Rice University Statistics for Prospective Undergraduate Students
Annotations
Commencement and Beyond
(as of May 1998)

Retention and Graduation Rates
(average rates for classes entering ‘90, ‘91, and ‘92)

Retention refers to the number of degree-seeking students who were enrolled at the beginning of an academic year and who returned the fall semester of the following academic year to continue their program of study. The freshman to sophomore year retention rate is the percentage of the first-year students who entered during the fall semesters of 1990, 1991, and 1992 and who returned in the fall semester of the year following their entry.

The graduation rate tracks the number of years to degree attainment for degree-seeking students in each fall semester’s
entering class. The figure shown was the average of the six-year graduation rates for classes entering Fall 1990, 1991, and 1992. Of the 1990, 1991, and 1992 first year students, 90% had graduated within six years of their entry into Rice. Rice’s graduation rate reflects the time to degree not only for students who progressed within the traditional four years, but it also included those who may have taken a leave of absence of several semesters for personal reasons or for study abroad. Also included are students with double and triple majors.

          Sources: Enrollment information was accessed from AIMS (see footnote). The average freshman retention
          and graduation rates for the 1990, 1991, and 1992 entering classes were calculated by the Office of
          Institutional Research from data provided by the Office of the Registrar in Graduated or Last Year
          Registered as of Summer 1998 Report. The latter is available on the web at
          http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~reg/reports/degrees_report/grad_rates.html
 
 

Degrees Awarded, Spring 1998

On May 9, 1998, Rice awarded 654 undergraduate degrees to 619 students. One-third of the students had double or triple majors. Professional (fifth-year) degrees in Architecture and Fine Arts were awarded to 12 students. Graduate degrees (master’s 334 and doctorates 114) totaled 448 degrees and were awarded to 437 students. Rice has one commencement ceremony each year in the spring; however, those students (undergraduate, graduate, and "fifth year") who complete all degree requirements at the end of the fall semester are eligible for mid-year degree conferral, but diplomas are not issued until the May Commencement.

          Source: The degrees awarded data were accessed from AIMS (see footnote). Information on the number of
          undergraduates with multiple majors among the May 1998 graduates was provided by the Registrar. The
          number of degrees awarded and the number of student recipients were reported by the Registrar in the
          document Summary of Degrees Awarded May 9, 1998. This report can be found at
          http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~reg/reports/degrees_report/deg_awarded_98_p1.html
 

Postgraduation Pursuits

These statistics are taken from the results of a questionnaire that was sent by the Office of Institutional Research at Rice
to the graduating seniors in the spring semester 1998. Every four years since 1994, in concert with other institutional members of the Consortium on Financing Higher Education (COFHE), Rice has been surveying its graduating class in order to gauge the seniors’ perceptions of their undergraduate experience. The 1998 questionnaire covered such areas at the students’ immediate and long-term plans after graduation, their level of satisfaction with their undergraduate education, their evaluation of various services and facilities on campus, the activities in which they participated during college, how they financed their undergraduate education, what Rice could have done to improve their undergraduate experience, etc. Fifty-one percent of the 1998 seniors responded to the survey.

          Source: Senior Survey Spring 1998. The survey results were tabulated by COFHE and sent to Rice for
          analysis. The data were analyzed and reported by the Office of Institutional Research. These data are
          considered confidential and proprietary; so, the data, analyses, and work files are kept in a secure environment
          in files in the Office of Institutional Research.
 
 

Recent National Recognition
(as of May 3, 1999)

These are national scholarships and fellowships that were awarded to some of Rice’s undergraduate and graduate students. Information on the requirements for most of these fellowships and scholarships can be found on the Rice web site at:

            http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~acadadv/scholarship/natsch.html
 

Deadline: 
Tenure:
Restricted fields:
Value of award: 

Eligibility:

Number awarded:
Rice can nominate:
Recent Winners: 
 

 

February 1 (Office of Academic Advising)
1 year at Rice + 2 years of graduate study.
None, but preference given to arts and sciences.
Approximately $2000 for senior year plus up to $15,000
for each of two years of graduate school.
Restricted to juniors who will graduate the following
year. Not restricted to U.S. citizens.
Approximately 18 per year nationally.
One student.
Elizabeth Davis (Hanszen, 1998)
Joanna Winters (Jones, 1995)
Girish Putcha (Sid Richardson, 1991)
Katherine Eggert (Hanszen College, 1986)
Deadline:
Length of tenure:
Restricted fields:
Value of award: 
Eligibility:
Number awarded:

