Each year, College Factual releases its Best Quality Schools ranking to identify graduate schools that offer a great educational experience and provide excellent student outcomes. Our methodology places a high weight on things such as post-graduation wages, time to graduate, and student-per-faculty ratio. Post-graduation debt, faculty and staff diversity, and other factors are also taken into account.
Out of the 1149 colleges and universities analyzed in College Factual's 2024 Best Master's Degree Schools in the U.S. ranking, Johnson C Smith University took the #1038 spot.
In addition, JCSU took the #27 spot for Best Master's Degree Schools in North Carolina.
Athough the male-female ratio may vary depending on the degree program, 86.8% of the total graduate students at JCSU are women and 13.2% are men.
Of all the graduate students at JCSU, around 60.4% belong to a racial-ethnic minority group. For more details on graduate school diversity at the school, check out the chart below. If you click on it, you'll be taken to a page with more details.
The average graduate full-time tuition and fees is shown in the table below.
In-State | Out-of-State | |
---|---|---|
Tuition | $17,798 | $17,798 |
After obtaining their master's degree from JCSU, graduates go on to jobs earning an average starting salary of $43,687. That's about 25% lower than the countrywide average of $58,425 for all master's degree holders.
Get more details about the location of Johnson C Smith University.
Contact details for JCSU are given below.
Contact Details | |
---|---|
Address: | 100 Beatties Ford Road, Charlotte, NC 28216-5398 |
Phone: | 704-378-1000 |
Website: | www.jcsu.edu/ |
Facebook: | https://www.facebook.com/smithites |
Twitter: | https://twitter.com/JCSUniversity |
The only degree programs listed here are those in which master’s degrees were awarded in 2020-2021.
Master’s Degree Program | Annual Graduates |
---|---|
Social Work | 40 |
Footnotes
*The racial-ethnic minorities count is calculated by taking the total number of students and subtracting white students, international students, and students whose race/ethnicity was unknown. This number is then divided by the total number of students at the school to obtain the racial-ethnic minorities percentage.
References
More about our data sources and methodologies.