NMT Graduate Programs Rank Highly
by George Zamora
SOCORRO, N.M., March 30, 2000 -- Make it five years in a
row now: New Mexico Tech's graduate
program in hydrology has once again been rated among the best
in the nation in the latest U.S. News & World Report's annual
rankings of graduate schools.
And, for the second year in a row, New Mexico Tech's graduate
program in petroleum engineering has made the guidebook's
top ten list in that field of study.
The small, yet renowned, hydrology program at the state-supported
research university was once again ranked as the nation's fourth-best
graduate program in the specialty area of hydrogeology, behind
much larger schools such as the University of Arizona (ranked
first), Stanford University (ranked second), and the University
of Wisconsin at Madison (ranked third).
In the soon-to-be-released guidebook's rankings, New Mexico
Tech's hydrology program bested several academic luminaries, including
Penn State (ranked fifth), University of Texas at
Austin (ranked sixth), and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(tied at eighth).
New Mexico Tech's graduate program in petroleum engineering
was listed in the latest issue as being the tenth-best program
available in the nation in the specialty area of petroleum engineering.
In the four prior annual surveys and analyses conducted by
U.S. News & World Report,
New Mexico Tech's graduate program in hydrology also ended up
being ranked each time as the country's fourth-best in that particular
academic discipline.
The university's graduate program in petroleum engineering
also was listed as the tenth-best such program in last year's
assessment.
The 2001 edition of U.S. News & World Report America's
Best Graduate Schools guidebook will be available in newsstands
and bookstores on Monday, April 3.
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