Campus safety - College Admission Counseling https://greatcollegeadvice.com Great College Advice Fri, 15 Aug 2025 10:34:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/758df36141c47d1f8f375b9cc39a9095.png Campus safety - College Admission Counseling https://greatcollegeadvice.com 32 32 Campus Safety Questions https://greatcollegeadvice.com/questions-to-ask-about-campus-safety/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=questions-to-ask-about-campus-safety Mon, 07 Jul 2025 11:52:58 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=169 Parents will have questions about campus safety when building a college list. Here is where to find the most up-to-date and relevant information.

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Where Can I Get Statistics on Campus Safety? 

The Clery Act requires colleges and universities to disseminate a public annual security report that must include statistics of campus crime for the preceding three calendar years, plus details about efforts taken to improve campus safety.  

The best tool for finding the most recent data on individual school campus safety is from the Department of Education. Its Campus Safety and Security Data Analysis Cutting Tool is put together by the Office of Postsecondary Education. When searching for an individual college, you’ll be presented with three years of data reported by the college, broken down into different kinds of crimes and where they took place (on campus generally, or in the campus residences). As you’ll see, liquor law violations tend to dominate the list for any college. But, note that rape, burglary, stalking and other very serious offenses are also reported separately. 

You can also compare up to four colleges at the same time. Here’s 2023 data comparing some well-known Boston-area universities: Northeastern, Boston University, Harvard, and MIT. 

Selected Criminal Offenses and Disciplinary Actions 

2023 (Most Recent Data)  Northeastern  Boston University  Harvard  MIT 
Liquor Law Violations  388  282  0  47 
Rape  8  6  17  6 
Robbery  3  10  28  0 
Aggravated Assault  5  20  59  6 
Burglary  9  9  31  5 

 Source: US Department of Education Campus Safety and Security Data Analysis Cutting Tool. 

Individual college data can also be found on the “College Navigator” website of the National Center for Education Statistics by typing in the college name and scrolling down to the “Campus Security and Safety” tab. However, I have found this data to not be updated as frequently and you’re unable to do a side-by-side college comparison. 

Individual College Data is Only as Good as the Method of Reporting

One criticism of this reported crime data is that reporting is inconsistent from one college to the next. While the government provides guidelines and universities are expected to follow those guidelines. Reasonable people may question the accuracy of the data from school to school and from year to year. Some colleges may seem to have very high rates of theft and burglary, for example. But the location of the school (in a city, in a rural town) may help to explain those differences rather than the laxity of the campus police. 

Similarly, some colleges seem to have higher incidences of sex-related crimes. Those universities with higher rates of sex crimes sometimes claim that they are actually better at encouraging victims of such crimes to come forward than may be the case on other campuses. It’s hard to tell, sometimes, what the statistics really tell us about campus safety. And it can still be difficult to compare one campus against another. 

Nonetheless, the statistics are helpful to families as they investigate campus safety as they are building their college lists. 

What Campus Safety Questions Can I Ask? 

It’s perfectly okay to ask about campus safety while on a college tour. The admissions staff is generally well-positioned to answer your inquiries on this topic. They should be able to refer you to statistics and other information and may invite you to visit the office of the campus police if you have concerns you’d like addressed. You can also try to talk to local residents about their impressions of safety in the community. The local police department can be another source of information (crimes that do not take place on campus will not appear in the government statistics reported on College Navigator). 

However, it is less helpful to ask current students about the details of campus safety. You can certainly ask about their own experiences (do you feel comfortable walking around campus after dark, or do you feel safe in your campus residence?). They might be able to share their own impressions of how well the campus is able to provide information to students about safety issues. But students–including tour guides–are generally not fully aware of all safety systems, university policies, disciplinary procedures, or aggregate crime statistics. 

CRIME 

  • Does campus feel safe to you? 
  • Is the school monitored in real time, 24/7 by video cameras? Or is the video merely checked after there has been a problem? 
  • Are there emergency call boxes throughout campus? (More on these in a moment) 
  • Does the school offer a campus safety escort service? If so, is it staffed with officers or students or both? 
  • Does the campus police use a cell phone alert system to communicate imminent risks to students? 
  • Does the school use electronic-access card keys to monitor the entry and exit of campus buildings? 
  • Are there redundant forms of security, like cameras, call buttons and rotating patrols? 
  • Does the school offer self-defense classes? 
  • Do you feel safe walking alone across campus at night? If not, what do you do to get around campus at night? 

ALCOHOL AND DRUGS 

  • Is there a well-defined alcohol and drug policy? How vigorously is it enforced? 
  • Are residential staffers trained to spot abuse and offer help? 
  • Does the college inform you of arrests and hospitalizations related to drugs and alcohol? 
  • How many students are in fraternities and sororities? (They tend to drink more heavily.) 
  • How many students are involved in community service? (They tend to drink less.) 

FIRE 

  • Are there smoke and carbon monoxide detectors? 
  • Are there sprinklers and fire extinguishers? Are there two exits? Do the windows open? 
  • Are there regular fire drills? 
  • Does the furnace get annual maintenance, and is the electrical system up to date? 

Campus Safety and Blue Light Call Boxes 

Often when touring colleges you’ll see a network of call boxes or emergency buttons, often with blue lights on them. Campus tour guides may actually point them out while on the tour and mention how quickly campus police will arrive when one of those buttons is pushed. This is because this button will immediate connect the caller with emergency services – likely either campus security or local police. At USC, its blue phones connect callers with the school’s 24-hour Department of Public Safety. 