Rice can nominate:
Recent winners: 
 

 

November 20 (Office of Student Advising)
1 year at Churchill College, Cambridge.
Engineering, Science, Mathematics.
Approximately $25,000: Tuition and fees + $9000.
U.S. citizen, 19-26, bachelor's degree at enrollment.
10 annually. Rice is one of 41 schools that can nominate
candidates.
2 students.
Ron Dror (Math/Elec, Baker, 1997)
Charlie Wright (Bioc, Baker, 1991)
Karen Oehler (Elec, Jones, 1987)
David Dankworth (Ceng, Jones, 1986)
Deadline: 
Tenure: 
Restricted fields: 

Value of award: 
 
 
 
 
 

Eligibility:
 

Number awarded:
Rice can nominate: 
Recent Winners: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

About October 10 (Office of Academic Advising)
1 year of university study and/or research abroad.
None, although individual countries may have
"nonrecommended" fields.
Varies; "full grants"--in countries in which there are
Fulbright Commissions/Foundations--are for
transportation, language courses (where appropriate),
tuition, books, and insurance;
"fixed sum grants" pay a fixed fee in US dollars--these
are available in countries where there are no Fulbright
Commissions/Foundations.
Graduate students and graduating seniors who are U.S.
citizens; have language proficiency (if applicable), and are in good
health.
About 630 nationally per year.
Unlimited.
1999: Amy Bender (Spain, International Relations)
         Elizabeth Brown (Austria, Cell Biology)
         Matthew Chrisman (Germany, Philosophy)
         Theodore Howard (Austria, Electrical Engineering)
         Patrick Thomas (Spain, Molecular Biology)
         Rosemary Yiameos (Germany, Music--oboe)
1998: Shana Warren
         Patrick Clark
         Alexis Bacon
         T.Scott Brown
         Tom Ngyun
1997: Jessica Nolley (Bioengineering)
        Daniel Whiteson (Physics)
        Lamia Karim (Anthropology)
        Karen Fang (Biology)
        Rhea Sumpter (Molecular Biology),
        Ron Dror (also won a Churchill; turned down the Fulbright)
Deadline: 
Tenure: 
Restricted fields: 
 

Value of award: 
Eligibility:
 

Number awarded:
Rice can nominate: 
Recent Winners: 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

December (Office of Academic Advising)
One or two years.
Mathematics, the natural sciences, and engineering
Pre-meds only if they plan to go into research
rather than practice.
Up to $7000 annually.
Sophomores and juniors may apply.  GPA 3.0 minimum, applicants must be U.S. citizens or resident aliens intending to obtain U.S. citizenship.
Up to 250 nationally.
Four.
1998: Bobby Azamian (Biophysics)
         Sharon Merryman (Mathematics)
1997: Rebecca Lewis (Biology)
         Aaron Pierce (Physics/Math)
         Lucia Nurman (Biology, nominated by Arizona State 
         where she was visiting student; spent Goldwater
         Scholarship at Rice)
1996: Karen Fang
         Noah Rosenberg
Deadline: 
Tenure: 
Restricted fields: 

Value of award: 

Eligibility:
 

Number awarded:

Rice can nominate: 
Recent Winners: 

October 16 (Office of Academic Advising)
1 year living and working in Asia.
Courses of study "clearly directed toward Asian affairs
or international relations" not eligible.
Varies by locale; includes travel expenses, medical
insurance, a stipend and a living allowance.
Under age 30 and expecting a bachelor's degree
(in non-restricted field) no later than end of academic
year of application.
10 nationally per year (approximately 60 universities
can nominate candidates).
Two or three.
1993: Lorraine Guthrie B.A. ’88, B.Arch ‘90
Deadline: 
Tenure: 
Restricted fields: 
Value of award: 
Eligibility:

