The following schools top our list of the Best “Most Veteran Friendly for Medical/Health Humanities for a Master’s”.
Out of the 2 schools in the Most Veteran Friendly for Medical/Health Humanities for a Master’s that were part of this year’s ranking, University of Rochester landed the #1 spot on the list. University of Rochester is a fairly large school located in Rochester, New York that handed out 8 masters’s medical/health humanities degrees in 2020-2021.
University of Rochester not only placed well in this ranking. It is also #2 on our “Best Medical/Health Humanities Master’s Degree Schools” list.According to our most recent data, University of Rochester supports 11,741 students, and 7 of those are GI Bill® students, of which 3 are Post-9/11 GI Bill® recipients. The average tuition and fees award for the Post-9/11 GI Bill® recipients was $14,872. To help with additional expenses, 1 students received funds through the Yellow Ribbon Program.
With a freshman retention rate of 92%, the school does an excellent job of retaining its undergraduate students. The undergrad student loan default rate at the school is [DEFAULT_RATE_STRING]%, which is quite low when compared to the national default rate of 10.1%. With a undergrad student-to-faculty ratio of 10 to 1, it’s easy to see that the school is committed to helping their undergraduates succeed.
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You’ll join some of the best and brightest minds around if you attend Columbia University in the City of New York. The school came in at #2 for the Most Veteran Friendly for Medical/Health Humanities for a Master’s. Columbia is a large private not-for-profit school situated in New York, New York. It awarded 33 masters’s medical/health humanities degrees in 2020-2021.
In addition to being on our master’s degree vets studying medical/health humanities list, Columbia has also earned the #1 rank in our “Best Medical/Health Humanities Master’s Degree Schools” ranking.Our most recent data shows that 739 of the 30,135 students enrolled at Columbia University in the City of New York were GI Bill® students, of which 467 were Post-9/11 GI Bill® recipients. The average tuition and fees award for the Post-9/11 GI Bill® recipients was $22,069. During this same period, 328 students qualified for the Yellow Ribbon Program.
The school has an impressive undergrad student loan default rate. It’s only [DEFAULT_RATE_STRING]%, which is much lower than the national rate of 10.1%. The impressive undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio of 6 to 1 means that students may have more opportunities to work more closely with their professors than they would at other schools. With a freshman retention rate of 95%, the school does an excellent job of retaining its undergraduate students.
[Read full report on veteran student life at Columbia]](/colleges/columbia-university-in-the-city-of-new-york/student-life/veterans/)