ANU On The Rise as MIT Takes The Top Spot
Tuesday 11th September
2012/13 QS World University Rankings
ANU On The Rise as MIT Takes The Top Spot
Top 700 universities published Tuesday 11th September www.topuniversities .com
London, 10 September: ANU moved up two places to 24th in the world in another strong performance from Australian universities in the QS World University Rankings. Australia’s total of seven universities in the top 100 is beaten by only the US and UK.
MIT tops the table for the first time ever ahead
of University of Cambridge and Harvard University. Four UK
and six US universities make up the top ten.
Harvard
University slips to third, having topped the table every
year between 2004 and 2009. In contrast, MIT has risen
steadily up the rankings from 10th in 2007.
Global top ten
2012 | 2011 | Institution |
1 | 3 | Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) |
2 | 1 | University of Cambridge |
3 | 2 | Harvard University |
4 | 7 | UCL (University College London) |
5 | 5 | University of Oxford |
6 | 6 | Imperial College London |
7 | 4 | Yale University |
8 | 8 | University of Chicago |
9 | 13 | Princeton University |
10 | 12 | California Institute of Technology (Caltech) |
© QS Quacquarelli Symonds 2004-2012 www.topuniversities.com . All rights reserved.
2012/13 QS World University Rankings
-Top ten Australian universities
2012 | 2011 | Institution |
24 | 26 | Australian National University (ANU) |
36 | 31 | The University of Melbourne |
39 | 38 | The University of Sydney |
46 | 48 | The University of Queensland (UQ) |
52 | 49 | The University of New South Wales (UNSW) |
61 | 60 | Monash University |
79 | 73 | The University of Western Australia (UWA) |
102 | 92 | The University of Adelaide |
233 | 211 | Macquarie University |
246 | 228 | RMIT University |
© QS Quacquarelli Symonds 2004-2012 www.topuniversities.com . All rights reserved.
Despite the strong performance of leading institutions, several Australian universities have struggled to continue the upward trajectory established in recent years. Melbourne drops five places to 36, while Australian universities outside of the Group of Eight have suffered a general decline in year-on-year performance.
“Australia continues to punch above its weight, though the results reflect growing international competition, as well as certain domestic challenges”, says QS head of research Ben Sowter. “A slowdown in international student intake at Australian universities dating back to 2009 has coincided with a sharp rise in mobility among other leading institutions.”
This year's data shows that intake of
international students at Australian universities has slowed
markedly relative to that of other leading
institutions.
The top 100 universities average nearly 10%
more international students than in 2011, the biggest
single-year increase in the rankings’ nine-year
history.
Sowter states: “The unprecedented acceleration
in global international recruitment reflects an escalating
battle for talent. 120,000 more international students were
reported by the top 500 universities this year, suggesting
the global total may now exceed 4 million”.
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Notes to editors
QS Quacquarelli Symonds
Since 1990, QS has become established as the world’s leading network for top careers and education. Producers of the QS World University Rankings®, QS’s innovative research, events, publications and university solutions provide new ways of bringing universities into contact with the best and brightest students worldwide.
QS World University Rankings
The QS World University Rankings is an annual league table of the top 700 universities in the world and is arguably the best-known and respected ranking of its kind. Compiled by the QS Intelligence Unit in close consultation with an international advisory board of leading academics, the QS World University Rankings is widely referenced by prospective and current students, university professionals and governments worldwide. The purpose of the rankings has been to recognise universities as the multi-faceted organisations they are and to provide a global comparison of their success against the notional mission of remaining or becoming world-class. The rankings are based on four key pillars, research, teaching, employability and internationalisation.
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Scopus Database from
Elsevier
QS Rankings use citation data from
Scopus which is the largest abstract and citation database
of peer-reviewed literature and quality Web sources. Its
unique database contains abstracts and references from over
18,000 titles from more than 5,000 international publishers,
ensuring broad interdisciplinary coverage. Scopus is a
trusted source of bibliometric data, also used by many other
organisations including: the OECD, the Australian Research
Council, iFQ ( Institut für Forschungsinformation und
Qualitätssicherung) and ISTEP (National Institute of
Science and Technology Policy of Japan).
ENDS