Latest global university rankings: MIT & Harvard share top spot, Russia and China record best-ever performances
PR88232
LONDON, March 4, 2021 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/ --
QS Quacquarelli Symonds – international higher education think-tank – have
today released the eleventh edition of the QS World University Rankings by
Subject [https://www.topuniversities.com/subject-rankings/2021]: an extensive
independent comparative analysis on the performance of 13,883 individual
university programs, taken by students at 1440 universities in 85 locations
across the world, across 51 academic disciplines. They are part of the annual
QS World University Rankings portfolio, which was consulted over 147 million
times in 2020, and covered 98,000 times by media and institutions.
Global Highlights
- Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology are the
strongest-performing institutions across the exercise, ranking number-one in
twelve subjects.
- The United Kingdom's higher education sector remains resilient. 13 of the 51
subject tables are topped by a British university, with the University of
Oxford leading five of those 13.
- Chinese higher education continues to reach new heights, with the sector
attaining a record number of programs now achieving a top-50 rank.
- No university has a larger number of top-50 departments than Canada's
University of Toronto (46).
- Switzerland's ETH Zurich is continental Europe's top university, achieving
number-one spots for Geology, Geophysics, and Earth & Marine Sciences. Based on
its share of top-10 ranks, Switzerland is the world's third-best higher
education sector.
- Australia now possesses its lowest number of programs ranking among the top
10 in the world in the last three years. Its total of 13 top-10 departments is
fewer than in 2020 (17), and 2019 (18). - Two-thirds of Australian National
University's programs have fallen year-on-year.
- Backed by strong endowments, two Singaporean universities hold number-one
positions: Nanyang Technological University is #1 for Materials Science, while
the National University of Singapore – - Asia's best-performing university – is
#1 for Petroleum Engineering.
- Conversely, Japanese higher education is in relative decline after decades of
underfunding for research and PhD students.
- India's Institutes of Eminence program is struggling to yield results, with
no increase in top-100 representation for India's public Institutes of
Eminence.
- Russian higher education continues to move from strength to strength, with a
record number of departments achieving top-20 places.
- Driven by world-class performances in Dentistry, Petroleum Engineering, and
Mining Engineering, Universidade de São Paulo (USP) has retained its status as
Latin America's best-performing university in this exercise.
- The University of Cape Town remains Africa's most competitive institution,
with 24 of its programs placing among the top-200.
Jack Moran, QS Spokesperson, said: "Observing performance trends across nearly
14,000 university departments enables us to draw some conclusions about the
commonalities between nations that are improving and nations that are not.
Three factors stand out. First, an international outlook – both in terms of
faculty body and research relationships – correlates strongly with improved
performance. Second, rising universities have received strong targeted
investment from governments over a decade or more – particularly in China,
Russia, and Singapore. Third, improving relationships with industry is
correlated with better employment, research, and innovation outcomes."
Methodology: https://www.TopUniversities.com/subject-rankings/methodology.
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Source: QS Quacquarelli Symonds
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