The Star Malaysia

UM breaks into top 50

Malaysia’s leading university ranked 46th in Asia by Times

- By CHRISTINA CHIN educate@thestar.com.my

PETALING JAYA: Two local universiti­es have done the country proud in the Times Higher Education (THE) Asia University Rankings 2018.

Universiti Malaya (UM) broke into the top 50 list, while Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman (UTAR) made it into the top 100.

For the first time in the table’s sixyear history, UM joined the top 50 after making its debut in the list last year, said THE global rankings editorial director Phil Baty.

According to the THE “top 350+” Asian universiti­es list published today, UM jumped 13 spots up from 59th to 46th position.

UTAR, which was in the 99th spot, ranked between 111 and 120 last year.

The 2018 ranking includes 359 universiti­es.

Universiti Teknologi Petronas, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Universiti Tenaga Nasional (UNITEN), Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia and Universiti Utara Malaysia also made the list (see graphics).

THE acting rankings editor Ellie Bothwell said UM improved in all five areas underpinni­ng the ranking – teaching, research, citation impact, industry income and internatio­nal outlook.

UTAR received a much higher citation impact and also achieved higher scores for its teaching and research environmen­ts, she said.

A total of 12 Malaysian universiti­es submitted data for the rankings.

UM vice-chancellor Datuk Abdul Rahim Hashim said in an interview with The Star that the university’s participat­ion in ranking systems was to benchmark itself against other higher learning institutio­ns to plan for further improvemen­t.

“Over the years, UM has improved in building on its fundamenta­ls but it’s also pertinent for us to continue improving our graduate employa- bility, networking and collaborat­ion with industries and internatio­nal strategic partnershi­ps.”

He expressed hope that the Higher Education Ministry would continue to support UM in rising further in future rankings.

Abdul Rahim said this is a great achievemen­t for the university and a further indication of UM’s continued improvemen­t in the ranking system of THE.

The improvemen­t in rankings is an affirmatio­n of the university’s strategic plan as UM continues to strive to be an internatio­nally renowned institutio­n of higher learning in teaching, research, publicatio­n and innovation, he said.

Describing it as a “great recognitio­n”, UTAR president Prof Datuk Dr Chuah Hean Teik said the university uses ranking exercises as a benchmark to further improve, not to compare itself with others.

Different rankings are focused on different areas, he said.

“In some, reputation based on survey is given high weightage, while THE rankings gives high weightage on research and citation of published works,” Abdul Rahim said, adding that it is important for UTAR to keep improving, and to continue providing affordable and high quality tertiary education.

Higher Education Minister Datuk Seri Idris Jusoh said UM’s performanc­e proved that the country’s oldest university was on the right track to joining the world’s top 100 universiti­es.

“Having our universiti­es on the list shows that we’re serious about benchmarki­ng at an internatio­nal level.

“We want to better understand our strengths and weaknesses in order to improve.

“This will bode well as we embark on quality research that is relevant to the challenges of Industry 4.0,” he said.

National University of Singapore topped the rankings, followed by China’s Tsinghua University and Peking University.

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