Times Higher Education 2012-13 World University Rankings
UNDER STRICT EMBARGO UNTIL 21.00 (GMT+1) WEDNESDAY 3rd October 2012
TIMES HIGHER EDUCATION PUBLISHES 2012-13 WORLD UNIVERSITY RANKINGS
Australia excels in latest rankings, with six top 100 institutions - up from four last year
Most of Australia’s top institutions have risen up the table, and it adds a further top 200 representative
California Institute of Technology holds on to the world’s number one spot, while Harvard is pushed into FOURTH place by Oxford and Stanford, which share 2nd place
Major gains across Asia-Pacific countries, with falls for leading institutions in the West
New Zealand’s only top 200 representative, Auckland, gains ground
US still dominates with seven institutions in top 10 and 76 in top 200, but strong representation masks alarming sector-wide decline – with 51 US institutions falling down the table
UK loses a top 200 representative as most UK institutions lose ground, with household names among the victims
Russia and India again fail to make the top 200 list, while Norway and Spain lose their only top 200 representatives
China’s massive investment in developing world-class universities is paying off
Australia and New Zealand have seen significant improvements in the 2012-13 Times Higher Education World University Rankings published today. They form part of a dynamic Asia-Pacific higher education zone gaining serious ground on the traditional powerhouses of the US and UK.
The California Institute of Technology has retained its place at the top of the World University Rankings for 2012-13, with Harvard University pushed into fourth place by the UK’s University of Oxford and Stanford University, which share second place.
As with last year, the US utterly dominates the rankings, taking seven of the top 10 places. This year it has 76 institutions in the top 200 in total -- one more than last year. But the dominance of the US masks worrying falls for many of its institutions, in stark contrast to significant gains among Asia-Pacific universities.
Australia’s number one institution, the University of Melbourne, has shot up from 37th in the rankings last year to inside the top 30, at 28th. It has widened its lead on second-placed Australian National University, which moved up from 38th to 37th. The University of Sydney was one of the few Australian institutions to drop – but only marginally from 58th to 62nd.
Australia has also gained an additional top 200 university, with the University of Adelaide entering the top 200 at 176th.
Of Australia’s eight top 200 representatives, six improved their positions. The generally good news for the whole Australian sector is reflected in a new analysis that examines the average movement of the top 200 institutions in each country. On this measure, Australia saw the third-biggest ranking improvement in the world, with its top 200 institutions rising an average of 15 places. This compares to the US and UK, which have seen average falls of more than six places each.
Phil Baty, editor of Times Higher Education rankings, said: “Despite high-profile problems with international student recruitment, and some reputational challenges, this has been a really strong year for Australia. Not only has it gained an additional representative in the top 200 since last year, but the majority of Australian institutions have improved their positions.
“The improvements are primarily down to better scores for research, in both scholarly papers per staff and citation impact. It is also clear that Australia is investing in its universities.
Of the US’s 76 top 200 representatives, 51 fell down the table in the face of mounting competition from heavy-spending Asian nations.
The Times Higher Education World University Rankings are the world’s most comprehensive and carefully calibrated global rankings, using 13 separate performance indicators to examine a university’s strengths against all of its core missions – teaching, research, knowledge transfer and international outlook. All data are collected, analysed and verified by global data provider Thomson Reuters.
This year’s rankings, which employ an identical methodology to the 2011-12 rankings for clear year-on-year comparisons, provide firm new evidence of a power shift from west to east in global higher education and research.
The rankings show heavy casualties of cuts to public funding for US state universities. Key research institutions of the University of California system fell, including UC Davis (from 38th to 44th), and other significant casualties included Pennsylvania State University (51st to 61st), the University of Massachusetts (64th to 72nd) and Arizona State University (127th to 148th).
The UK, which has also been hit by public funding cuts to higher education and research, also suffered. The UK lost one of its top 200 representatives (University of Dundee) and now has 31 top 200 institutions. Nineteen of the remaining 31 top 200 institutions also tumbled in 2012-13. Prestigious institutions such as the University of Bristol (66th to 74th) and the University of Glasgow in Scotland (102 to 139th) fell.
