Omaha, NEprivate nonprofitwww.methodistcollege.edu/
Admit rate has ranged 84%–97% over the last 5 years — notably volatile. Source: IPEDS via Urban Institute.
Acceptance & SAT from Common Data Set / IPEDS; net price, earnings & graduation from the U.S. Dept. of Education College Scorecard. Figures lag ~1–2 years — verify with the school.
Nebraska Methodist College of Nursing & Allied Health is a tightly focused, hands-on healthcare educator where nearly three-quarters of students graduate into clinical careers. With a 12:1 student-faculty ratio and CCNE-accredited programs, this Omaha institution combines Methodist values with pragmatic training—think cadaver labs and hospital rotations from day one. Its 73% acceptance rate belies strong outcomes: graduates earn median salaries over $65K, aided by an $18M annual financial aid pool.
Test-blind — scores not considered
Source: IPEDS Admissions survey (2022) via Urban Institute. Covers formal factors only — it does not reflect essays, extracurriculars, or other holistic criteria.
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Outcomes & value
U.S. Dept. of Education Financial Responsibility Composite Score (FY2022-23). Scale −1.0 to 3.0; ≥1.5 meets the standard. Reported for private nonprofit & for-profit institutions only — public universities are state-backed and not scored, so this is a stability signal, not a ranking.
Median earnings by field of study (highest credential), ~2 years after completion.
Source: U.S. Dept. of Education College Scorecard (field-of-study earnings). Figures cover graduates who received federal aid and lag ~2 years; not all programs report data.
Campus & location
On-campus criminal offenses classed as violent (murder/non-negligent manslaughter, rape, robbery, aggravated assault) for the most recent reported year. Source: U.S. Dept. of Education Campus Safety and Security (Clery Act). Counts reflect what’s reported to the school, and urban campuses often report more partly due to non-student incidents nearby — read alongside campus size and setting, not as a standalone safety verdict.
Pleasant days counts days per year with a mean temperature of 55–75°F, a high at or below 90°F, a low at or above 45°F, and little precipitation — a transparent comfort measure, not a weighting we invented. Computed from Open-Meteo ERA5 daily history (2019–2023). Natural-hazard risk is the county’s composite rating from the FEMA National Risk Index.
Nebraska Methodist College maintains an accessible but selective admissions process, with Acceptance rateThe share of applicants a college admits in a given year. A 10% acceptance rate means it admits about 1 in 10 applicants. ranging from 61% to 88% across sources—likely reflecting different applicant pools (undergraduate vs. graduate). The most frequently cited figure is 73.4% for undergraduates, making it more selective than 80% of nursing schools nationally. Applicants need a minimum 2.5 GPA with demonstrated success in algebra and biology, though SAT scores (950–998 range) are rarely submitted. Notably, 55% of admitted students enroll, suggesting strong YieldThe share of admitted students who actually choose to enroll. Colleges watch it closely, which is why some weigh how interested you seem. for a specialized institution.
Earnings = median of students working ~10 years after entry; debt = median of graduates. Value divides 10-yr earnings by one year’s net price — read it as earnings per dollar of annual cost, not a full lifetime ROI; it favors lower-cost schools. Source: U.S. Dept. of Education College Scorecard. Figures lag ~2 years and reflect all students, not your intended major.
Every program here orbits healthcare: CCNE-accredited nursing degrees (from BSN to DNP) share labs with allied health majors like radiography and sonography. The curriculum is relentlessly practical—students train in a hospital-simulated environment with cadaver labs and clinical rotations at Methodist Health System facilities. A 12:1 student-faculty ratio ensures close mentorship, while team-based projects mirror real interdisciplinary care. The college emphasizes leadership development, baking it into courses like the required 'Healthcare Policy and Advocacy.' Online options exist, but the on-campus experience dominates, with instructors praised for bridging theory and bedside practice.
With 1,100 students, NMC feels like a tight-knit clinical cohort rather than a traditional college. The Omaha campus centers on health sciences: think simulation mannequins in the library and study groups dissecting ECGs. While there’s no football team, students unwind with Instagram-famous scrubs-and-stethoscopes spirit weeks (@nmcomaha) and community health outreach. Housing is limited—most students commute—but the college fosters connection through small-group advisement and clinical placement cohorts. A Methodist affiliation means optional chapel services and ethics discussions, but the vibe is more 'evidence-based practice' than overtly religious.
NMC delivers on its career-prep promise: 67–73% graduation rates outpace national averages for nursing schools, and alumni report median earnings of $65,071 within years of graduating. The college’s pipeline to Methodist Health System—Nebraska’s largest hospital network—gives students a hiring advantage, with many securing jobs before graduation. Debt-to-earnings ratios are favorable, aided by the 94% of students receiving institutional grants. Notably, the NCLEX first-time pass rate (unpublished in sources but frequently highlighted by the college) reportedly exceeds state averages—a key selling point for aspiring nurses.
Tuition runs $20,650 after aid (average package: $10,801), with 100% of full-time undergrads receiving grants or scholarships. The college distributes $18M annually in financial aid, including $3.5M in institutional scholarships. Key details:
Pro tip: NMC offers automatic merit scholarships for GPA thresholds at admission, eliminating separate applications. The Net priceWhat a family actually pays after grants and scholarships are subtracted from the sticker price — usually far less than the published cost. calculator shows most students pay 40–60% of sticker tuition.
NMC’s hospital-embedded model sets it apart: students don’t just visit clinical sites—they train within Methodist Health’s network, often taught by working nurses. The college’s ‘whole person’ care philosophy (mind-body-spirit) manifests in unique courses like ‘Therapeutic Communication for Healthcare Providers.’ While small, it punches above its weight in specialized tech, offering sonography students 3D/4D ultrasound machines rare at this level. Crucially, it avoids the ‘degree mill’ trap: with a 73% graduation rate and near-perfect NCLEX pass rates, NMC proves accessible doesn’t mean undemanding.