Number awarded:
Rice can nominate: 
Recent Winners: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Late September (Office of Academic Advising)
2 years (possibly a third) at a British university.
None.
Tuition, fees + various stipends; approximately £15,500
U.S. citizen under 26 years of age, bachelor's with
a 3.7 + grade point average.
40 per year nationally.
As many 2 students to each of 6 districts.
Justyna Gudzowska (Economics) 1998
           Baker - Cambridge University
Coulter George (German/linguistics/classics) 1997-1999
           Baker College - Trinity College, Cambridge University
Eve Crane (ChemE) 1996-1998
           Will Rice College - University of London
Girish Putcha (Bioc/Medical Ethics) 1991-1993
           Sid Richardson College - University of London
Gregg Robins (Economics) 1989-1991
           Hanszen College - St. Antony's College, Oxford
1986 Leslie Henderston (to U. of Edinborough)
1985 Charles Bier (to Cambridge)
1984 Roger Hoskins (to Cambridge)
1974 Augustine Martinez (to Cambridge)
1972 Sharon Hott (to London)
1968 Roland Theodore Smith (to Warwick)
1966 Jerome Hafter, Donald Lamb (to Liverpool
1965 William Boyles (to Oxford)
Circa 1959 Jim Bernhard

 
Deadline: 
 

Tenure: 
Restricted fields: 
 

Value of award: 
Eligibility:
 
 
 

Number awarded:
Rice can nominate: 
Recent Winners: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Application requested by early November. (Students
should plan to take the October GRE, for which the
deadline is early September.)
One year at any US or Canadian graduate school.
"The traditional humanities, including history," but
not the performing or creative arts; area majors "where
the emphasis in subject and method is humanistic."
$13,750 plus tuition and fees.
US citizen or permanent resident who plans to begin
Ph.D. graduate school work in the humanities the year
following application. (Graduating seniors are eligible,
as are alumni who graduated in the past but who have
not begun graduate education.)
About 80 nationally.
Not applicable.
1996: F. Jeffrey Karem (English)
         David Thompkins, (History)
1993: Robert T. Pomplun (Religious Studies/Asian Studies)
         David A. Harvey (History)
1992: Richard B. Menke (English)
         Brian D. Prince (Philosophy)
         Sue-Sun Yom (English)
1990: Charles Dan Blanton (English)
         Fiona Tolhurst Neuendorf (English)
1988: Patricia M. Mason
1987: Rachel L. Fulton
1986: Elizabeth Brient
1984: Otto B. Bassler 

 
 
Deadline: 
Tenure: 
Restricted fields: 
Value of award: 
Eligibility:
Number awarded:
Rice can nominate: 
Recent Winners:
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

January 21
36 months
Mathematical, physical, biological, ocean and engineering sciences
$18,500 for 1999-2000
U.S. citizens
90 annually
Not applicable
1999: Dennis Michael Geels (Mathematics/Computer Science)
          James Henry Henderson (Mechanical Engineering)
          Jill Karen Nelson (Electrical Engineering/Economics)
1998: John Charles Burant
          Ron Ofer Dror
          Bruce Owen Knuteson
          Sarah Elizabeth Marsh
1997: Karen Fang
          Noah Rosenberg

 
Deadline: 
 
 
 

Tenure: 
Restricted fields: 
 

Value of award: 
Eligibility:

Number awarded:
Rice can nominate: 
Recent Winners:
 

 

Part 1: postmarked by mid-November
(Application forms available in Academic Advising and
elsewhere on campus)
Part 2: postmarked by early December
(Forms sent directly to applicant after Part 1 received.)
Up to 3 years of graduate work.
Only engineering, science, and social sciences
(including mathematics, mathematical science, social sciences,
linguistics, and history and philosophy of science).
Varies; about $14,400 per year.
U.S. citizen with no more than 20 semester hours
toward post-graduate degree in science or engineering.
Approximately 900 per year nationally.
Rice nomination not required.
Approximately 15-20 per year from Rice:
1999 (16); 1998 (27); 1997 (10); 1996 (19); 1995 (13);
1994 (17); 1993 (10); 1992 (20); 1991 (15); 1990 (20);
1989 (16); 1988 (13)

Rice University NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Awards for Fiscal Year 1999:
 
