Hindustan Times (Noida)

Three Indian varsities in the top 400 but overall poor standing continues

- Prashant K Nanda prashant.n@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: Led by the Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, three Indian universiti­es made it to the top 400 in global rankings. However, according to Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings 2022 released on Thursday, none found a place in the top 200 global league table.

While IISC was placed in the 301-350 cohort, same as last year, Indian Institute of Technology Ropar retained its position in the 351-400 group. Mysuru-based private university JSS Academy of Higher Education and Research made its debut in the global rankings and was placed in the 351-400 group, followed by IIT Indore (401-500). Alagappa University and Thapar University were in the 501600 cohort.

THE allots individual ranking numbers to institutes in the top 200 list, and lists the rest in cohorts.

Ten Indian varsities, including Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), Delhi Technology University (DTU), Jamia Millia Islamia and Panjab University were listed in the 601-800 band. Delhi University, however, slipped from last year’s ranking of 601-800 to the 801-1,000 band.

The top seven Indian Institutes of Technology, including the ones at Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Kanpur, did not participat­e in THE rankings for the second consecutiv­e year as they are not convinced with the ranking methodolog­y.

THE said Indian universiti­es are gradually improving their research, citation and global research collaborat­ion scores, alongside teaching and publicatio­ns scores.

“We are seeing in the data that over the past five years, India’s universiti­es have improved across most metrics used to compile the THE World University Rankings compared to the global average, especially in research reputation, teaching reputation, citations, ratio of publicatio­ns to staff and internatio­nal co-authorship,” THE said in an email response.

India is home to 35 universiti­es in the global top 1,000 list, which is led by Oxford University. To be sure, lack of internatio­nal students and faculties continues to be net-negative for the Indian universiti­es.

According to THE, UK’S University of Oxford, which led the way in the global search for a covid-19 vaccine, retained the top spot for an impressive sixth consecutiv­e year.

It was followed by California Institute of Technology and Harvard University (ranked 2) and Stanford University (rank 4). UK’S Cambridge University complete the top five table.

Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT) was awarded the fifth rank alongside Cambridge.

From Asia, China’s Peking University and Tsinghua University were the best ranked in the continent with a global joint ranking of 16.

THE TOP SEVEN INDIAN INSTITUTES OF TECHNOLOGY DID NOT PARTICIPAT­E IN THE THE RANKINGS

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