Rabbinical Seminary Mkor Chaim

4-years Private College In Lakewood, NJ

Rabbinical Seminary Mkor Chaim (referred to as Rabbinical Seminary Mkor Chaim) is a Private (not-for-profit), 4 or more years school located in Lakewood, NJ. and its highest level of offering is Bachelor's degree. The 2023 tuition & fees at Rabbinical Seminary Mkor Chaim is $8,450. The school has a total enrollment of 72 and student to faculty ratio is 8.33% (12 to 1).The highest degree offered at Rabbinical Seminary Mkor Chaim is Bachelor's degree. It offers degrees and programs.
2023 Key Facts
Tuition & Fees$8,450 (2023)
Acceptance Rate100.00%
Student Population72
Student to Faculty Ratio12 to 1
2021-2022 Tuition & Fees
The undergraduate tuition & fees at Rabbinical Seminary Mkor Chaim is $8,450 for academic year 2021-2022. Rabbinical Seminary Mkor Chaim offers the alternative tuition plans. 98 students have received grants and/or scholarships and the average amount of received financial aid is $11,182 (exclude student loans).
Admission, Enrollment, and Graduation
The acceptance rate at Rabbinical Seminary Mkor Chaim is 100.00% and the admission yield (also known as enrollment rate) is 96.43%. Total 72 students are attending at Rabbinical Seminary Mkor Chaim. The students to faculty ratio is 12 to 1 (8.33%).
Special Learning Opportunities & On-Campus Services
On Rabbinical Seminary Mkor Chaim campus, academic/career services are provided for their students.
Special Learning Opportunities & On-campus Services at Rabbinical Seminary Mkor Chaim
Distance Learning (Online Classes)Not Offered
Special learning OpportunitiesNo Special Learning Available or Reported
On-Campus Student Services
  • Academic/career services
Rabbinical Seminary Mkor Chaim Mission Statement
RABBINICAL SEMINARY M'KOR CHAIM seeks to train students in the skills required for understanding, studying and mastering the Talmud and the considerable body of traditional Jewish thought. At the same time we are committed to the understanding that knowledge is a means to a larger end. We seek therefore to help students build a world outlook drawn from the ethical and moral concepts of Judaism. If scholarship is to have a significant value it must orient its students to a way of life that, by its own definition, is good and moral.