In stark contrast, the leading universities from across the Asia-Pacific region saw significant improvements.
China’s two top 200 institutions both rose, with Peking University moving from 49th to 46th and Tsinghua jumping 19 places from 71st to 52nd. Thanks to extremely strong income figures, Singapore’s two top 200 institutions saw spectacular success. The National University of Singapore moved from 40th to 29th and Nanyang Technological University rocketed up the table from 169th to 86th.
Every one of South Korea’s institutions rose up the tables, with the most spectacular improvement by Seoul National University, which rose from 124 to 59th. The country also gained a new representative in the top 200 – Yonsei University, entering at 183rd.
Phil Baty said: “No doubt Australia is really starting to benefit from the power shift from the West to the East in higher education – it has great advantages being close to the exciting innovation and research hotspots in Asia. If it can fully exploit the geographical advantage it has over Europe and North America, there’s every reason to believe it can be part of a real higher education revolution in Asia-Pacific.”
Key Facts:
• There are a total of 24 countries in the world top 200 list – two fewer than last year
• The highest-ranked institution outside of the US and UK is ETH Zürich, in Switzerland, in 12th place
• Asia’s number one university is the University of Tokyo, in 27th place
• After the US and UK, the Netherlands is the next best represented nation in the top 200, with 12 institutions, but its highest-ranked institution, Leiden University, makes only 64th place
• Germany has 11 universities in the top 200, and its highest-ranked, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, makes 48th place
• Of the so-called BRIC developing economies, Russia and India have no representatives in the top 200
• All of the Netherlands’ 12 universities improved their positions in the rankings
• Brazil’s sole top 200 institution, the University of São Paulo, moved up 20 places to 158, and a sub-200 institution, the State University of Campinas, is moving closer to the top 200
• Italy does not have a single country in the top 200, and most of its representatives in the 200-400 bands posted declines
• Japan has five top 200 universities, more than any other Asian nation, but most of its representatives have slipped a little down the table while Asian rivals rise
• France has seven institutions in the top 200, compared to just five last year
• The Middle East is represented in the top 200 only by Israel, which now has three top 200 representatives, up from two last year
• Iran, Saudi Arabia and Turkey have no top 200 institutions, but all have members of the 200-400 group
• Switzerland maintained its seven members of the top 200, but all but the top two slipped
• Ireland has just two top 200 institutions – and neither make the top 100
• Sweden has five top 200 universities, but its top three have slipped
• Six countries have only one top 200 representative – Austria, Brazil, Finland, New Zealand, South Africa and Taiwan
• The whole of Africa has only a single representative in the top 200: the University of Cape Town, which has slipped from 103 to 113
• Belgium now has four top 200 institutions – up from three last year – and every one of its representatives has improved its ranking position
• New Zealand’s sole representative, Auckland, has improved its position
• Australia increased its representation by one, and now has eight institutions in the table. Six of the eight improved their rankings
• The average top 200 US university fell 6.5 places, while the average UK institution fell 6.7 places
• The South Korean institutions in the top 200 rose a startling 23.5 place on average, and the Hong Kong institutions rose an average of 8.5 places
Comments:
Phil Baty, editor of Times Higher Education rankings, said: “There is no question that the balance of power in global higher education is shifting. Strong support for world-class universities in the East, and clear national commitments to driving the knowledge economy through investment in research and innovation, is paying off. Almost without exception the top institutions of Asia – in China, Singapore, Taiwan and South Korea – are marching up the global rankings.
“In stark contrast, funding cuts are hurting the West. The traditional powerhouses of the US and UK are losing ground. This should be a cause for alarm for Western governments.”
Writing in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings publication in a personal capacity, Dirk Van Damme, the head of the Innovation and Measuring Progress Division at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, said: “Academic excellence is gradually shifting away from the 20th-century centres. The US and UK still dominate the absolute top, but they face a severe loss of total ranking positions in the top 200 list.”
Van Damme’s analysis of the results also suggested that the elite top 40 institutions may be suffering from complacency, with a “sub-top” group ranked between 40 and 100 performing more efficiently in research. “On average, the sub-top universities are more effective than the top 40 in translating research investment into citations output,” he said. “The concern is that those at the absolute top of the rankings have become complacent, and lack efficiency and innovation. They rely on their reputation and unchallenged capacity to raise resources.”
