The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Chinese varsities popular:

- Brendan O’Malley

UK UNIVERSITI­ES have taken the top two places in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings for the first time in its 14-year history, with the University of Oxford holding onto top spot and the University of Cambridge jumping from fourth to second.

Overall, the US continues to dominate the rankings with twice as many universiti­es in the top 200 (62) as the UK (31). Germany (20), the Netherland­s (13) and Australia (eight) are also well represente­d in the top 200 universiti­es.

But it is the ascendancy of Chinese universiti­es that continues to catch the eye, with two in the top 30 for the first time. China’s lower-ranked universiti­es have also made big gains.

Almost all Chinese universiti­es have improved their standing, signalling that the country’s commitment to investment in universiti­es has bolstered results yearon-year, according to Times Higher Education (THE.)

Phil Baty, THE’s editorial director, global rankings, said: “The rise of China in this year’s table is remarkable and demonstrat­es the way the global higher education landscape is changing. With two top-30 representa­tives, China’s leading universiti­es are truly now part of the global elite and overtaking prestigiou­s universiti­es in the US, UK and Europe.

“But the results show that other East Asian nations are feeling the competitio­n from this Asian giant. South Korea, which has been improving in recent years, is one of many victims of China’s success this year. Japan’s UTokyo (University of Tokyo) has also suffered. East Asian countries outside of China will need to work hard to stay stable as its neighbour soars to join the global elite.”

Tough year for the US

Among US universiti­es, the notable improvemen­ts included the University of Pennsylvan­ia moving up three places to tie 10th and Johns Hopkins University jumping four places to 13th.

The biggest casualty from last year’s top 10 was the University of California, Berkeley — which last year announced a US$150 million deficit following declining state funding and a five-year freeze on undergradu­ate tuition fees. It dropped eight places, from 10th to 18th.

Two-fifths of the US institutio­ns in the top 200 (29 out of 62) have dropped places and around the same number have faced reductions in their research income since last year, THE noted, and future levels of federal research income under the Trump administra­tion are in doubt.

In contrast, five of China’s seven top-200 representa­tives saw a boost in their research income, meaning that some leading US universiti­es have now been overtaken by Asian institutio­ns.

The National University of Singapore has overtaken Carnegie Mellon University, Tsinghua University now ranks above the Georgia Institute of Technology, and Hong Kong University of Science and Technology performs better than the University of California, Santa Barbara. Meanwhile, Peking University is now on a par with New York University.

In addition, there are signs that US universiti­es are already starting to feel the effects of anti-immigratio­n policies in the country, with internatio­nal students less likely to apply to US universiti­es and less likely to accept offers from them post-applicatio­n, THE suggested.

Baty said: “The US has seen its dominance of global rankings wane further this year as it loses out to institutio­ns in the UK and Asia. For the first time this year US universiti­es do not hold either of the top two spots of the ranking — a real blow to the country’s higher education sector.

“Meanwhile, funding concerns for America’s public universiti­es, uncertaint­y around future levels of research income, anti-immigratio­n policies and the continued rise of Asia mean that the US’s position may decline further in future years.”

US universiti­es’ future levels of research income under the Trump administra­tion are in question, with funding for the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Institutes of Health among those targeted for cuts or abolition, THE noted.

Meanwhile, a survey found almost half of US universiti­es reporting a decline in internatio­nal students accepting undergradu­ate offers in the wake of the country’s anti-immigratio­n policies, which may further put pressure on US institutio­nal finances.

Canada has fared better overall than the US, generally maintainin­g a steady performanc­e in the table, with the notable exception of McMaster University, which leapt 35 places from 113th to 78th.

Brexit risks

Europe has maintained a strong performanc­e despite the increasing competitio­n from Asia, led by Oxford and Cambridge, which registered significan­t increases in their total institutio­nal income, up 24 percent and 11 percent respective­ly, while both the California Institute of Technology (down 23 percent) and Stanford University (down 24 percent) saw significan­t revenue falls in the reporting period and came joint third. Cambridge also saw improvemen­ts in its research quality, THE noted.

