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The Ohio University system dominates affordable Slavic, Baltic and Albanian Languages education in Ohio, claiming five of the six cheapest programs with net costs under $7,000. Ohio University-Eastern Campus leads at just $4,503 annually, while private options like Oberlin College cost $39,184 - nearly nine times more. This price gap reflects Ohio's commitment to accessible language education, particularly valuable given the state's growing international business connections through major employers like Honda and the Cleveland Clinic's global patient services. Regional campuses offer the same academic foundation as main campuses but with significantly lower overhead costs.
11
Programs
$4,503 – $39,184
Net Price Range
48.3%
Avg. Graduation Rate

11 Slavic, Baltic and Albanian Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics Programs

Program rankings
# School Net Price In-State Tuition Graduation Rate Acceptance Rate
1 $4,503 $6,178 20.0%
2 $5,328 $6,178 19.3%
3 $5,971 $6,178 17.7%
4 $6,133 $6,178 13.7%
5 $6,483 $6,178 12.1%
6 $18,292 $12,859 87.7% 52.7%
7 $19,614 $12,846 65.5% 88.0%
8 $20,413 $13,746 66.4% 86.5%
9 $20,918 $14,081 62.8% 78.7%
10 $29,383 $69,330 86.8% 34.3%
11 $39,184 $64,646 79.5% 34.9%

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes Ohio University's regional campuses so affordable for language studies?

Ohio University's five regional campuses offer net costs between $4,503 and $6,483, compared to $20,413 at the main Athens campus. These regional locations maintain lower operational costs while providing access to the same university system and degree programs.

How do graduation rates vary across different price points?

The most affordable programs show graduation rates between 12.1% and 20%, while mid-tier public universities like Kent State achieve 65.5%. The highest-cost private colleges reach 79.5% to 86.8% graduation rates, reflecting the correlation between investment and completion.

Is Ohio State University worth the higher cost for language studies?

Ohio State's $18,292 net cost delivers an 87.7% graduation rate, the highest among public options. With selective 52.72% acceptance rate, it offers research opportunities and resources that smaller regional campuses cannot match.

Where can students find the best value among Ohio's private colleges?

Kenyon College at $29,383 net cost provides better value than Oberlin's $39,184, offering an 86.8% graduation rate compared to Oberlin's 79.5%. Both maintain highly selective admission standards around 34% acceptance rates.

Net price reflects the average cost after grants and scholarships for first-time, full-time students. See our methodology for details.