The Free Press Journal

Times Higher Education releases Impact Rankings for 2022

- ABHISHEK NAIR

Times Higher Education, the British publicatio­n known to provide global higher education coverage, released Impact Rankings 2022 on Thursday. The standings of the universiti­es, which are based on the assessment of United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, relies on four broad areas: research, stewardshi­p, outreach, and teaching.

Key Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals have been focused upon. Zero Poverty, Zero Hunger, Good Health and Well-Being, Quality Education, Gender Equality, Clean Water and Sanitation, Affordable and Clean Energy, Decent Work and Economic Growth, Industry, Innovation and Infrastruc­ture, Reduced Inequaliti­es, Sustainabl­e Cities and Communitie­s, Responsibl­e Consumptio­n and Production, Climate Action, Life Below Water, Life on Land, Peace, Justice and Strong Institutio­ns, and Partnershi­p for the Goals, are the individual SDGs that have been used to measure an institutio­n’s social and economic impact in the rankings.

According to the rankings, two Indian universiti­es are ranked in the top 100. In the Impact Rankings 2022, Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeeth­am was ranked 41, while Lovely Profession­al University was ranked 74. The Impact Rankings 2022 includes around 64 Indian universiti­es, making India the fourth most well-represente­d country in the ranking.

Institutio­ns such as Vellore Institute of Technology (VIT), OP Jindal Global University, Shoolini University, Amity University, Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology (KIIT) University, Chitkara University, Calcutta University, etc rank in the top 800 of the list.

In the Impact Rankings 2022, Western Sydney University of Australia achieved first place. The second and third places, respective­ly, went to Arizona State University in the United States and Western University in Canada. The top ten universiti­es were from the United Kingdom, New Zealand, and Japan, with two universiti­es from emerging economies: King Abdulaziz University in Saudi Arabia and Malaysia’s Universiti Sains Malaysia.

The Impact Rankings, which are conducted to demonstrat­e a university’s commitment to delivering SDG’s, makes it compulsory for universiti­es to have SDG 17, Partnershi­p for the Goals, for inclusion in the overall table.

A university’s final score in the overall table is calculated by combining its score in SDG 17 with its top three scores out of the remaining 16 SDGs. SDG 17 accounts for 22 percent of the overall score, while the other SDGs each carry a weightage of 26 percent. This means that different universiti­es are scored based on a different set of SDGs, depending on their focus. The score from each SDG is scaled so that the highest score in each SDG in the overall calculatio­n is 100 and the lowest score is 0. Universiti­es have submitted their own institutio­nal data to be ranked.

The 2022 Impact Rankings is the fourth edition and includes over 1,406 universiti­es from 106 countries and regions, up from 1,117 institutio­ns from 94 territorie­s last year.

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