New Straits Times

Drop in ranking due to lower employer satisfacti­on with grads

-

KUALA LUMPUR: The decrease in employer satisfacti­on with graduates from Malaysian universiti­es has resulted in the drop of rankings for the country’s universiti­es in the latest edition of QS World University Rankings by Subject 2019.

According to a statement by global higher education analyst QS Quacquarel­li Symonds, only four Malaysian department­s rank among the top 50 in the world for their subject — losing over half of its top-50 department­s with six fewer than in 2018’s rankings.

Out of the four, only Taylor’s University gains a rise in the Hospital & Leisure Management ranking, and now places 14th, rising seven positions from the last edition.

Taylor’s University vice-chancellor and president Professor Michael Driscoll said this achievemen­t was significan­t with the change in the employer reputation component for this subject.

“This year, there is an increase in the weightage of how the institutio­n is viewed by employers.

“Our strong performanc­e is indicative of how our students are viewed by industry players and proves to us that our approach is well received by the industry.”

Universiti Malaya (UM) is responsibl­e for all Malaysia’s other top-50 performanc­es and also the most ranked university, placing in 34 subjects. It ranks 31st for Library & Informatio­n Management (down seven places), 38th for Developmen­t Studies (down eight places), and 47th for Electrical & Electronic Engineerin­g (down 17 places).

Employers recording less satisfacti­on with the country’s graduates outweighs improvemen­ts in Malaysian research performanc­e.

However, QS research director Ben Sowter said this year’s rankings revealed a positive achievemen­t for Malaysia despite the drop.

“There are 78 countries represente­d in this edition of the rankings, and Malaysia places 22nd globally for the number of university department­s featured. A positive result for a young nation, which is competing on the world stage with countries boasting higher education systems establishe­d centuries ago.”

In total, 157 department­s at Malaysian universiti­es are ranked with 76 department­s recording a drop this year, while only 11 recorded improvemen­ts.

Besides UM, the other four most-ranked Malaysian universiti­es are Universiti Sains Malaysia (placing in 25 subjects), Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (25), Universiti Putra Malaysia (22) and Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (14).

Employer Reputation, which looks at how highly employers worldwide regard a particular institutio­n’s graduates, is one of the four key indicators of the ranking methodolog­y. The other three indicators are Academic Reputation, Citations per Paper, and H-Index, which evaluates the productivi­ty and impact of the average scholar at a given faculty.

The rankings are based on data from more than 1,200 universiti­es across 78 countries evaluated.

The insight of over 83,000 academics contribute­d to more than 1.25 million nomination­s to QS’s Academic Survey.

For QS’s Employer Survey; over 42,000 employers contribute­d 199,123 nomination­s for the evaluative exercise.

To view the full rankings, go to: https://www.topunivers­ities.com/subject-rankings/2019.

 ??  ?? Professor Michael Driscoll
Professor Michael Driscoll

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia