Top 200 universities in the world 2016: the global trends
As the latest QS
world university rankings are released, we take an overview of the results –
and it looks like money talks.
Today, for the 13th time, the QS World University Rankings are released
into the world. Although there is often particular interest in the individual
institutional narratives thrown up by each iteration, closer examination of the
datasets also allows us to discern trends both potential and current from the
higher education landscape.
Perhaps the biggest trend this year is the regressive performance of
Western European institutions. France, Portugal, Germany, and Italy all suffer
to varying extents, but perhaps the most significant tremors are those felt by
the UK.
Taken alone, the University of Cambridge dropping from third to fourth
might represent a minor fluctuation, as might King’s College London falling out
of the top 20. Rather, the small but noticeable drops of 38 of their 48 top-400
universities suggests that storm clouds are gathering over the British higher
education system.
Of more significance, however, are the trends visible when one looks at the
dataset for citations per faculty, a measure of global research impact. Cambridge’s
drop in citations performance is more severe here, while, for the second
consecutive year, the UK has fewer top-100 research institutions than does
China. Across Western Europe, too, research performance as a whole remains
broadly static, while universities in other parts of the world are making
advances apace.
China’s rise is the best example of this, but the universities in Denmark,
Sweden, Belgium, and France also seem to be following a very different
trajectory to those in the United Kingdom, both reputationally and for research
performance.
What’s happening?
As far as the UK is concerned, Brexit is an inadequate explanation. Almost
all of the information used by QS for this year’s rankings was collected well
in advance of 23 June, while a number of their indicators track five years’
worth of data.
Perhaps the rankings indicate that national austerity policy is failing the
nation’s researchers, and the nation’s students.
This year’s £20 million increase to the Higher Education Funding Council
for England’s research budget is both the first since the coalition government
took charge in 2010, and still insufficient to compensate for the real-terms
cuts that came after the 2010-11 academic year. Factor six years of inflation
into the equation, and it becomes clear that the UK government is asking its
universities to do more with less.
The correlation holds across the world. Denmark and Sweden, two of the
three countries to have exceeded the European Unions’s research and development
spending targets, see 12 of their 13 universities improve their research
performance. France, which only recently reneged on the promise of €256m
(£200m) worth of education cuts after an outcry from the academic world – while
still cutting almost half of the proposed sum – sees consistent drops both
overall and for research impact.
The US, whose universities receive substantial private funding by means of
endowments, hold all of QS’s top three places for the first time. Brazil, in
the midst of its worst recession for decades and harbouring a higher education
system with troubling inequities in terms of both funding and access, sees
every single one of its ranked universities fall for research quality for the
second consecutive year.
Decreases in funding do not only affect QS’s research indicators. They also
affect, indirectly, other indicators like international faculty ratios and
academic reputation scores. A nation’s ability to provide world-class teaching
and research is, in part, contingent on its ability to attract outstanding
academics and students from abroad.
Before Brexit
Much has been made of the potential for Brexit to adversely affect the UK’s
desirability as a student destination, but this year’s rankings also indicate
that the UK is also – already – becoming a less attractive destination for
foreign academics. More than half of the UK’s universities are seeing drops in
their international faculty ratio score, and it is important to note that the
majority of the data used for this year’s rankings was sourced pre-Brexit.
It is difficult to foresee UK scores for indices of internationalisation
improving as research budgets remain static, as uncertainty remains for
students about the potential costs of tuition, and as uncertainty remains for
academics both national and international about their funding sources.
It is here, too, that the use of reputational indicators becomes of
essential importance. Governmental policy-makers, students both aspiring and
current, and university administrators would all do well to remain aware of
present feeling in the global academic community. QS’s Academic Reputation
survey is, to date, the world’s largest aggregation of feeling in this
community.
That well over two-thirds of Western European universities see their
standing among academics reduced suggests a number of troubling things about
the state of European academia. It is difficult to ignore the correlation
between increasing publishing pressures, reduced budgets, fears around the
seemingly relentless marketisation of higher education, and the belief that
Western Europe’s universities are becoming more stressful, less attractive
places for those academics upon whom they depend.
In The Guardian. Jack Moran. 5 Setembro 2016.
Marcadores: Aprende Mais; Explicações; Universidades
sexta-feira, 9 de setembro de 2016
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