Colleges That Change Lives
Colleges That Change Lives began as a college educational guide first published by Loren Pope in 1996, that went through three editions prior to his death in 2008. The fourth and final edition, revised by Hilary Masell Oswald, was released in 2012.
The current non-profit, 501(c)(3), Colleges That Change Lives which was founded in 1998, is based on Pope's books.
Background
CTCL: The book
Colleges That Change Lives is a guide to colleges. It was first published in 1996, with a second edition in 2000, and a third edition in 2006. The final fourth edition was published in 2012 after Pope's death, and was revised by Hilary Masell Oswald. A non-profit organization modeled after the book now carries the name.The fourth edition profiles 40 choices for liberal arts colleges that, "have one primary mission: educate the undergraduate. Each appeals to a slightly different type of teenager, but they all share a mission to raise students' trajectories and develop thinkers, leaders, and moral citizens. The little-known truth is that these colleges have been on the cutting edge of higher education for decades. Many of them have outperformed most of the ranking sweethearts in the percentages of graduates who become America's scientists and scholars."
CTCL: The non-profit
Following Loren Pope's vision, Colleges That Change Lives, Inc. was founded in 1998, two years after the first edition, and "independent of Mr. Pope and his publisher." It is recognized as a non-profit, 501(c)(3). According to the CTCL website:CTCL was established to "as a way to keep Loren Pope's message alive." It is governed by a voluntary board of college counseling professionals. After the publication of the book, the colleges "began working together as a group of like-minded schools." A few years later, the non-profit was founded with Pope's approval. Then in 2012, Pope's family "hired Hilary Masell Oswald to revise the book again. She identified four more schools, and the organization invited them to join CTCL."
List of schools in the 2013-2014 edition
Northeast- Allegheny College — Meadville, Pennsylvania
- Clark University — Worcester, Massachusetts
- Juniata College — Huntingdon, Pennsylvania
- Marlboro College — Marlboro, Vermont
- Ursinus College — Collegeville, Pennsylvania
- Emory and Henry University — Emory, Virginia
- Goucher College — Towson, Maryland
- University of Lynchburg — Lynchburg, Virginia
- McDaniel College — Westminster, Maryland
- St. John's College — Annapolis, Maryland
- Agnes Scott College — Decatur, Georgia
- Birmingham-Southern College — Birmingham, Alabama
- Centre College — Danville, Kentucky
- Eckerd College — St. Petersburg, Florida
- Guilford College — Greensboro, North Carolina
- Hendrix College — Conway, Arkansas
- Millsaps College — Jackson, MississippiNew College of Florida — Sarasota, Florida
- Rhodes College — Memphis, Tennessee
- Beloit College — Beloit, Wisconsin
- Cornell College — Mount Vernon, Iowa
- Denison University — Granville, Ohio
- Earlham College — Richmond, Indiana
- Hillsdale College — Hillsdale, Michigan
- Hiram College — Hiram, Ohio
- Hope College — Holland, Michigan
- Kalamazoo College — Kalamazoo, Michigan
- Knox College — Galesburg, Illinois
- Lawrence University — Appleton, Wisconsin
- Ohio Wesleyan University — Delaware, Ohio
- St. Olaf College — Northfield, Minnesota
- Wabash College — Crawfordsville, Indiana
- Wheaton College — Wheaton, Illinois
- The College of Wooster — Wooster, Ohio
- Austin College — Sherman, Texas
- St. John's College — Santa Fe, New Mexico
- Southwestern University — Georgetown, Texas
- University of Puget Sound — Tacoma, Washington
- Reed College — Portland, Oregon
- Saint Mary's College of California — Moraga, California
- Whitman College — Walla Walla, Washington
- Willamette University — Salem, Oregon
Current list of CTCL schools
The current CTCL list contains all of the colleges and universities above, except for Marlboro College, which closed in 2020, Birmingham–Southern College, which closed in 2024, and New College of Florida. It also places both branches of St. John's College under one listing. In addition, it restored a few schools that were included in earlier editions of the book: The Evergreen State College, Hampshire College, and Antioch College, which were all included in the 1996, 2000, and 2006 editions, and Bard College, which was in the 1996 edition. In 2024, CTCL added two colleges that were not a part of the original books, DePauw University and Oberlin College and Conservatory.Northwest
Northeast
Midwest