Prescott College

Recent News About Prescott College

Higher Education | Colleges & Universities


Arizona residents attending four-year schools pay the highest in-state tuition at Brookline College-Phoenix, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University-Prescott and Prescott College, according to an analysis of federal data.

Arizona residents attending four-year schools pay the lowest in-state tuition at Dine College, Arizona State University - ASU Colleges at Lake Havasu City and National Paralegal College, according to an analysis of federal data.

National Paralegal College enrolled the most in-state students of all four-year Arizona schools, according to a Higher Education Tribune analysis of fall 2017 data.

National Paralegal College enrolled the fewest in-state students of all four-year Arizona schools, according to a Higher Education Tribune analysis of fall 2017 data.

University of Notre Dame, Earlham College and Saint Mary's College enrolled the fewest in-state students of all four-year schools in the U.S., according to a Higher Education Tribune analysis of fall 2017 data.

National Paralegal College enrolled the fewest in-state students of all four-year schools in the U.S., according to a Higher Education Tribune analysis of fall 2017 data.

At International Baptist College & Seminary, 14.2 percent of borrowers who started repaying student loans in 2014 defaulted on those loans by the end of 2016, according to a Higher Education Tribune analysis.

Arizona residents attending four-year schools pay the highest in-state tuition at Brookline College-Phoenix, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University-Prescott and Prescott College, according to a Higher Education Tribune analysis of federal data.

Arizona residents pay the highest in-state tuition at Brookline College-Phoenix, Carrington College-Phoenix East and Universal Technical Institute of Arizona Inc, according to a Higher Education Tribune analysis of federal data.

University of Phoenix reported the largest share of borrowers who defaulted on school loans they started repaying in 2014, according to a Higher Education Tribune analysis of federal data.