David Willetts, the UK’s universities and science minister, said: “The Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2012-13 show it is not only in Olympics sports that Britain excels…Our university sector has maintained its world-class status…but we can not be complacent. In particular, the rankings show the rapid advances taking place in East Asia and the Pacific region…In future, any country that stands still – or moves forward only slowly – will find itself slipping down the international league as other countries try harder, invest more and improve their research.”
Simon Pratt, product manager at Thomson Reuters, said: “We continue to see a high level of engagement and collaboration from participating universities. This year we had 700 institutions actively participating in the Institutional Profiles project. This is a strong endorsement of the rigorous data collection process and analysis. As we enter the fourth year of the Institutional Profiles initiative we have the broadest and deepest set of key performance indicators on Universities globally, drawing on Thomson Reuters institutional, reputation, and citation data. This is the ideal foundation for the Times Higher Education World University Ranking.”
The Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2012-13
(Copyright Times Higher Education. If reproducing this table, or any part of this table, you must provide a link to http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/world-university-rankings/)
2012-13 Rank | Institution Name | Country | 2011-12 Rank |
1 | California Institute of Technology | United States | 1 |
=2 | University of Oxford | United Kingdom | 4 |
=2 | Stanford University | United States | 2 |
4 | Harvard University | United States | 2 |
5 | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | United States | 7 |
6 | Princeton University | United States | 5 |
7 | University of Cambridge | United Kingdom | 6 |
8 | Imperial College London | United Kingdom | 8 |
9 | University of California, Berkeley | United States | 10 |
10 | University of Chicago | United States | 9 |
11 | Yale University | United States | 11 |
12 | ETH Zürich – Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich | Switzerland | 15 |
13 | University of California, Los Angeles | United States | 13 |
14 | Columbia University | United States | 12 |
15 | University of Pennsylvania | United States | 16 |
16 | Johns Hopkins University | United States | 14 |
17 | University College London | United Kingdom | 17 |
18 | Cornell University | United States | 20 |
19 | Northwestern University | United States | 26 |
20 | University of Michigan | United States | 18 |
21 | University of Toronto | Canada | 19 |
22 | Carnegie Mellon University | United States | 21 |
23 | Duke University | United States | 22 |
24 | University of Washington | United States | 25 |
=25 | Georgia Institute of Technology | United States | 24 |
=25 | University of Texas at Austin | United States | 29 |
27 | University of Tokyo | Japan | 30 |
28 | University of Melbourne | Australia | 37 |
29 | National University of Singapore | Singapore | 40 |
30 | University of British Columbia | Canada | 22 |
31 | University of Wisconsin Madison | United States | 27 |
32 | University of Edinburgh | United Kingdom | 36 |
33 | University of Illinois - Urbana | United States | 31 |
34 | McGill University | Canada | 28 |
=35 | University of Hong Kong | Hong Kong | 34 |
=35 | University of California, Santa Barbara | United States | 35 |
37 | Australian National University | Australia | 38 |
38 | University of California, San Diego | United States | 33 |
39 | London School of Economics and Political Science | United Kingdom | 47 |
40 | École Polytechnique Fédérale of Lausanne | Switzerland | 46 |
41 | New York University | United States | 44 |
=42 | Karolinska Institute | Sweden | 32 |
=42 | University of North Carolina | United States | 43 |
=44 | University of California, Davis | United States | 38 |
=44 | Washington University in Saint Louis | United States | 41 |
46 | Peking University | China | 49 |
47 | University of Minnesota | United States | 42 |
48 | University of Munich | Germany | 45 |
49 | University of Manchester | United Kingdom | 48 |
50 | Pohang University of Science and Technology | Korea, Republic of | 53 |
51 | Brown University | United States | 49 |
52 | Tsinghua University | China | 71 |
53 | Ohio State University | United States | 57 |
=54 | Boston University | United States | 54 |
=54 | Kyoto University | Japan | 52 |