Campus Safety Questions and School Location 

One of the biggest differentiators in campus safety has nothing to do with the quality of policing or the complexity of campus policies. Rather, the location of the school can tell us a lot more about the relative safety of the campus than anything else. These days, most students seem to want to attend college in a city. But higher population density in urban areas is correlated with criminality (not to mention traffic accidents, which remain a significant risk on many campuses). 

On urban campuses, one is likely to find a high degree of security. For example, at the University of Pennsylvania or New York University, it is impossible for a casual visitor to visit any building without proper permissions and concomitant identification cards. However, on campuses located in small towns or rural areas away from major population centers, some campus buildings may be unlocked. 

So, if safety is a primary concern, you may want to consider the location of the campus itself. 

Campus Safety, Alcohol and Drug Use, and Walkability 

As a parent, I tend to worry about some of the simpler, more obvious risks that many students will experiment with while in college: alcohol, marijuana, and other drugs. Because young people are impaired while on these substances (their protestations to the contrary), it’s important to consider how easy it is to walk from place to place around campus while in this state. 

Big busy streets with speeding cars is a riskier environment than small, tree-lined lanes with slow-moving traffic. And the proximity of campus buildings to one another is better than a school where a car might be required to head to a bar or off-campus parties.  

Why Is Campus Safety Important in Choosing a College? 

Campus safety is an important consideration in selecting a college. You want to have an understanding of the relative risks involved in choosing a particular campus. And statistics give us an indication of what sorts of risks one might encounter. However, keep in mind that the statistics do not necessarily tell the whole story and that environmental and circumstantial factors (e.g., the location of the campus) may have a bigger impact on campus safety than school policies or the size of the campus police force. 

As you think about campus safety, you’ll have to trade off these considerations with other ones, including the quality of the academic programs, the availability of certain activities or amenities, and other preferences and priorities. 

Whatever campus you choose, it’s important to think carefully about the risks one might encounter while at university and to build awareness about how to minimize those risks for you as an individual student. Understanding the risks is the first step in reducing them for yourself. 

Feeling overwhelmed with the college admissions process?  

The team at Great College Advice has years of experience working with thousands of students as they navigate the college admissions process.  We can help you prepare, select, and apply to colleges to give you the best chance of being accepted to your top choices. Please contact us to schedule your no-cost, no-obligation meeting so we can learn more about you and discuss how we can help make the college admissions process more successful and less stressful. 

Editor’s Note: This post was originally published in June 2023 and has been updated for accuracy and comprehensiveness. 

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Admissions Consultant on Campus Security https://greatcollegeadvice.com/admissions-consultant-on-campus-security/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=admissions-consultant-on-campus-security Fri, 07 Oct 2016 14:27:13 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=15913 College expert Mark Montgomery advises students to think about the strictness of a campus's security when deciding whether to attend.

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Expert educational consultant Mark Montgomery encourages student searching for the perfect college to consider what kind of environment they want to study in: one with a strict security apparatus or one with a more laid-back atmosphere. He goes to Bowdoin College in rural Maine to illustrate the point.

So one thing that students, when they’re looking for a college, tend to forget is that there are different lifestyles to choose from when you’re looking at a campus. I was recently on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania and it was completely inaccessible to a stranger like me coming from the outside. Everything locked up, you had to swipe your card everywhere, often had to go through turnstiles and big gates just to get into building complexes. I’m here on the campus of Bowdoin right now, and I want to show you what the difference is like. We just walked in this building, there are not that many people around, but come here, follow me. Here’s a classroom, a tech classroom in a science building, and I can just walk right in. So follow me in here and you can see this is a lecture hall at Bowdoin. All the computer stuff is here ready for the taking. I can just walk into this kind of place.
So you really do need to think about what kind of environment you want to study in. Certainly, if you’re in Philadelphia at the University of Pennsylvania, downtown Philadelphia, the security systems are going to be much different and much more strict than a place like Brunswick, Maine at Bowdoin College. But it does make a difference. If you can walk into a classroom, is that the kind of place you want to be or do you like the fact that you’re in the urban press where security is just going to be a natural part of your daily life? So that is something that students tend to neglect when they’re thinking about which college to attend.

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Campus Safety https://greatcollegeadvice.com/campus-safety/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=campus-safety Mon, 28 Sep 2009 21:43:47 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=3052 Did you know that September is National Campus Safety Awareness Month?  Campus safety has always been a hot topic for prospective students and their parents, however it has recently gained more urgency due to the murder Yale graduate student, Annie Le.  All colleges and universities are required to report crime statistics under the Cleary Act […]

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Did you know that September is National Campus Safety Awareness Month?  Campus safety has always been a hot topic for prospective students and their parents, however it has recently gained more urgency due to the murder Yale graduate student, Annie Le.  All colleges and universities are required to report crime statistics under the Cleary Act and there are new proposed federal regulations that will update campus safety guidelines.  So, campus safety information is readily available to prospective applicants, however, it should not necessarily make or break your decision to apply to a certain college.  There are several factors to consider when thinking about campus safety.  First, think about the location of the school.  A more urban school is probably going to have more safety issues, so maybe you would be comfortable in a more rural setting.  Also, think about what you can do as a student to be safe once on campus to prevent crime from happening to you.  Security On Campus, Inc. offers a few tips on their website for prospective students and their parents, as well as information on crime statistics on campuses.  The Daily Beast also recently published a list of the 25 colleges with the worst crime rankings.  The list includes Ivy League schools such as Harvard, Yale and Brown.  Would you decide not to attend one of these schools just because they made this list?  I don’t think so.  Like everything else with the college admission process, it is important to think about the big picture and not focus on one ranking or statistic that a college may have.

Educational Consultant

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