The Florida State University-headquartered National High Magnetic Field Laboratory and the Tallahassee-based MagCorp have inked a five-year agreement to share resources and intellectual property rights in an effort to strengthen relationships between the university and private industry.
“This agreement is a wonderful opportunity for the experts at our National High Magnetic Field Laboratory to apply their skills to industry problems, while also helping promote economic development in our community,” Provost Sally McRorie said.
MagCorp was founded by a trio of current and former MagLab and FSU employees to leverage the unique capability of the MagLab to meet the demands of private industry. The company helps its clients tackle the risks associated with developing magnetic technology by breaking down larger ideas into smaller projects. As part of its agreement with FSU, MagCorp will work with MagLab experts to provide solutions for magnetically enabled technologies across many business sectors including medical technology, textiles, manufacturing, consumer products, and defense.
Any new technologies or techniques developed as a result of these projects would be patented and the intellectual property would be split among Florida State University, MagCorp and the client.
“The MagLab was created to solve the big scientific questions of tomorrow,” said Abby Queale, CEO of MagCorp. “MagCorp is putting the experts at this world-class facility to work on the problems industry faces right now. Our company is a huge advocate of the research being conducted by the MagLab and Florida State University. We see ourselves as a conduit for industry to access that expertise under this new model for technology development partnerships.”
The only facility of its kind in the United States, the National MagLab is the largest and highest-powered magnet laboratory in the world. The lab is a partnership among Florida State University, the University of Florida and Los Alamos National Laboratory and receives funding from the National Science Foundation and State of Florida.
MagLab scientists undertake a variety of complex research endeavors probing fundamental questions about materials, energy and life. The lab’s seven facilities offer a variety of tools and techniques for exploring physics, chemistry, biology and engineering in an interdisciplinary, collaborative environment. In addition to the scientists who work at the lab year-round, scientists from around the world reserve time on the lab’s record-breaking magnets to conduct their research.
MagLab Director Gregory Boebinger said the new agreement with MagCorp creates an expert-driven and proactive method for developing industrial relationships.
“The creation of MagCorp opens the door to new and dynamic industrial partnerships for the MagLab that are driven by applied science questions, while allowing the lab to stay focused on our core foundational research-driven user program,” said Gregory Boebinger, director of the MagLab.
The five-year partnership runs through 2025. Twenty-four experts and technicians, including 14 faculty members, have already begun working on projects related to a variety of areas such as sensors, orthopedics and textiles.
“We are very proud of the world-class faculty at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory and are hopeful that through this agreement, we will be able to provide even more opportunities for them while also supporting the economic development of the Tallahassee area,” said Interim Vice President for Research Laurel Fulkerson.
Florida State University retained its place in the Top 20 among national public universities in the latest U.S. News & World Report rankings, while improving in several key measures considered in the publication’s methodology.
FSU is No. 19 on the list, marking the second consecutive year that the university placed in the Top 20. The rankings appear in U.S. News & World Report’s “Best Colleges 2021” guidebook.
“Our continued recognition as one of the nation’s Top 20 public universitiesis a reflection of Florida State’s commitment to academic excellence and student success,” said President John Thrasher. “This is the result of hard work by our students, faculty and staff and support from the Florida Legislature and the Florida Board of Governors, who have been staunch champions of our goals and aspirations.”
The university improved on 11 of 15key factors used to compile the ranking score. Once again, the metrics shined a spotlight on Florida State’s continued emphasis on student success.
Florida State matched last year’s 6-year graduation rate of 83 percent, outperforming its predicted 6-year graduation rate by 13 percentage points. The university ranked No. 12 among public universities when comparing the actual graduation rate against the predicted rate, which U.S. News calculates based on the university’s resources and student profile.
In addition, Florida State moved up to No. 15 among public universities for the graduation rate of students who receive a Pell Grant, a measure that drives the methodology’s social mobility factor. The university improved by two points in the metric, posting an 81 percent graduation rate among Pell Grant recipients.
FSU rose nine spots up to No. 13 in the class size metric. More than 60 percent of FSU’s classes have fewer than 20 students, an improvement of more than 4 percent over last year.
“We continue to make investments to ensureour students have a world-class learning experience, and reducing class sizes helps our students have engaging, active classroom experiences,” McRorie said. “It also makes it more likely that a faculty member may recognize a student’s special talent and encourage that student. Long–term research shows that mentoring is the single–most important university factor that alumni attribute to their overall well–being, even 20years after graduation.”
FSU also improved 2.3 pointsin the percentage of faculty with a terminal degree in their field. The university now ranks No. 18 among public universities in this category at 94.9 percent.
“We are incredibly grateful for our outstanding faculty, whose commitment to excellence has helped to propel the university to these historic highs,” McRorie said.
This year, U.S. News changed its methodology, adding the new category of graduate indebtedness. While FSU performed well in this measure, the new calculation devalued another metric that the university excels in — undergraduate alumni giving.FSU increased two places to No. 5 in the nation in undergraduate alumni giving.
FSU now shares the No. 19 spot with three other public universities —the University of Maryland atCollege Park, the University of Pittsburgh and the University of Washington.
Also included in this year’s U.S. News report were undergraduate business and engineering program rankings, which were based solely on peer assessments.
“We are extremely proud to be among the best business schools in the nation,” said Michael Hartline, dean of the College of Business. “We are determined to continue our journey of preeminence by focusing on our highly recognizable points of distinction: outstanding faculty, rigorous programs and unparalleled student success.”