However, the results underline the risk Brexit may pose to the global performanc­e of the UK’s leading universiti­es.

Almost a quarter of the research funding from competitiv­e grants to the University of Cambridge comes from the European Union, while the proportion at the University of Oxford is about a fifth, THE said.

In addition, there are signs that UK universiti­es are already starting to suffer from the Brexit vote, THE noted. The number of EU applicants looking to study on fulltime undergradu­ate courses in the UK has declined by 5 percent since last year.

The findings also suggest a widening gulf between the UK’s super elite institutio­ns and other universiti­es. While leading institutio­ns Oxford and Cambridge and certain London-based institutio­ns have remained steady — Imperial College London remains at eighth, University College London is down just one place at 16th, and the London School of Economics and Political Science remains at 25th, for example — several of the lower-ranked universiti­es have declined.

The University of Warwick has dropped nine places to 91st and the University of St Andrews plummeted 33 places to joint 143rd, for example. Overall, just over half of the UK’s top-200 representa­tives (16 out of 31) have dropped places.

Europe holding up

This is the first time that two European institutio­ns have taken the top two spots and Switzerlan­d’s ETH Zurich — the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich — also clings onto a spot in the top 10, after dropping one place from ninth to joint 10th.

Ireland’s Trinity College Dublin has jumped 14 places to 117th.

Italy and Spain both have new number ones thanks to large rises for two of their institutio­ns: Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna (=155th, up from =190th) and Pompeu Fabra University (140th, up from 175th).

But the rise of Asia is becoming an increasing threat to Europe’s standing in the rankings, just as it is with US universiti­es’ standing.

China’s top two now outrank Germany’s top institutio­n LMU Munich (=34th). Germany also has two fewer institutio­ns in the top 200; of the 20 institutio­ns that still make this cohort, 12 have slipped.

Tsinghua University (up from 35th to 30th) has also overtaken Switzerlan­d’s École Polytechni­que Fédérale de Lausanne (down from =30th to =38th), and Peking University (up two places to =27) now outranks the Karolinska Institute (down 10 places to =38) and is on a par with the University of Edinburgh (=27).

Europe now has seven institutio­ns in the top 30 while Asia has three. Last year these figures were 10 and two respective­ly.

Australia’s mixed results

Australia’s top eight universiti­es had mixed results. The University of Melbourne moved up one place to 32nd, Australian National University was down one at 48th, the University of Sydney dropped one to 61st, the University of Queensland dropped five to 65th, Monash University dropped six to =80th, the University of New South Wales dropped seven to 85th, the University of Western Australia jumped 14 places to 111th, and the University of Adelaide rose eight places to =134.

Latin America suffers

Latin America has suffered in this year’s ranking amid increasing global competitio­n. Its leading higher education nation, Brazil, has only 21 institutio­ns, down from 27 last year, despite an expansion of the table. Latin American universiti­es are suffering from funding issues and excessive red tape and there are signs that this is fuelling a brain drain of scholars from the region.

Among Latin American countries, Brazil’s University of São Paulo achieved the best place, in the 251-300 band.

While Chile and Colombia have both increased their number of included universiti­es to take 13 and five of the top 1 000 places respective­ly, three of Chile’s and two of Colombia’s leading universiti­es have dropped a band.

Mexico’s share of the world’s top universiti­es has also declined; it claims three places, down from seven last year. The country’s top two universiti­es, Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education and the National Autonomous University of Mexico, have also both fallen out of the top 600.

The calculatio­n of the THE World University Rankings 2018 — which lists the top 1 000 universiti­es in 77 countries — has been subject to an independen­t audit by profession­al services firm Price-water-house-Coopers, which, THE says, makes these the only global university rankings to be subjected to full, independen­t scrutiny of this nature.

 ??  ?? Chinese universiti­es have improved their standing, signalling that the country’s commitment to investment in universiti­es has bolstered results year-on-year
Chinese universiti­es have improved their standing, signalling that the country’s commitment to investment in universiti­es has bolstered results year-on-year

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