Author: Dan Godlin

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Dan Godlin is the Founder & CEO of CollegeCommit, a NYC-based boutique college admissions consulting firm serving high-achieving students worldwide. Over the past 14 years, he has guided 600+ students to top universities, including Harvard, Stanford, MIT, Yale, Columbia, UPenn, UC Berkeley, UCLA, and USC. Dan holds a Bachelor’s degree with honors from NYU, where he studied psychology with a focus on emotional intelligence and human behavior, and now leads a team of senior strategists and mentors who provide highly personalized, data-driven admissions guidance.

The answer to how many colleges are in the United States of America depends on what a source counts. Most summaries put the total at roughly 5,300 to 6,000 institutions when they include a broad range of Title IV schools, while narrower counts of degree-granting institutions are lower, often around 3,900 to 4,000. Sources differ because some include community colleges, certificate-focused schools, branch campuses, and non-degree institutions, while others do not. That is why readers may see different totals even when the data comes from credible education sources. Key Takeaways How Many Colleges and Universities Are in the U.S.? A…

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Historically Black Colleges and Universities, often called HBCUs, are accredited colleges and universities created before 1964 with the original and continuing mission of educating Black Americans. They were founded because Black students were long excluded from much of U.S. higher education, and they still matter because they combine academic opportunity with a strong legacy of leadership, community, and access. Today, the federal definition centers on that pre-1964 mission, and recent national data counts 99 active HBCUs, most of them in the South

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The best courses in colleges are the ones that build useful skills across both academic and real-world settings. In most cases, that includes writing, personal finance, public speaking, computer science or coding, and classes that strengthen critical thinking, such as logic or ethics.

These subjects help students communicate clearly, solve problems, manage money, and adapt to different kinds of work. They also support success across majors because they teach skills that transfer beyond one department.

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