Thousands of high school students are currently deliberating over which university to attend next year. But which are the best? A study published in the open access journal BMC Medicine warns against using international rankings of universities to answer this question. They are misleading and should be abandoned, the study concludes.
The study focuses on the published 2006 rankings of the Times Higher Education Supplement "World University Rankings" and the Shanghai Jiao Tong University "Academic Ranking of World Universities". It found that only 133 institutions were shared between the top-200 lists of the Shanghai and Times rankings; four of the top-50 in the Shanghai list did not even appear among the first 500 universities of the Times ranking.
The study's authors argue that such discrepancies stem from poor methodology and inappropriate indicators, making the ranking systems invalid.
The Shanghai system, for example, measures research excellence in part by the number of Nobel- and Fields-winning alumni at the institution. However, few universities boast laureates on their staff, and their presence does not necessarily lead to better undergraduate education. Furthermore, the prize-winning staff usually have performed their ground-breaking work at another institution, so the measurement really addresses the ability of institutions to attract prestigious awardees rather than being the site where ground-breaking work is done.
The Times ranking, on the other hand, places great emphasis on the results of a survey sent out to more than 190,000 researchers. They are asked to list what they think are the top 30 universities in their field of research. Yet this survey is entirely opinion-based, and with a response rate below 1% may contain significant bias.
"There are flaws in the way that almost every indicator is used to compile these two popular rankings," says John Ioannidis, who led the analysis team. "I don't disagree that excellence is important to define, measure, interpret and improve, but the existing ranking criteria could actually harm science and education."
The study authors call for global collaboration to standardise data on key aspects of universities and other institutions, and any flaws should be openly admitted and not underestimated. "Evaluation exercises should not force spurious averages and oversimplified rankings for the many faces of excellence," says Ioannidis. "And efforts to improve institutions should not focus just on the numbers being watched."
Comments
Ranking
May 12, 2009 by Anonymous, 25 weeks 4 days ago
Comment id: 36597
How do you rank universities from the developing world, whose graduates end up in the most selective universities for graduate work, or who end up passing the competitive professional exams in the most industrialized countries ? . To me, if universities in resource poor settings can produce high quality graduates who are competitive against the graduates of the most selective and monied schools, then the universitities of the developing world are doing a superb job, and may in fact be better at teaching students !
There needs to be a separation of teaching quality (but how do we judge this?) from research quality in the overall assessment. The rankings are good to the extent that they encourage healthy competition to improve global academic standards. They must not be used to decide university choice, student recruitment, as the parameters measured are not always universally applicable or objective. Citations is subjective and sometimes 'nationalistic". Acceptance of papers to top journals is not totally based on novelty or impact, geographical and nominal factors play a role.
All that is required is a list of league tables - top universities in different fields- based on teaching of their students, and the objective outcome of such teaching (such as scores achieved on USMLE 1 and 2) , GRE, etc. A separate league table for research universities that is field oriented is also useful, but numerical ranking of universities is misleading and confusing to those not so familiar with academic analytics and its limitations.
International Ranking
May 8, 2009 by Anonymous, 26 weeks 1 day ago
Comment id: 36545
It's simply wrong to rank universities, PERIOD! However, if you must that it shuold be done properly.
The THES and other rankings are heavily biased towards westernised institutions leaving out top universties where the primary publication and teaching language isn't English.
In addition, considering the vast amount of Universities around the world, you will need a substantially large pool of academics, representing all the countries that have universities in order to perform a fair evaluation.
It's simply statistics. The evil thing is that QS and THES are well aware of the tremendous shortfalls of their methdology yet they continue to publish because the rankings generate a lot of income for them ~ exploiting the lack of public statistical knowledge.
THES Ranking is more famous
February 23, 2009 by Anonymous, 36 weeks 5 days ago
Comment id: 34772
THES Ranking is more famous and representative than the other world ranking table- Shanghai Jiao Tong University Academic Ranking.
From:
http://gooduniversityguide.blogspot.com/
Schools and Colleges
December 30, 2008 by Anonymous, 44 weeks 4 days ago
Comment id: 33564
The final scores of world university ranking are compiled based on three years worth of responses from academics around the world to an online survey. But if you're searching online colleges and universities instead of a traditional college or university I would recommend for SchoolPursuit(dot)com. SchoolPursuit.com will have a searchable and comprehensive database of schools, degrees, and programs including both online schools and campuses.
Thank you,
Liza
Flaws in World Ranking
August 9, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 12 weeks ago
Comment id: 31450
World ranking such as the THES only included some top universities in the USA, not all top research universities from the USA. If not, many US univ will be in the list!
From: http://worldranking.blogspot.com
Ranking criticism
June 20, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 20 weeks ago
Comment id: 30748
There are many ranking league tables.
The most famous are SJTU & THES, I have made some comparisons between different league tables in my blog http://whichuniversitybest.blogspot.com.
Different ranking factors
October 27, 2007 by Anonymous, 2 years 1 week ago
Comment id: 25701
It is true that all the ranking systems use different factors for building their university ranking. When I was researching which universities are the best, I noticed that it really depends who you ask.
Therefore, if anyone wants to find a good university, they should first think about the factors that are important to them, and then find the ranking system that features these factors.
To make this easier, i started collecting university and college rankings on my blog http://thebestuniversity.blogspot.com .
Here, visitors can see which factors for ranking the different organizations use.
I would like your comment, or maybe you know new rankings that I should feature on The Best University blog.
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