Undergraduate admissions In fall 2021, Alabama received 42,421 applications for first-time freshman enrollment, from which 33,472 applications were accepted (78.9%) and 7,593 freshmen enrolled, a
yield rate (the percentage of accepted students who choose to attend the university) of 22.7%. Alabama's freshman
retention rate is 88.6%, with 72.1% going on to graduate within six years.
Classification The University of Alabama is
classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity". It is a large, four-year primarily residential university accredited by the
Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. Full-time, four-year undergraduates comprise a large amount of the university enrollment. The undergraduate instructional program emphasizes professional programs of study as well as the liberal arts, and there is a high level of co-existence between the graduate and undergraduate program. The university has a very high level of research activity and has a "comprehensive doctoral" graduate instructional program in the liberal arts, humanities, social sciences. health sciences (medical school), and
STEM fields. UA began offering engineering classes in 1837. It was one of the first universities in the nation to offer an engineering degree. Over the past decade, UA has greatly expanded its science and engineering programs, in terms of numbers of students, faculty hired, and number and size of new academic/research facilities (almost one million in new square footage). UA's College of Engineering enrolls more students than any other engineering program in the state as of 2016. UA's freshman engineering classes have also had the highest average ACT score among all state of Alabama engineering programs for the last several years.
Degrees conferred Ten of the university's twelve academic units (see above) offer degree programs across a combined total of 117 areas of study. Two areas, economics and health care management, are offered jointly by separate units (
Culverhouse College of Business and Arts & Sciences for both), and one area (material science) is offered jointly by the other universities in the UA system. UA conferred 9,105 degrees in the 2023–24 academic year, including 6,604 bachelor's degrees (3,579 with
Latin honors), 1,192 master's degrees, 300 doctorates, 56 education specialist, and 153 professional degrees.
Latin honors are conferred on graduates completing a bachelor's degree for the first time (including at other universities) with an overall grade point average of at least 3.5.
Cum laude honors are conferred to graduates with a GPA of 3.5 or greater and less than 3.7 (without rounding).
Magna cum laude honors are conferred with a GPA of 3.7 or greater and less than 3.9.
Summa cum laude honors are conferred with a GPA of 3.9 or higher.
Rankings In the 2023
U.S. News & World Report rankings, UA was tied for 170th in the
National Universities category (tied for 91st among "Top Public Schools"). Additionally, in the 2023
U.S. News rankings, the
law school was tied for 35th in the nation, the
business school was tied for 55th, the education school tied for 56th, and the engineering school was tied for 99th. In August 2020, the UA Department of Advertising and Public Relations was named the Most Outstanding Education Program by
PRWeek during the 2020 PRWeek Awards. It was the department's ninth recognition as a finalist for the award and first selection as the top program. As of 2021
The Princeton Review ranked University of Alabama first in the nation as a
party school and first for having lots of
Greek life. The university was also ranked the eighth-most
LGBT unfriendly school in the nation.
Libraries The University of Alabama has 2.9 million document volumes, along with nearly 100,000 uncatalogued government documents in its collection; of these, 2.5 million volumes are held by the University Libraries. The University Libraries system has six separate libraries. The Amelia Gayle Gorgas Library, which sits on the
Main Quad, is the oldest and largest of the university libraries. Gorgas Library holds the university's collections in the humanities and social sciences, as well as the university's depository of U.S. government documents. The library opened in 1939. A seven-story addition was built on the north side of the library in the 1970s. The
Angelo Bruno Business Library, in the Business Quad, is named after the co-founder of the
Bruno's grocery chain who gave the university $4 million to create a library focusing on commerce and business studies. Opened in 1994, the , three-story facility holds more than 170,000 volumes. Bruno Library also houses the Sloan Y. Bashinsky Sr. Computer Center. The Eric and Sarah Rodgers Library for Science and Engineering, in the Science and Engineering Quad, is named after two popular, long-time professors of engineering and statistics, respectively. It opened in 1990, combining the Science Library collection in Lloyd Hall and the Engineering Library collection in the Mineral Industries Building (now known as H.M. Comer Hall). Rodgers Library was designed with help from IBM to incorporate the latest in
informatics. McLure Education Library was founded in 1954 in a remodeled student union annex (across the street from the old Student Union, now Reese Phifer Hall) and named in 1974 after John Rankin McLure, the longtime dean of the College of Education. The William Stanley Hoole Special Collections Library, which holds the university's collection of rare and historical documents and books, is in Mary Harmon Bryant Hall. The Library Annex holds seldom-used books and journals, as well as other volumes which need special protection, that would otherwise take up valuable space in the libraries. Other libraries on campus are independent of the University Libraries. The Bounds Law Library, at the Law Center, holds more than 300,000 volumes. Established in 1978, the Health Sciences Library, at the University Medical Center, serves students at the College of Community Health Sciences. Its 20,000-volume collection includes clinical medicine, family practice, primary care, medical education, consumer health, and related health care topics. Located in Farah Hall (home of the Department of Geography) the Map Library and Place Names Research Center holds over 270,000 maps and 75,000 aerial photographs. The William E. Winter Reading Room of the College of Communication and Information Sciences is in Reese Phifer Hall and holds more than 10,000 volumes. The School of Social Work Reading Room in Little Hall contains around 200 volumes. UA is one of the 126 members of the
Association of Research Libraries, which yearly compiles internal rankings. In 2011, the University of Alabama ranked 56th among all criteria, a marked improvement over a 2003 ranking of 97th. In the fall of 2011, the University of Alabama Trustees approved a resolution to expand Gorgas Library by , doubling the seating capacity from 1,139 to 2,278.
Research In academic year 2014–2015, UA received $76 million in research contracts and grants. The
Alabama International Trade Center and the
Center for Advanced Public Safety are two research centers at UA. The
US Department of Homeland Security has selected The University of Alabama as a National Center of Academic Excellence (CAE) in Information Assurance Education and Research. ==Student life==