Holy Names University
Holy Names University is located in Oakland, California. It is a private not-for-profit, 4-year or above institution.
From Wikipedia: Holy Names University was a private Roman Catholic university in Oakland, California. It was founded in 1868 by the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary with which the university remained affiliated until it closed in 2023.
Notes
These are items that bear looking into more closely.
This institution’s six year bachelors graduation rate is 53.7%, so approximately 1/2 of undergrads who enroll do not earn a bachelors degree from here.
From 2011 to 2021, full time undergraduate enrollment dropped from 677 to 492, a decline of 27.3%
Overview of institution
Institution kind: Master’s Colleges & Universities: Small Programs
Undergrad program: Arts & sciences plus professions, some graduate coexistence
Graduate program: Postbaccalaureate: Education-dominant, with Arts & Sciences
Enrollment profile: High undergraduate (see more details below)
Average net price for undergrads on financial aid: $23,065 (1.2 times the equivalent cost of Harvard).
Actual price for your family: Go here to see what your family may be asked to pay. It can be MUCH lower than the average price but also higher for some.
Size and setting: Four-year, very small, highly residential
In state percentage: 97% of first year students come from California (note that 1.5% have no residence reported)
In US percentage: 98% of first year students come from the US
This institution has a religious affiliation of Roman Catholic
Graduation rate (within 6 years) for students seeking a Bachelors: 53.7% (this is what is usually reported as “graduation rate”)
Graduation rate (within 4 years) for students seeking a Bachelors: 46.3%
Percent of students seeking a Bachelors who transfer out of this institution: 35.8%
Student to tenure-stream faculty ratio: 23.6 (undergrads to tenure-stream faculty) [Tenure explained]
Student to faculty ratio: 14.1 (undergrads to all faculty)
Degrees offered: Bachelor’s degree, Postbaccalaureate certificate, Master’s degree, Post master’s certificate
Schedule: Semester
Institution provides on campus housing: Yes
Dorm capacity: There are enough dorm beds for 440 students
Freshmen required to live on campus: No
Covid vaccination requirement for students: At some point during the pandemic (this may have changed), this institution required students to be vaccinated against covid (based on info from here)
Covid vaccination requirement for faculty/staff: At some point during the pandemic (this may have changed), this institution required faculty and/or staff to be vaccinated against covid (based on info from here)
Advanced placement (AP) credits used: Yes
Disabilities: 6.39 percent of undergrads are registered as having disabilities.
Overview of location
- Abortion in this state: Very protective (based on https://states.guttmacher.org/policies/ as of May 10, 2023)
- Gun law stringency: A (higher grade = more stringent)
- State rep support for contraception: 79.2% of US reps from this state voted in favor of legal protections for contraception.
- State rep support for recognizing same-sex and interracial marriage: 88.7% of US reps from this state voted in favor of requiring states to recognize same-sex and interracial marriages performed in other states
- Anti-trans legislative risk for adults over the next two years: Safest (based on Erin Reed’s work, as of September 6, 2023)
- Ecological region: California interior chaparral and woodlands
- Biome: Mediterranean Forests, Woodlands & Scrub
- Distance to mountains: 0 miles to North American Cordillera
- Climate: See overview at WeatherSpark
Other links
Similar institutions
This is using information about school size, acceptance rate, yield rate, graduation rate, cost, athletic conference, and similar metrics, but it can miss important axes of similarity (for example, culinary versus hair styling schools).
Map
Enrollment
Holy Names University | Change over ≤ 12 years | Trend | Pacific West Conference | Master’s Colleges & Universities: Small Programs | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Undergrads (full time) | 492 (2021) | ||||
Undergrads (part time) | 104 (2021) | ||||
Grad students (full time) | 198 (2021) | ||||
Grad students (part time) | 221 (2021) |
↓ -20 per year |
|||
Admission rate (undergrads) | 100% (2022) | ||||
Yield rate (percent of applicants offered undergraduate admission who accept) | 15% (2022) |
✪✪ Better (higher) than 25% |
✪ Better (higher) than 18% |
||
Graduation rate (bachelors in 6 years) | 54% (2022) |
✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 47% |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 60% |
||
Transfer out rate (bachelors) | 36% (2022) |
✪✪ Better (lower) than 25% |
✪ Better (lower) than 18% |
Student financing
At many universities, almost no students pay the listed tuition and fees (“sticker price”): instead, their financial aid package lowers this dramatically, but how much students pay can vary substantially based on family income and other factors. The tuition below is the average across many students receiving aid: your family may be asked to pay less or more than this.