The FAMU-FSU College of Engineering vaulted 37 spots to No. 40 among public universities and 51 places to No. 69 among all national universities.
“We are delighted that the quality and impact of our engineering education is increasingly recognized in these rankings,” said J. Murray Gibson, dean of the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering. “I’m also proud that our student body, combined from two major universities, is uniquely diverse and is changing the face of engineering for future generations.”
Among all national universities, including private universities, FSU ranked 58th in the overall rankings. Syracuse University, a private institution, joined FSU, Maryland, Pitt and Washington at No. 58. The national universities category comprises 385 institutions (208 public, 175 private and 2 proprietary) that offer a wide range of undergraduate majors as well as master’s and doctoral degrees.
U.S. News & World Report determines its national university rankings based on these factors: graduation and retention rates (22 percent); undergraduate academic reputation, i.e. peer assessment (20 percent); faculty resources (20 percent); financial resources (10 percent);graduation rate performance (8 percent); student selectivity (7 percent); social mobility (5 percent); graduate indebtedness (5 percent); and alumni giving (3 percent).
The College of Communication and Information’s online graduate program in information technology jumped to No. 5 nationally and No. 2 among public universities. The Master of Science in Information Technology degree offered by the college’s School of Information is also ranked No. 3 for veterans.
“It is great to see this tangible recognition of the hard work of our faculty and staff for building an outstanding master’s in IT program,” said Larry Dennis, dean of the College of Communication and Information. “FSU’s program is one of the highest quality, most affordable IT master’s programs in the nation and is a tremendous asset for Florida residents.”
FSU’s online master’s degree in criminal justice retained its respective spots at No. 8 nationally and at No. 6 among public universities. For veterans, the online program checked in at No. 5. The College of Criminology and Criminal Justice’s online graduate program combines a first-rate faculty with the flexibility of the distance-learning environment.
“The college’s continued appearance among top-ranked graduate programs is an honor to our outstanding faculty,” said Thomas Blomberg, dean and Sheldon L. Messinger Professor of Criminology. “Their dedication to the success of our diverse student population as well as their high-quality scholarship shows their ongoing commitment to our intellectual community and the field of criminology.”
The College of Business’ online graduate programs in both management information systems and risk management and insurance took the No. 13 spot nationally and placed No. 9 among public institutions. The college’s online MBA program was listed at No. 40 overall and No. 27 among publics. The online MBA program ranked No. 23 overall for veterans.
“Our consistently high rankings among public universities are directly linked to our stellar faculty and staff,” said Michael Hartline, dean of the College of Business. “Despite the challenges of the pandemic, we’ve experienced accelerated enrollment growth, and our college continues to deliver individual attention and instruction that resonates with working professionals determined to navigate new industry demands.”
The college’s online MBA program also offers individual specialties that are ranked among the top in the nation. These specialty areas include business analytics (No. 16 overall and No. 11 among publics) and marketing (No. 14 overall and No. 8 among publics).
The College of Education’s online graduate program retained a No. 15 ranking and checked in at No. 14 among public universities. The college offers online programs in athletic coaching, curriculum and instruction, educational leadership and policy, educational psychology, instructional systems and learning technologies and school counseling. The college also secured the No. 7 spot for Best Online Master’s Education Programs for Veterans.
“We’re proud of our sustained position as one of the top online graduate programs in the country,” said Damon Andrew, dean of the College of Education. “Despite numerous challenges presented by COVID-19, the college came together and accomplished amazing things this past year. This perseverance in the face of difficulties speaks to our commitment to be student-focused and innovation driven no matter the circumstances.”
The college’s individual graduate specialty programs are ranked among the most-respected in the nation. These areas include educational/instructional media design (No. 1 overall and public), curriculum & instruction (No. 4 overall and public), educational administration and supervision (No. 7 overall and public) and special education (No. 7 overall and public).
The latest @usnews rankings named the #FSUCOE #14 among public colleges (#15 overall)! We also ranked:
#1 for Educational Media/Instructional Design #4 for Curriculum and Instruction #7 for Special Education #7 for Educational Leadership #7 for veterans pic.twitter.com/qqDQKhdnj8
Expected due to the pandemic, other variables, but FSU’s athletic department posted a $26 million deficit in 2020, according to its annual NCAA Membership Financial Report.
The department posted an operating revenues of $129,481,351 and total operating expenses of $155,656,855.
We broke a team’s online presence into 4 categories:
Dedicated Websites: Sites dedicated specifically to a school’s team. This includes fan blogs, but only those dedicated specifically to that specific team. Social Media. There are a million social media platforms out there, but we stuck with the big 3: Facebook, Reddit, and Twitter. Message Boards: Again, only those specifically dedicated to a specific team. Search engine searches: We used Google, Bing, Yahoo, and Duckduckgo.
We put together a scoring system, giving each FBS team a score in each of those four categories, looking at subs, fans, traffic.. basically every number we could find. (We stuck with BCS, but there are a number of non BCS schools that have huge followings; by our score, North Dakota State and James Madison, for example, would have cracked the BCS top 50 ) Divided the total by 4, and used that score to compile our list.
Some things came as no surprise. Ask any football fan who they think would end up on top of a list like this, most will no doubt mention Ohio State, ‘Bama, and Clemson. And they would be right. But there were also some that surprised us. Who knew that BYU and Rutgers have huge online followings? Some teams known to have amazing fan bases ranked surprisingly low; it turns out some of them have huge support at home, but not much across the country.
Is this scientific? Maybe a little. But it was a blast for us to do, and it does make a great discussion. So below, you will find all 130 FBS schools, in order.