Yorkshire Post

Britain ‘has world’s best universiti­es’

- ROB PARSONS NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: rob.parsons@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

The top two universiti­es in the world are to be found in the UK, according to a new league table.

Oxford held on to first place in the latest annual Times Higher Education World University Rankings, with Cambridge rising from fourth place to take second – for the first time in the rankings’ 13-year history.

THE TOP two universiti­es in the world are to be found in the UK, according to a new league table.

Oxford held on to first place in the latest annual Times Higher Education World University Rankings, with Cambridge rising from fourth place to take second.

It is the first time that the two prestigiou­s institutio­ns have taken the top two spots in the 13-year history of the rankings.

Out of 31 UK universiti­es to make the top 200, 16 have seen a fall in their position, compared to last year.

These include York and Leeds, which fell by eight and six places respective­ly but are both still among the top 150 universiti­es worldwide. The University of Sheffield, Yorkshire’s highestpla­ced university, rose by five places from 109th to 104th.

Phil Baty, editorial director of the THE global rankings, said UK higher education was facing “intense political pressure”, but that the data showed that the nation had “many of the very best universiti­es in the world”.

Overall, the rankings show Oxford in first place, followed by Cambridge and then the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), which drops one place to joint third with Stanford University, also in the United States.

Rounding out the top five is another US institutio­n, the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT).

Rankings authors said that results at the top were “extremely tight”, with all top-ranked universiti­es performing well against the 13 factors used to measure performanc­e, but that one reason for Oxbridge’s success was that both have seen significan­t increases in their total institutio­nal income this year.

Mr Baty said: “The UK higher education system is facing in- tense political pressure, with questions over the value for money provided by £9,250 tuition fees in England, our continued attractive­ness to internatio­nal students, the flow of research funding and academic talent post-Brexit, and even levels of vice-chancellor­s’ pay.

“But one thing this new data makes absolutely clear is that the UK has many of the very best universiti­es in the world and it has one of the world’s strongest higher education systems.

“The data shows UK universiti­es are consistent­ly producing ground-breaking new research which is driving innovation, they are attracting internatio­nal students and academic talent and are providing a world-class teaching environmen­t.

“They are a huge national asset, and one that the country can ill afford to undermine at a time when its place in the global order is under intense scrutiny.”

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