56 | University of Southern California | United States | 55 |
57 | King's College London | United Kingdom | 56 |
58 | Katholieke Universiteit Leuven | Belgium | 67 |
=59 | École Normale Supérieure, Paris | France | 59 |
=59 | Seoul National University | Korea, Republic of | 124 |
61 | Pennsylvania State University | United States | 51 |
=62 | École Polytechnique | France | 63 |
=62 | University of Sydney | Australia | 58 |
64 | Leiden University | Netherlands | 79 |
=65 | Hong Kong University of Science and Technology | Hong Kong | 62 |
=65 | University of Queensland, Australia | Australia | 74 |
67 | Utrecht University | Netherlands | 68 |
68 | Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology | Korea, Republic of | 94 |
69 | Purdue University | United States | 98 |
70 | University of Göttingen | Germany | 69 |
70 | Wageningen University and Research Center | Netherlands | 75 |
=72 | Erasmus University Rotterdam | Netherlands | 157 |
=72 | University of Massachusetts | United States | 64 |
74 | University of Bristol | United Kingdom | 66 |
75 | Rice University | United States | 72 |
76 | University of Pittsburgh | United States | 59 |
77 | Delft University of Technology | Netherlands | 104 |
78 | Universität Heidelberg | Germany | 73 |
79 | Emory University | United States | 75 |
80 | Durham University | United Kingdom | 83 |
81 | Université Pierre et Marie Curie | France | 84 |
82 | Lund University | Sweden | 80 |
83 | University of Amsterdam | Netherlands | 92 |
84 | University of Montreal | Canada | 104 |
85 | University of New South Wales | Australia | 173 |
86 | Nanyang Technological University | Singapore | 169 |
87 | Tufts University | United States | 77 |
88 | McMaster University | Canada | 65 |
89 | University of Groningen | Netherlands | 134 |
89 | University of Zurich | Switzerland | 61 |
91 | University of Colorado | United States | 77 |
92 | Université Paris-Sud | France | Not ranked |
93 | Ghent University | Belgium | 106 |
=94 | Michigan State University | United States | 96 |
=94 | University of Notre Dame | United States | 89 |
96 | University of California, Irvine | United States | 86 |
97 | University of Maryland College Park | United States | 94 |
98 | University of Arizona | United States | 97 |
=99 | Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Germany | 109 |
=99 | Monash University | Australia | 117 |
=99 | Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey | United States | 81 |
102 | University of Rochester | United States | 81 |
103 | University of York | United Kingdom | 121 |
104 | Case Western Reserve University | United States | 93 |
105 | Technische Universität München | Germany | 88 |
=106 | Uppsala University | Sweden | 87 |
=106 | Vanderbilt University | United States | 70 |
108 | University of St. Andrews | United Kingdom | 85 |
109 | University of Helsinki | Finland | 91 |
=110 | University of Sheffield | United Kingdom | 101 |
=110 | University of Sussex | United Kingdom | 99 |
=110 | Trinity College Dublin | Ireland, Republic of | 117 |
113 | University of Cape Town | South Africa | 103 |
114 | Eindhoven University of Technology | Netherlands | 115 |
115 | Maastricht University | Netherlands | 197 |
116 | Aarhus University | Denmark | 125 |
117 | Stockholm University | Sweden | 131 |
118 | University of Virginia | United States | 135 |
119 | Royal Holloway, University of London | United Kingdom | 107 |
120 | University of Nottingham | United Kingdom | 140 |
121 | University of Alberta | Canada | 100 |
=122 | University of California, Santa Cruz | United States | 110 |
=122 | University of Florida | United States | 125 |
=124 | Chinese University Hong Kong | Hong Kong | 151 |
=124 | Dartmouth College | United States | 90 |
=124 | University of Warwick | United Kingdom | 157 |
127 | Radboud University Nijmegen | Netherlands | 159 |
=128 | Freie Universität Berlin | Germany | 151 |
=128 | Tokyo Institute of Technology | Japan | 108 |
=130 | University of Copenhagen | Denmark | 135 |
=130 | University of Lausanne | Switzerland | 116 |
=130 | University of Southampton | United Kingdom | 127 |
133 | University of Geneva | Switzerland | 130 |
=134 | Indiana University | United States | 123 |
=134 | National Taiwan University | Taiwan | 154 |
=134 | University of Utah | United States | 113 |
=137 | Hebrew University of Jerusalem | Israel | 121 |
=137 | Tohoku University | Japan | 120 |
139 | University of Glasgow | United Kingdom | 102 |
=140 | Royal Institute of Technology | Sweden | 187 |
=140 | VU University Amsterdam | Netherlands | 159 |
