracked about 30 million students born between 1980 and 1991, linking anonymized tax returns to attendance records from nearly every college in the country.

We’re offering detailed information on each of more than 2,000 American colleges on separate pages. See how your college compares – by clicking any college name like Harvard, U.C.L.A., Penn State, Texas A&M or Northern Virginia Community College – or search for schools that interest you.

At elite colleges, the share of students from the bottom 40 percent has remained mostly flat for a decade. Access to top colleges has not changed much, at least when measured in quintiles. (The poor have gotten poorer over that time, and the very rich have gotten richer.)

Access to top colleges has not changed much

At “elite” colleges, roughly 80 of the most selective colleges in the United States, as measured by a 2009 index created by Barron’s.

Previously, the most widely available data on the economic makeup of college students came from government statistics on Pell grants. Those grants typically go to students in the bottom 40 percent of the income distribution. The government data categorizes students as qualifying for Pell grants or not, but does not distinguish between students who just miss the cutoff and those whose families make much more money.

The Obama administration and Congress have expanded Pell eligibility, which caused the number of Pell recipients at many colleges to rise. Some elite colleges pointed to this increase as a sign that they took economic diversity much more seriously than in the recent past.

But the new estimates show that much of the increase in Pell recipients stems from the expansion of the program. The students at elite colleges, at least as of 2013, were not actually much more economically diverse than in the past, though there are some exceptions.

Elite colleges that enroll the highest percentage of low- and middle-income students

Rankings are shown for “elite” colleges only.

These patterns are important because previous research has found that there are many highly qualified lower-income students who do not attend selective colleges – and because the low- and middle-income students who do attend top colleges fare almost as well as rich students.

Even though they face challenges that other students do not, lower-income students end up earning almost as much on average as affluent students who attend the same college.

Look at the remarkably relative flatness of the colored lines below. An affluent student who attends one of 12 “Ivy plus” universities (the Ivy League colleges, Duke, M.I.T., Stanford and the University of Chicago) ends up around the 80th percentile of the income distribution on average. A lower-income student who attends one of those colleges ends up around the 75th percentile. Lower-income students who attend less elite colleges also have outcomes similar to others from the same college.

Poor students who attend top colleges do about as well as their rich classmates

Poor children at elite colleges ended up at about the 75th percentile.
Their rich classmates fared only a little better.
In general, parent income is a strong predictor of child income.
Data here comes from the 1980-82 cohort, roughly the college classes of 2002-4. By this stage in life, income ranks are relatively stable.

By contrast, the steeper gray line shows outcomes for the entire American population. Most students who grow up poor remain poor as adults, and most students who grow up affluent remain affluent.

The data above covers children born between 1980 and 1982, who are around 35 years old today. Most Americans remain in a similar place on the income distribution from their late 30s through the end of their careers, previous studies have found, so the highest-earning 36-year-olds are likely to become the highest-earning 60-year-olds, at least on average.

Even though most lower-income students fare well at elite colleges, there are relatively few of them there, so less elite colleges may be more important engines of social mobility. The researchers developed a new statistic they call a college’s mobility rate, which combines a college’s share of students from lower-income families with its success at propelling them into the upper part of the distribution.

Colleges with the highest mobility rate, from the bottom 40 percent to the top 40 percent

Success rate measures the percent of lower-income students who ended up in the top 40 percent. Data here comes from the 1980-82 cohort, roughly the college classes of 2002-4. By this stage in life, income ranks are relatively stable.

The mobility rate captures the share of all students at a given college who both came from a lower-income family and ended up in a higher-income family. The top of this list is dominated not by elite colleges, but by mid-tier public ones, including the colleges that make up the City University of New York.

A separate column looks at working-class colleges in more detail.

Selectivity tiers used here are based on a 2009 index created by Barron’s. “Ivy plus” colleges include the eight colleges of the Ivy League in addition to Stanford, the University of Chicago, Duke and M.I.T. “Other elite colleges” represent colleges with a selectivity index of 1 excluding the “Ivy plus” colleges. “Highly selective” colleges represent those with a selectivity index of 2; “selective” colleges represent those with a selectivity index from 3 to 5; “nonselective” colleges represent those with a selectivity index greater than 5 or unlisted in Barron’s.

These estimates cover only colleges that participate in Title IV federal funding, which excludes the military academies and certain other colleges.

\Source: “Mobility Report Cards: The Role of Colleges in Intergenerational Mobility”, The Equality of Opportunity Project