Name 
Bala, Vikram
Chi, Eric Culbert
Cole, Roger Barto 
Cowles, Brendan Eugene
Dunn, Travis Bailey 
Gallagher, Daphne Elizabeth
Geels, Dennis Michael 
Henderson, James Henry
Merryman, Sharon Kae
Morris, Grayson Edward
Nelson, Jill Karen
Smith, Jeff S.
Stone, Mira Beth
Tan, Jeff Shun-Wei 
Tsai, Annabel T.S.
Wolfe, Daniel Brandon 
Major 
E/MATERIAL
E/ELECTRICAL
CHEM/ORGANIC
E/MATERIAL
CHEM/ORGANIC
ANTHR/ARCH 
CS/SYS DSN
E/BIOENGR
MATH/ALGEBRA
E/MECHANICAL
E/ELECTRICAL
EVOLUTION
E/ENVIRON
NEUROSCI 
E/BIOENGR
CHEM/OTHER
Institution of Study
Stanford U
M.I.T.
Yale U-School of Medicine
Stanford U
Harvard U
U College-London, England
Stanford U
Stanford U
Harvard U
M.I.T.
U of Illinois-Urbana
Emory U
U of Virginia-Charlottesville
U of California-Berkeley
U of Washington
Harvard U

Rice University NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Awards for Fiscal Year 1998:
 
Name 
Adolph, Christopher Alan
Burant, John Charles
Dror, Ron Ofer
Elliott, Meghan Elizabeth
Epps, Clinton Wakefield
Gilyot, Duane David
Goetz, David Henry
Grossman, Daniel Joseph
Gupta, Maya Rani
Harms, Brian David
Hastings, Michele Dawn
Hoffman, Kari Lee
Hunter, Adam Robert 
Knuteson, Bruce Owen
Lewis, Rebecca Austin
Liu, Valerie Ai-Ling
Lovato, Martha Ann
Nurman, Lucia Arlis
Pasadyn, Alexander James
Penn, Alexander Hayes
Pierce, Aaron Thomas
Rahmandar, Jennifer Joy
Shorey, Jamie Margaret
Stone, Matthew Thad
Walter, Benjamin Charles
Yoder, Tennessee Joplin
Yue, Herman Heng 
Major 
POLIT SCI
CHEM/THEOR
E/ELECTRCL
E/CIVIL
ECOLOGY
MATH/STATS
LIFE/OTHER
CS/LANG
E/ELECTRCL
E/BIOENGR
GENETICS
NEUROSCI 
CS/OTHER
PHYS/PART
ANIMAL BEH
E/BIOENGR
BIO/ORGAN 
MOLEC BIOL
E/CHEMICAL
E/BIOENGR
PHYS/PART
CELL BIOL
E/ELECTRCL 
E/CHEMICAL
MATH/TOPOL
CELL BIOL
DEVEL BIO
Institution of Study
Harvard U
Yale U/CT
MIT
U of California-Berkeley
Yale U/CT
U of California-Berkeley
U of Washington
Cornell U/NY
Stanford U/CA
Harvard-MIT Health Sci/Tech
Stanford U/CA
U of Arizona
Stanford U/CA
U of California-Berkeley
U of California-Davis
MIT
Stanford U
Stanford U/CA
U of Texas-Austin
U of Washington
U of California-Berkeley
Columbia U/NY
U of Ill.-Urbana-Champaign
U of Texas-Austin
MIT
U of Washington
Harvard U

The Phi Beta Kappa Society, an undergraduate honors organization, fosters and recognizes excellence in the liberal arts and sciences. The chapters, and their community counterparts, the associations, work with the national office to sustain a variety of programs that honor and champion liberal arts scholarship. These activities, whether local or national, provide support in the form of scholarships, lectureships, book and essay awards, summer institutes for teachers, and funds for visiting scholars. Invitations to membership are extended solely at the discretion of the individual chapters. Members are elected from candidates for degrees in the liberal arts and sciences, usually from the upper tenth of the graduating class. Students interested in Phi Beta Kappa should contact the chapter officers early in their academic careers for guidance on
requirements and curriculum. Generally, election to membership occurs at the completion of undergraduate study.
 