=142 | University of Basel | Switzerland | 111 |
=142 | University of Leeds | United Kingdom | 133 |
144 | University of Freiburg | Germany | 189 |
=145 | Lancaster University | United Kingdom | 131 |
=145 | Queen Mary, University of London | United Kingdom | 127 |
147 | Osaka University | Japan | 119 |
148 | Arizona State University | United States | 127 |
149 | Technical University of Denmark | Denmark | 178 |
150 | Boston College | United States | 195 |
=151 | University of Bern | Switzerland | 112 |
=151 | Karlsruhe Institute of Technology | Germany | 196 |
153 | University of Exeter | United Kingdom | 156 |
=154 | University of California, Riverside | United States | 143 |
=154 | RWTH Aachen University | Germany | 168 |
=156 | Texas A&M University | United States | 164 |
=156 | Yeshiva University | United States | 154 |
=158 | University of Birmingham | United Kingdom | 148 |
=158 | University of São Paulo | Brazil | 178 |
=158 | Tel Aviv University | Israel | 166 |
161 | University of Auckland | New Zealand | 173 |
=162 | Stony Brook University | United States | 114 |
=162 | University of Vienna | Austria | 139 |
164 | Université Catholique de Louvain | Belgium | 169 |
165 | University of Delaware | United States | 180 |
166 | Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 | France | 169 |
167 | University of Texas at Dallas | United States | 251-275 |
168 | George Washington University | United States | 135 |
169 | University of Iowa | United States | 141 |
170 | École Normale Supérieure de Lyon | France | 141 |
=171 | Universität Bonn | Germany | Not ranked |
=171 | University of Liverpool | United Kingdom | 181 |
=171 | University of Ottawa | Canada | 185 |
=174 | Georgetown University | United States | 138 |
=174 | Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute | United States | 144 |
=176 | University of Aberdeen | United Kingdom | 151 |
=176 | University of Adelaide | Australia | 201-225 |
=176 | University of East Anglia | United Kingdom | 145 |
=176 | University of Reading | United Kingdom | 164 |
=180 | Université Joseph Fourier - Grenoble 1 | France | Not ranked |
=180 | Newcastle University | United Kingdom | 146 |
182 | City University Hong Kong | Hong Kong | 193 |
183 | Yonsei University | Korea, Republic of | 226-250 |
=184 | Colorado School of Mines | United States | 201-225 |
=184 | University of Illinois - Chicago | United States | 167 |
=184 | William & Mary | United States | 146 |
=187 | University College Dublin | Ireland, Republic of | 159 |
=187 | University of Twente | Netherlands | 200 |
189 | Medical University of South Carolina | United States | 162 |
=190 | Wake Forest University | United States | 162 |
=190 | University of Western Australia | Australia | 189 |
192 | University of Antwerp | Belgium | 276-300 |
=193 | Iowa State University | United States | 184 |
=193 | University of Miami | United States | 172 |
=193 | Technion Israel Institute of Technology | Israel | 201-225 |
=196 | University of Leicester | United Kingdom | 197 |
=196 | University of Victoria | Canada | 177 |
198 | State University of New York Buffalo | United States | 201-225 |
199 | Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main | Germany | 181 |
200 | Birkbeck, University of London | United Kingdom | 149 |
The Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2012-13. Average change in ranking position per university*
(Copyright Times Higher Education 2012. Link to http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/world-university-rankings/)
Country | Number of universities in top 200 | Country mean score 2012/13 | Total change in ranking position 2011/12-2012/13 | Average change in ranking position per university listed 2011/12-2012/13 |
United States | 76 | 65.6 | -494 | -6.50 |
United Kingdom | 31 | 60.1 | -208 | -6.71 |
Netherlands | 12 | 58.5 | 334 | 27.83 |
Germany | 11 | 55.8 | 93 | 8.45 |
Canada | 8 | 63.1 | -45 | -5.63 |
Australia | 8 | 62.1 | 120 | 15.00 |
Switzerland | 7 | 61.6 | -106 | -15.14 |
France | 7 | 56.9 | -22 | -3.14 |
Japan | 5 | 60.8 | -64 | -12.80 |
Sweden | 5 | 59.5 | 30 | 6.00 |
South Korea | 4 | 61.9 | 94 | 23.50 |
Hong Kong | 4 | 60.7 | 34 | 8.50 |
Belgium | 4 | 55.4 | 27 | 6.75 |
Denmark | 3 | 53.5 | 43 | 14.33 |
Israel | 3 | 50.2 | -8 | -2.67 |
* This table contains new analysis by the Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2012-13. It examines the average movement of each nation’s universities in the top 200 (only those nations with more than three top 200 universities are listed).