Holy Names University | Change over ≤ 12 years | Pacific West Conference | Master’s Colleges & Universities: Small Programs | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Average net price (for students awarded aid) | $23,065 (2021) |
✪✪✪✪ Better (lower) than 64% |
✪✪ Better (lower) than 26% |
|
Undergrads getting federal aid | 55% (2022) |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 71% |
✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 53% |
|
Undergrads getting any aid | 100% (2022) |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 100% |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 100% |
|
Undergrads getting Pell grants | 55% (2022) |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 93% |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 79% |
Teaching
Holy Names University | Change over ≤ 12 years | Trend | Pacific West Conference | Master’s Colleges & Universities: Small Programs | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Undergrads per tenure track instructor (lower is better) | 24 (2019) |
✪✪✪ Better (lower) than 45% |
✪✪ Better (lower) than 37% |
||
Undergrads per instructor (lower is better) | 14 (2019) |
✪✪✪✪ Better (lower) than 73% |
✪✪✪✪ Better (lower) than 69% |
||
Total instructors | 40 (2020) | ||||
Tenure track instructors | 22 (2020) |
↓ -1.3 per year |
|||
Non-tenure track instructors | 18 (2020) |
Student details
Holy Names University | Change over ≤ 12 years | |
---|---|---|
Dorm capacity | 440 (2022) | |
Percent of undergrads with registered disabilities (≤3 is rounded up to 3) | 6.4% (2022) |
Institution finances
Holy Names University | Change over ≤ 12 years | Trend | Pacific West Conference | Master’s Colleges & Universities: Small Programs | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Revenue from tution and fees | 52% (2022) |
✪✪✪✪ Better (lower) than 73% |
✪✪✪ Better (lower) than 41% |
||
Revenue | $26 M (2022) | ||||
Expenses | $38 M (2022) |
↑ $1.1 M per year |
|||
Assets | $78 M (2022) |
↑ $6.1 M per year |
✪ Better (higher) than 7% |
✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 44% |
Graduation rates
Graduation rates for bachelor’s degrees within 150% of normal time (6 years for a 4-year degree). Note that this uses US federal demographic data: it only has two genders and a specified set of ethnicities and races. For groups with small numbers, the graduation rate may be highly variable year to year (do all three people in this group graduate this year or just two of three, for example).
Holy Names University | Change over ≤ 12 years | Pacific West Conference | Master’s Colleges & Universities: Small Programs | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Total | 54% (2022) |
✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 47% |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 60% |
|
Men | 39% (2022) |
✪ Better (higher) than 20% |
✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 40% |
|
Women | 61% (2022) |
✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 47% |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 67% |
|
American Indian or Alaska Native men | 100% (2013) |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 100% |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 100% |
|
American Indian or Alaska Native women | 100% (2018) |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 100% |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 100% |
|
Asian men | 67% (2021) |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 67% |
✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 58% |
|
Asian women | 73% (2022) |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 73% |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 61% |
|
Black or African American men | 0% (2022) |
✪ Better (higher) than 7% |
✪ Better (higher) than 16% |
|
Black or African American women | 57% (2022) |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 77% |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 80% |
|
Hispanic men | 39% (2022) |
✪✪ Better (higher) than 40% |
✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 47% |
|
Hispanic women | 59% (2022) |
✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 60% |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 67% |
|
Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander men | 50% (2020) |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 77% |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 61% |
|
Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander women | 67% (2021) |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 69% |
✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 60% |
|
White men | 25% (2022) |
✪ Better (higher) than 7% |
✪ Better (higher) than 7% |
|
White women | 0% (2022) |
✪ Better (higher) than 0% |
✪ Better (higher) than 1% |
|
Two or more races men | 67% (2022) |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 71% |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 85% |
|
Two or more races women | 100% (2022) |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 100% |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 100% |
Freshmen demographics
Demographic data for first time degree-seeking students. Note that this uses US federal demographic data: it only has two genders and a specified set of ethnicities and races.
