The Free Press Journal

Record 31 Indian varsities in top world university rankings

- ADITI KHANNA

India has improved its position in the global higher education, with a record 31 educationa­l institutio­ns making it to a new list of the world's top varsities topped by the University of Oxford. The Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bangalore is India's top institutio­n in the 'Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings

2016-17' list released yesterday, up nearly 50 places from its last year's rank. Only two Indian universiti­es have made it to the top 400 universiti­es' list.

IISc (201-250 group), up from last year's 251-300 group, is accompanie­d by the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Bombay (351-400 cohort) in the top 400 table. There is no Indian university in the coveted top 200 list. This year's list, which includes 14 new entrants, is topped by University of Oxford, the first UK university to top in the 12-year history of the table. Five-time topper California Institute of Technology came second while Stanford University was ranked third.

South Asia as a whole has almost doubled its representa­tion in this year's list of the world's top 980 universiti­es, claiming 39 places, up from 20 last year. Sri Lanka makes its debut in the table with the University of the Colombo in the 801+ band, while Pakistan has five new entries, taking its total to seven.

"But the star of the region is India, which has 31 universiti­es in the list. Its leading university – the Indian Institute of Science – is edging closer to the top 200, claiming a spot in the 201-250 band, its highest ever position and the country has four new entries in the top 800," said Phil Baty, the editor of the THE World University Rankings.

"India's strong performanc­e is partly thanks to the country recognisin­g the importance of participat­ing in global benchmarki­ng exercises; just last month the government launched a new funding-backed project aimed at catapultin­g Indian Institutes of Technology to the top of world university rankings," he said.

Baty described as "encouragin­g" that the Indian government had displayed an ambition to create worldclass universiti­es, witnessed by the country's leading institutio­ns "edging towards the world top 200". The other Indian universiti­es on the list include IIT Delhi, IIT Kanpur and IIT Madras, all within the 401-500 ranks, and IIT

Kharagpur and IIT Roorkee in the 501-600 band. India has 19 institutes in the top 800, two more than last year and 12 others in the 801-980 band. Overall, India has 31 institutio­ns, including 14 new names, in the list of 980. PTI The calculatio­n of the THE World University Rankings is subject to an independen­t audit by profession­al services firm Pricewater­house Coopers (PwC). The rankings claim to be the only global performanc­e tables that judge research-intensive universiti­es across all their core missions: teaching, research, knowledge transfer and internatio­nal outlook. It uses 13 calibrated performanc­e indicators to provide the most comprehens­ive and balanced comparison­s, trusted by students, academics, university leaders, industry and government­s. Other Indian universiti­es which have found a place in the list include Jadavpur University, Aligarh Muslim University, Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Pilani, University of Calcutta, University of Delhi, IIT Guwahati, National Institute of Technology Rourkela, Panjab University, Savitribai Phule Pune University. Sri Venkateswa­ra University, Tata Institute of Fundamenta­l Research, Tezpur University, Acharya Nagarjuna University, Amity University, Amrita University, Andhra University, Cochin University of Science and Technology, Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, Manipal University, Osmania University, SASTRA University, Sathyabama University, SRM University, Vellore Institute of Technology have also made it to the list.

 ??  ?? Virat Kohli walks after losing his wicket. New Zealand had India in trouble at 291/9 at the end of the first day’s play in the first test of the series being played there
Virat Kohli walks after losing his wicket. New Zealand had India in trouble at 291/9 at the end of the first day’s play in the first test of the series being played there

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