💾 Archived View for gmi.noulin.net › mobileNews › 693.gmi captured on 2023-06-16 at 21:23:38. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2023-01-29)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
2008-10-09 08:07:48
Universities in the USA and the UK continue to dominate an annual table ranking
the world's top higher education institutions.
Among the top 10 institutions in the Times Higher Education QS list, six are in
the USA and four are in the UK.
Harvard and Yale are in first and second places, with Cambridge and Oxford in
third and fourth.
The compilers of the list say technology-based universities are becoming more
important.
Caltech, MIT, ETH Zurich and Hong Kong University of Science and Technology all
improved their position in the table, which is based on views of academics,
citations in academic publications, opinions of employers and staff to student
ratios.
It is the fifth year that the list has been produced and the fifth year that
Harvard University has led the field.
Yale was in joint second place with Oxford and Cambridge last year but this
year has that spot alone.
Top universities
Harvard
Yale
Cambridge
Oxford
California Instit. of Technology
Imperial College London
University College London
University of Chicago
Massachusetts Instit. of Technology
Columbia University
Cambridge and Oxford slipped to third and fourth places respectively.
Imperial College London fell from fifth to sixth place, while University
College London, the last in the UK to make the top 10, rose from ninth to
seventh place.
Of the top 100 institutions 17 are from the UK, two fewer than in 2007,
compared with 37 US universities.
The editor of Times Higher Education, Ann Mroz, said: "UK universities are very
clearly among the world's best and have maintained good positions in the
rankings this year.
"But the fact that Cambridge and Oxford have slipped down the top 10 and that
US universities have cemented their dominance among the world's elite - at the
UK's expense - raises key questions about the future funding of the sector.
"Harvard alone has an endowment that is about the same size as the total annual
income for the whole of the UK university sector."
More than 6,300 academics and 2,300 employers took part in the surveys used to
compile the list. Academics are not allowed to vote for their own institutions.
New entrants in the top 200 include: Technion - Israel Institute of Technology,
Stony Brook University (USA), Indian Institute of Technology Delhi (IITD), VU
University Amsterdam (Netherlands), University of Lausanne (Switzerland),
Chulalongkorn University (Thailand), Universit t Frankfurt am Main (Germany),
Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IITB), Lomonosov Moscow State University
(Russia), Brandeis University (USA), Pohang University of Science and
Technology (South Korea), Technische Universit t Berlin (Germany), University
of Bern (Switzerland), Dalhousie University (Canada), University of Buenos
Aires (Argentina) and University of Athens (Greece).
Ben Sowter, from QS, says there is a "reasonably strong trend" of
technology-based institutions moving up the world rankings.
Thirteen of those in the top 100 were strong on technology, he said.
He said such institutions scored particularly well in the survey of employers.
"People with strong numerical and problem-solving skills seem to be appreciated
by employers."
Such institutions seemed to be becoming more important in many regions of the
world, he said.
China
The director general of the Russell Group of leading UK universities, Dr Wendy
Piatt, said it had reservations about the use and accuracy of "league tables"
but the group was pleased that its member universities were continuing to
perform well against major global competitors.
But she added: "We are very concerned about our ability to sustain this level
of success in the face of fierce global competition.
"The table reflects the growing strength of our major competitors -
particularly the US institutions - who benefit from much higher levels of
investment than UK universities.
"As a result of huge investment in higher education and science in recent
years, China already looks set to overtake the UK very soon in terms of total
research publications, and its universities have been steadily climbing up
international league tables," she said.
England's Higher Education Minister David Lammy said the table was further
evidence that its higher education system was world class.
"But we are not complacent. Excellence today is no guarantee of excellence in
10 - 15 years' time.
"There are plenty of countries both developed and emerging that will want to
challenge our position and that is why we are having a debate on the challenges
we will need to overcome to have a world class system into the future."
So by 2011 it was planned that funding would have increased by 30% in real
terms since 1997, to 11bn a year.