Holy Names University | Change over ≤ 12 years | |
---|---|---|
Men (percent freshmen) | 35% (2022) | |
Women (percent freshmen) | 65% (2022) | |
American Indian or Alaska Native men (percent freshmen) | 0% (2022) | |
American Indian or Alaska Native women (percent freshmen) | 0% (2022) | |
Asian men (percent freshmen) | 2.9% (2022) | |
Asian women (percent freshmen) | 4.4% (2022) | |
Black or African American men (percent freshmen) | 9.6% (2022) | |
Black or African American women (percent freshmen) | 15% (2022) | |
Hispanic men (percent freshmen) | 8.8% (2022) | |
Hispanic women (percent freshmen) | 23% (2022) | |
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander men (percent freshmen) | 0.7% (2022) | |
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander women (percent freshmen) | 1.5% (2022) | |
White men (percent freshmen) | 3.7% (2022) | |
White women (percent freshmen) | 12% (2022) | |
Two or more races men (percent freshmen) | 0.7% (2022) | |
Two or more races women (percent freshmen) | 5.1% (2022) | |
Race ethnicity unknown men (percent freshmen) | 4.4% (2022) | |
Race ethnicity unknown women (percent freshmen) | 3.7% (2022) | |
Nonresident alien men (percent freshmen) | 1.0% (2021) | |
Nonresident alien women (percent freshmen) | 0% (2021) |
Freshmen geography
Holy Names University | Change over ≤ 12 years | |
---|---|---|
In state | 97% (2022) | |
US | 98% (2022) | |
Not reported | 1.5% (2022) |
Tenure track faculty
Tenure track faculty are those who are eligible for tenure. This includes both pre-tenure and tenured faculty. Once faculty get tenure, they are (generally) protected from being fired for intellectual reasons, helping to ensure their freedom in teaching and research. They can still lose their positions for misconduct, financial problems, not fulfilling their duties, or other reasons. Note that this chart uses US federal demographic data: it only has two genders and a specified set of ethnicities and races.
Holy Names University | Change over ≤ 12 years | Trend | |
---|---|---|---|
Total (tenure-track count) | 22 (2020) |
↓ -1.3 per year |
|
Women (tenure-track count) | 12 (2020) |
↓ -1.3 per year |
|
Men (tenure-track count) | 10 (2020) | ||
American Indian or Alaska Native (tenure-track count) | 0 (2020) | ||
Asian (tenure-track count) | 8 (2020) |
↑ 0.7 per year |
|
Black or African American (tenure-track count) | 1 (2020) | ||
Hispanic or Latino (tenure-track count) | 1 (2020) | ||
Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander (tenure-track count) | 0 (2020) |
↓ -0.2 per year |
|
White (tenure-track count) | 11 (2020) |
↓ -1.1 per year |
|
Two or more races (tenure-track count) | 0 (2020) | ||
Nonresident alien (tenure-track count) | 0 (2020) |
Non-tenure track faculty
Non-tenure track faculty are not eligible for tenure. Some are hired one semester at a time, some have multi-year contracts. They typically have a higher teaching load than tenure track faculty, leaving less time for research or other creative endeavors. They are also easier to fire than tenured faculty. Sometimes they are external experts (a noted musician, a former senator) who are hired to teach some classes without the expected permanence of a tenure-track position. Note that this chart uses US federal demographic data: it only has two genders and a specified set of ethnicities and races.
