<p>Are there any ivies or other top schools that have good anthro/archae programs?</p>
<p>University of Chicago has one of the best.</p>
<p>There are many excellent archaeology programs. Each of them has different strengths, but here’s how I would rank them:</p>
<p>Liberal Arts Colleges
- Bryn Mawr College
Haverford College - Oberlin College
- Beloit College
- Dickinson College
- Lycoming College
- Willamette University
- Franklin & Marshall College
- Hamilton College
- Washington & Lee University</p>
<p>Private Universities
- University of Pennsylvania
- Harvard University
- University of Chicago
- Boston University
- Stanford University
Washington University in St. Louis - New York University
- Cornell University
- Yale University
- Columbia University</p>
<p>Public Universities
- University of California-Los Angeles
- University of Arizona
- University of California-Berkeley
- Arizona State University
University of Michigan - University of Texas
- University of Florida
- University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
- Pennsylvania State University
- University of California-Santa Barbara
University of Pittsburgh</p>
<p>In your home state, U Oregon and Portland State have decent archaeology programs and might be good safeties. The best programs in archaeology in the Pacific Northwest are U Washington, Simon Fraser, and U British Columbia.</p>
<p>The best ** specialized ** anthropology/archaeology programs in the English-speaking world are found in the UK, namely at Oxford and Cambridge.</p>
<p>Are any of these better for phsyical anthropology or bioarchaeology?</p>
<p>I don’t think you can rank anthro for undergrad so easily warblers. That list seems totally off to me.</p>
<p>
I was ranking archaeology, not anthropology. I would never attempt to rank the latter, partially because so few schools are strong in all subject areas – you have Emory and Duke specializing in cultural and biological anthropology, Chicago specializing in archaeology and cultural anthropology, Stony Brook focusing on archaeology and biological anthropology, USC specializing in cultural and visual anthropology, etc. </p>
<p>As for archaeology, I think it is one of the few fields in which it is actually possible to rank colleges in terms of faculty quality and resources available, simply because so few schools are noticeably strong in the subject. Sure, some schools like Wooster and Vanderbilt may send a student to graduate school in archaeology every so often, and some schools are great in a specific area, like Johns Hopkins for Middle Eastern archaeology, Texas A&M for nautical archaeology, and SMU for southwestern archaeology. If, however, you want a wide range of archaeologists on faculty, large archaeological collections, well-equipped archaeology labs, and a wide range of courses that include not just the easily taught survey courses (“Greek Art and Archaeology,” “Mayan Civilization”) but also method courses (lithic analysis, ceramic analysis, faunal and floral analysis, molecular spectroscopy, etc.), then there are very, very few good options available. </p>
<p>I had very specific reasons for ranking the schools the way I did, and I focused on overall offerings – my lists would look rather different if the OP were only interested in, say, Chinese or Egyptian archaeology. I won’t go into it here, but I’d be happy to discuss it via PM.</p>