Pennsylvania community colleges

Yeshivath Beth Moshe

Scranton, PA · Private nonprofit two-year institution · official website

Key facts

Enrollment
34
In-state tuition
$10,600
Out-of-state tuition
$10,600
Annual cost of attendance
$20,400
Pell-grant share
54%
Retention
57%
150% completion
Transfer rate

About Yeshivath Beth Moshe

Yeshivath Beth Moshe is a private nonprofit community college located in Scranton, Pennsylvania. The institution is classified by the U.S. Department of Education as predominantly an associate-degree-granting two-year college, the federal definition that anchors this site's index of community colleges nationwide. Like other two-year colleges in Pennsylvania, it primarily serves local residents who are pursuing an occupational credential, an associate degree, or transfer-eligible general-education credit toward a bachelor's degree.

54% of undergraduates received a federal Pell Grant in the most recent reporting year — a useful proxy for the share of the student body from lower-income households. Median completer debt was not reported. Tuition and aid are reported here as published rates from the College Scorecard; the price you actually pay can be considerably lower once you file the FAFSA and your eligibility for federal, state, and institutional aid is calculated. For most community-college students, the realistic out-of-pocket cost after Pell and state grants is a small fraction of the published tuition.

Outcomes

Yeshivath Beth Moshe did not report a transfer rate to the College Scorecard in the most recent reporting cycle. Ask the admissions office directly for the share of full-time first-time entrants who continued at a four-year institution. Completion data was not reported for the latest cycle. Post-enrollment earnings were not reported.

Is Yeshivath Beth Moshe the right fit?

Use the lists in the sidebar to compare against neighboring community colleges in Pennsylvania on the metrics that matter for your situation. Students aiming to transfer should weigh transfer rate, completion rate, and the strength of articulation agreements with the four-year institutions they plan to apply to. Students pursuing a terminal credential should weigh program availability and the local employment market for that field, using the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Occupational Outlook Handbook as a national reference and the state workforce agency for Pennsylvania for regional wages and openings.

The data on this page is sourced from the U.S. Department of Education's College Scorecard, which is updated annually from IPEDS reporting and federal financial-aid records. DegreeMapper reformats and cross-links that data; we do not collect it ourselves and we are not affiliated with Yeshivath Beth Moshe or with any government agency.