Deadline: 
Tenure: 
Restricted fields: 
Value of award: 
Eligibility:

Number awarded:
Rice can nominate: 

Recent Winners:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

End of September (Office of Academic Advising)
2 years at Oxford (with possibility of 1 more)
Open.
Tuition and fees + £6900 per year.
Unmarried U.S. citizen, 18 - 23,
bachelor's before enrolling at Oxford.
32 nationally.
As many as 2 students to any State Committee; usually
will nominate from 0 to 3 nationally.
1998: Bobak Robert Azamian, Hanszen
1997: Lisa McCormick, Sid Richardson (Canadian
          Rhodes)
1996: Maryana Iskander, Wiess
1970: Charles R. Engles
         Charles A. Shanor
1963: Robert E. Johnston
1962: James R. Doty
1957: Roy M. Hofheinz
1952: Clyde M. Williams
1935: Samuel R. Dunlap

 
Deadline: 
Tenure: 
Restricted fields: 
Value of award: 
Eligibility:

Number awarded:
Rice can nominate: 
Recent Winners:
 

 

Early December (Office of Academic Advising)
1 year undergraduate, 2 or more years graduate school.
None, but should be planning "career in public service."
$30,000 over three years.
Juniors who are U.S. citizens planning graduate work
and careers in public service.
50 (1 per state), plus up to 50 at-large fellows.
Three students.
1996: Maryana Iskander (Wiess)
1991: Miriam Ma (Jones)
1989: Kristine Hain (Jones)
1988: Andrew Kopplin (Baker)
Deadline: 
Tenure: 
Restricted fields: 
 
 

Value of award: 
Eligibility:
Number awarded:
Rice can nominate: 
Recent Winners:

 

Early February (Office of Academic Advising)
1 year.
1) those of any ethnic background intending to
pursue careers in environmental public policy OR
2) Native Americans intending to pursue careers in
health care or tribal public policy
$5,000
Sophomores and Juniors only
55 nationally
Six annually
1998: Michael Ford
          Chris Johnson
1996: Maryana Iskander
Deadline: 
Tenure: 
Restricted fields: 

Value of award: 
Eligibility:
Number awarded:
Rice can nominate: 
Recent Winners:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

End of September (Office of Academic Advising)
1 year abroad.
None (but national committee would like to see more
business-related proposals).
$15,000 ($21,000 if married & accompanied by spouse).
Applicant must be in final year of first bachelor's degree.
60 nationally, from 48 colleges and universities.
Four annually.
Rice has averaged 2 per year for a number of years, although Rice
received 4 for 1999.
1999: Chris Johnson (New Zealand, Thailand, Ecuador, Canada)
          Elizabeth Gabriel (Spain)
          John Germany (Latin America)
          Katherine Solon (Scandinavia)
1998: Michelle Tran
          Jennifer Brown
1997: Emily Duval
          Nicole Gerardo
1993: Kelly Barnes
1992: Michael Noer
1991: Alice J. Chen
          Jennifer Sanders
1989: Linda Y. Park
          Kevin C. MacDonald
1988: Juliet E. Cox
         Christine E. Bruckner
1987: Scott Snyder
         Alice M. Levisay
1986: Vincent W. Uher
          Jon D. Hanson
1985: Duaine W. Pryor
          Jason Binford
1984: Harry H. Wade
          Sam Hirsch
1982: Charles L. Venable
1981: Mario L. Mateo
1980: Mark C. Brice
1979: Elizabeth Heitman
1978: Susan C. Tresch Fienberg
          Daniel W. Cecil
1977: Beth L. Glasser
          Elaine M. Alphin
1976: Nabila Cronfel
1975: R. Donovan Sadler
          Lawrence A. Darby
1974: William C. Horwitz
          Robert F. Anderson
1973: Philip B. Uninsky
          M. Elizabeth Rader
1972: Katherine T. Kobayashi
          Jonathan H. Glazier
1971: Paul N. Hester
          Bruce A. Coats

 
Deadline: 
Tenure: 
Restricted fields: 
Value of award: 
Eligibility:

Rice can nominate: 
Recent Winners:
 

 

December 10
3 to 5 years
Engineering or science
Cost of tuition and fees and stipends of $18,000 for 12 months
Undergraduates in final year of study in engineering or science; students currently in first year of graduate study
Not applicable
1999: James Henry Henderson IV (Bioengineering)
1998: Brian Harms (Chemistry)
         Valerie Liu (Chemical Engineering)
         Alexander Penn (Chemical Engineering)

          Sources: This information is found on the Rice University and other web sites. Additional sources were used to
          confirm the information, including correspondence with the Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs and
          correspondence with award sponsors.
 

Footnote: The Administrative Information Management System (AIMS) is the student information system that runs on a Prime 5320 computer and is maintained by several enrollment services offices including the Office of Admissions, Office of the Registrar, and the Financial Aid Office.
 

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