For the sixth straight year, New Jersey Institute of Technology's undergraduate program for entrepreneurship ranks top 50 nationally, according to The Princeton Review and Entrepreneur magazine.

At No. 44, NJIT improved three places from last year. Also, its graduate program for entrepreneurship rose two places to No. 29, making it the only New Jersey school on the list. The grad ranking began last year, and NJIT is one of the few universities in the country whose undergraduate and graduate entrepreneurship programs are both ranked.

“Day in, day out, we help students turn knowledge into action,” said Oya Tukel, dean of NJIT’s Martin Tuchman School of Management (MTSM), a key hub for entrepreneurship at the university. “We help them recognize gaps in the business world and hatch business plans that address them. As a result, they’re primed to become productive members of society.”

The spokes in NJIT’s entrepreneurship wheel include:

In addition, NJIT is a partner in a Northeast hub of the National Science Foundation Innovation Corps, which helps researchers explore how to transition discoveries into benefits for society. The other partners include Princeton and Yale. Altogether, these spokes provide NJIT students with an entrepreneurship experience that includes peers, faculty and industry leaders.

The top 50 schools on the undergrad and grad lists emerged from a field of more than 300 universities and colleges that The Princeton Review and Entrepreneur considered.

They based their selections on a survey of entrepreneurship-related majors, minors, courses, competitions and centers. The survey also weighed outside-the-classroom mentorship and the companies that alumni have started in the last five years.

“We highly recommend the schools that made our lists for 2025,” said Rob Franek, editor in chief of The Princeton Review. “Their faculties are outstanding. Their programs have robust experiential components. Their students have access to extraordinary mentors as well as networking contacts that will serve them well into their careers.”