iPhone App – World University Rankings
The 2012-2013 rankings are available via a free Times Higher Education iPhone app containing rankings data about the world’s 400 best-performing institutions. Powered by data from Thomson Reuters, the app allows users to create their own rankings based on personal preferences and criteria weightings so they can find the institution that best suits their needs. The app and data is available for free download on the iTunes store from 4 October.
Notes to Editors
Methodology Key Facts
• The Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2012-13 draw on:
• World’s largest academic reputation survey (16,639 academics in 2012, and almost 50,000 since 2010)
• 50,000,000 citations analysed and compared with the world average from the same field
• Arts, humanities and social sciences placed on an equal footing with science
• 13 indicators across five areas have been taken into account, making this the ONLY world rankings to examine ALL core missions of a modern global university - research, teaching, knowledge transfer and international activity. They are:
Industry Income - innovation
1. Research income from industry / Academic staff
Teaching – the learning environment
2. Reputation survey – Teaching
3. Staff-to-student ratio
4. PhDs awarded / Undergraduate degrees awarded
5. PhDs awarded / Academic staff
6. Institutional income / Academic staff
Citations – research influence
7. Citation impact (normalised average citations per paper)
Research – volume, income and reputation
8. Reputation survey – Research
9. Research income / Academic staff
10. Scholarly papers / (Academic staff + Research staff)
International Outlook – staff, students and research
11. International students / Total students
12. International academic staff / Total academic staff
13. Scholarly papers with one or more international co-authors / Total scholarly papers
Terminology & Intellectual Property
• The full title of the tables is “Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2012-13”
• Data for the Times Higher Education World University Rankings was provided by Thomson Reuters from its Global Institutional Profiles Project, an ongoing, multi-stage process that collects and validates factual data about academic institutional performance across a range of aspects and multiple disciplines. http://science.thomsonreuters.com/globalprofilesproject/
• Any publication of the “Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2012-13” tables (in full or part) should include full attribution to “Times Higher Education with data supplied by Thomson Reuters”
• YOU MUST include the following link when publishing the “Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2012-13” tables (in full or part): http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/world-university-rankings/ or http://bit.ly/thewur
About Times Higher Education magazine
Times Higher Education is the world’s most authoritative source of information about higher education. Designed specifically for professional people working in higher education and research, Times Higher Education was founded in 1971 and has been online since 1995. Times Higher Education is published by TSL Education Ltd.
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2012-2013 Times Higher Education World University Rankings supplement
These rankings are published in full in the 2012-2013 Times Higher Education World University Rankings supplement on Thursday 4th October 2012.
This supplement is sponsored by IDP Education. IDP Education is one of the world’s leading international student placement services, enrolling students in educational institutions in the UK, the US, Australia, Canada and New Zealand. IDP is also a one-third shareholder in IELTS, the world’s largest English language proficiency test.
Andrew Thompson, Chief Executive of IDP Education, said: “IDP, as one of the world’s leading international student placement services and co-owner of the IELTS English test, is delighted to again be the sponsor of THE’s World University Rankings supplement. WUR is a powerful resource for international students, helping them choose the university which is the best match for their needs.”
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