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QS World University Rankings® for technical subject

EMBARGOED until Tuesday April 5 at 11:00 NZST


MIT outshines Stanford and Cambridge in first ever QS World University Rankings® for technical subjects

- MIT tops all five rankings: Computer Sciences; Chemical; Civil; Electrical; Mechanical Engineering.
- Stanford and Cambridge divide second places
- 30 subjects to be ranked in coming weeks on www.topuniversities.com along with a personalised ranking tool to help students make the right choice
- University of Auckland best placed at 39th in Civil Engineering, 4 other New Zealand universities also featured.

The first ever QS World University Rankings® by Subject shows MIT to be the world’s leading university in computer science and four areas of engineering, based on employer reputation, academic reputation and research quality.

Over 50,000,000 people have viewed QS World University Rankings® in the past 12 months and there has been overwhelming demand for more detailed subject rankings incorporating a unique combination of employability and research quality metrics. The QS methodology has been tailored to each subject, in consultation with the QS Global Academic Advisory Board.

“QS World University Rankings® use of academic and employer review data is a real market differentiator”, states Paul Thurman, a leading data analyst and professor at Columbia University in New York and a member of the Advisory Board; “not only because of the sample sizes, which are industry-leading, but because of the way QS takes the data from the surveys and is able to extract meaningful results and interpretations”.

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“The new QS World University Rankings® by Subject respond to a need for comparative data at a more granular level”, says Ben Sowter, Head of QS Intelligence Unit, which produces the rankings. “ “In many countries students are being charged more than ever before for their degrees. So assessing the potential career outcomes of one’s study choice is becoming increasingly important. QS rankings are unique in taking on board the views of global employers”.

"It is a great development to see subject rankings as a refinement of the usual university rankings,” says Sej Butler, EMEA Recruitment Manager, IBM. “This will help students and employers look to those courses in more detail within a wider context."

The news that the opinions of employers do not always correlate with those of academics will raise eyebrows among prospective students. The results are published in separate data columns on www.topuniversities.com, allowing users to personally rank according to each indicator.

The complete rankings of the top 200 universities is available on www.topuniversities.com

ENDS

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