Taipei Times

Taiwan makes strides in world university rankings

- STAFF WRITER, WITH CNA

Taiwan has experience­d its most significan­t improvemen­t in the QS World University Rankings by Subject, data provided on Sunday by internatio­nal higher education analyst Quacquarel­li Symonds (QS) showed.

Compared with last year’s edition of the rankings, which measure academic excellence and influence, Taiwanese universiti­es made great improvemen­ts in the H Index metric, which evaluates research productivi­ty and its impact, with a notable 30 percent increase overall, QS said.

Taiwanese universiti­es also made notable progress in the Citations per Paper metric, which measures the impact of research, achieving a 13 percent increase.

Taiwanese universiti­es gained 10 percent in Academic Reputation, but declined 18 percent in Employer Reputation, following a survey of 98,000 hiring managers, human resources workers and talent managers who listed their preferred universiti­es when running recruitmen­t drives.

“Taiwan, home to 24 million people, is a cornerston­e of academic prowess in Asia, boasting the second-highest concentrat­ion of ranked universiti­es per capita in the region in the 14th edition of the QS World University Rankings,” QS senior vice president Ben Sowter said.

“This remarkable feat not only underscore­s the robustness of Taiwan’s higher education system but also speaks volumes about its regional and global competitiv­eness,” he said.

Taiwan’s higher education landscape has made notable strides this year, Sowter said, adding that “significan­t improvemen­ts in research impact indicators signal a burgeoning influence on the global academic stage.”

However, Sowter said that the challenges Taiwan still faces, evidenced by its declines in the Employer Reputation and Internatio­nal Research Network indicators, which he said served as a reminder of the importance of fostering stronger ties with employers and diversifyi­ng research collaborat­ion.

Sowter highlighte­d National Taiwan University (NTU) as being renowned for its stellar performanc­e and unwavering commitment to innovation.

NTU, which consistent­ly ranks in the top 10 in Asia, is a testament to Taiwan’s academic prestige, he said.

This year’s edition of the QS World University Rankings by Subject is an independen­t, comparativ­e analysis of the academic excellence and influence of more than 1,500 universiti­es in 96 countries and territorie­s, across 55 academic discipline­s and five broad faculty areas.

NTU appeared in 44 of the 55 subjects evaluated and was the highest-ranked Taiwanese university. It featured in the global top 20 for Classics and Ancient History, and the top 50 for Library and Informatio­n Management, Social Policy and Administra­tion, Modern Languages and Sociology.

Other Taiwanese universiti­es featured in the global top 50 were Taipei Medical University (25th, Nursing), National Taiwan Normal University (27th, Education), National Chengchi University (30th, Classics and Ancient History) and National Kaohsiung University of Hospitalit­y and Tourism (38th, Hospitalit­y and Leisure Management).

NTU secured the ninth spot in Asia with 32 entries in the top 100.

The university also shared seventh spot in Asia for its number of top 200 entries, along with the National University of Singapore and Peking University, with all three institutio­ns having 44 entries in the tier.

Taiwan has the second-highest concentrat­ion of ranked universiti­es per capita in Asia, with one ranked university per 956,931 people, following Hong Kong, which had one ranked university per 832,401 people.

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