Holy Names University | Change over ≤ 12 years | Trend | |
---|---|---|---|
Total (non-tenure-track count) | 18 (2020) | ||
Women (non-tenure-track count) | 13 (2020) | ||
Men (non-tenure-track count) | 5 (2020) | ||
American Indian or Alaska Native (non-tenure-track count) | 0 (2020) | ||
Asian (non-tenure-track count) | 4 (2020) |
↑ 0.5 per year |
|
Black or African American (non-tenure-track count) | 2 (2020) | ||
Hispanic or Latino (non-tenure-track count) | 2 (2020) |
↑ 0.3 per year |
|
Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander (non-tenure-track count) | 0 (2020) | ||
White (non-tenure-track count) | 9 (2020) | ||
Two or more races (non-tenure-track count) | 1 (2020) | ||
Nonresident alien (non-tenure-track count) | 0 (2020) |
Library facilities
Holy Names University | Change over ≤ 12 years | Pacific West Conference | Master’s Colleges & Universities: Small Programs | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Number of physical books | 37,284 (2022) |
✪ Better (higher) than 13% |
✪ Better (higher) than 14% |
|
Physical library circulations per students and faculty | 5.4 (2019) |
✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 71% |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 81% |
|
Digital library circulations per students and faculty | 63 (2019) |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 86% |
✪✪✪✪✪ Better (higher) than 87% |
SAT scores
Holy Names University | Change over ≤ 12 years | Trend | |
---|---|---|---|
Applicants submitting SAT | 78% (2019) | ||
SAT Evidence Based Reading and Writing 25th percentile score | 280 (2019) | ||
SAT Evidence Based Reading and Writing 75th percentile score | 330 (2019) | ||
SAT Math 25th percentile score | 440 (2019) |
↑ 13 per year |
|
SAT Math 75th percentile score | 550 (2019) |
↑ 14 per year |
ACT scores
Holy Names University | Change over ≤ 12 years | Trend | |
---|---|---|---|
Applicants submitting ACT | 22% (2019) | ||
ACT Composite 25th percentile score | 18 (2019) |
↑ 0.5 per year |
|
ACT Composite 75th percentile score | 21 (2019) | ||
ACT English 25th percentile score | 18 (2019) |
↑ 0.8 per year |
|
ACT English 75th percentile score | 22 (2019) | ||
ACT Math 25th percentile score | 17 (2019) | ||
ACT Math 75th percentile score | 22 (2019) |
Degrees by major
Bachelors
Masters
Doctorate
Certificate
Associates
Demographic cliff
There is a concern that giving changing US demographics, the number of students in the age groups who most commonly attend four year colleges will drop off, decreasing overall enrollment. This is often referred to as the “demographic cliff”. This concern comes with a lot of assumptions about the rate at which students will want to go to college, students coming from outside the US, what age students are when they go to college, overall immigration and emigration rates, whether there will be more or fewer colleges competing for students, time to degree and dropout rates remaining constant, and much more, but analyses often also look at just the population of the US as a whole, even though there can be substantial variation in growth by region. For this section, I am using US census data on the number of people in each state by age, and the proportion of students that come from each state for this particular college, to crudely model what will happen if everything remains constant except the demographic change in the population of 18 year olds in each year. For selective schools, they could probably change their admission rate and maintain enrollment; for less selective schools, they may need to change their marketing or other strategies to attract more students if they pull from areas with decreasing number of students of “traditional” college age, or, in rare cases, close. If there is no figure below, breakdowns of students by state are not available. Note that this uses just the 50 US states, not other US territories.
Life expectancy
This hopefully will not be relevant for potential students, but it may be for people moving to an area longer term, such as faculty and staff choosing where to live. This uses information from US National Vital Statistics Reports for 2020; like much federal data, it assumes people are male or female. For age difference from median, it is from the median state, averaging across all genders (one consequence of this is that the difference from the median life expectancy is almost always negative for men).
- Life expectancy at birth: 82 years women (5.3 years over the median), 76.2 years men (0.6 years below the median)
- Remaining life expectancy at age 18: 64.4 years women (5 years over the median), 58.7 years men (0.7 years below the median)
- Remaining life expectancy at age 30: 52.8 years women (4.6 years over the median), 47.6 years men (0.5 years below the median)
- Remaining life expectancy at age 45: 38.5 years women (4 years over the median), 34.1 years men (0.4 years below the median)
- Remaining life expectancy at age 60: 25.1 years women (3.1 years over the median), 21.6 years men (0.3 years below the median)
We can also plot the extra / fewer years of life expected for this state (red) compared to other states (dark gray) at each age. Again, this is normalized for the median state.