由英国《泰晤士报高等教育》等机构合办的“世界大学排名2009”日前揭晓,以学术表现、雇主评价、学生及教授国际化程度、师生比例及论文引用情况等为全球大学排名,是目前最权威的相关信息之一。
今年排名榜仍以美国哈佛大学居首,哈佛大学已连续6年成为全球最佳大学;英国剑桥大学则替代美国耶鲁大学排名第2位,后者退居第3位。排名前10位的大学中,美国占6所,英国占4所。
大陆高校中,有6所入围前200名。分别为:并列49位的清华大学;并列52位的北京大学;并列103位的复旦大学;153位的上海交通大学;154位的中国科技大学以及并列168位的南京大学。
香港高校在排名榜上有出色表现,香港大学、香港科技大学及香港中文大学再次位列50强,其中排名第24位的香港大学在亚洲仅次于排名第22位的日本东京大学,也是继2007年后再次进入前25位;香港科技大学的排名则由2006年的第58位升至今年的第35位;香港中文大学排名第46位,比2008年略降4位。此外,香港城市大学排名第124位,比去年上升23位。
World University Rankings 2009
Rankings 09: Talking points
The World University Rankings are compiled using a mixture of quantitative indicators and informed opinion
What makes a world-class university? When Times Higher Education asked the leaders of top-ranked institutions this question last year, one response stood out for its inspirational qualities.
Robert Zimmer, president of the University of Chicago, said that his institution was "driven by a singular focus on the value of open, rigorous and intense inquiry. Everything about the university that we recognise as distinctive flows from this."
He said that Chicago believed that "argumentation rather than deference is the route to clarity", that "arguments stand or fall on their merits" and that the university recognised that "our contributions to society rest on the power of our ideas and the openness of our environment to developing and testing ideas".
His answer prompted much praise. One Times Higher Education reader said that Zimmer's "glorious affirmation" was "marvellously refreshing" and had "brought joy to my heart, tears to my eyes and a renewed sense of commitment to the life of the mind".
But glorious as Zimmer's statement was, it also served to highlight the problem faced by the increasing number of people and organisations now in the business of ranking higher education institutions: how on earth do you measure such intangible things?
The short answer, of course, is that you cannot. What you can do, however, and what we have sought to do with these rankings, is to try to capture the more tangible and measurable elements that make a modern, world-class university.
When Times Higher Education first conceived its annual World University Rankings with QS in 2004, we identified "four pillars" that supported the foundations of a leading international institution. They are hardly controversial: high-quality research; high-quality teaching; high graduate employability; and an "international outlook".
Much more controversial are the measurements we chose for our rankings, and the balance between quantitative and qualitative measures.
To judge research excellence, we examine citations - how many times an academic's published work is cited.
We calculate this element - worth 20 per cent of the overall score - by taking the total number of citations for all papers published from the institution, and then dividing the figure by the number of full-time equivalent staff at the institution. This gives a sense of the density of research excellence on a campus.
Our proxy for teaching excellence is a simple measure of staff-to-student ratio. It is not perfect, but it is based on data that can be collected for all institutions, often via national bodies, and compared fairly. Our assumption is that it tells us something meaningful about the quality of the student experience. At the most basic level, it at least gives a sense as to whether an institution has enough teaching staff to give students the attention they require. This measure is worth 20 per cent of the overall score.
To get a sense of a university's international outlook, we measure the proportion of overseas staff a university has on its books (making up 5 per cent of the total score) and the proportion of international students it has attracted (making up another 5 per cent). This gives an impression of how attractive an institution is around the world, and suggests how much the institution has embraced the globalisation agenda.
But 50 per cent of the final score is made up from qualitative data from surveys of informed people - university academics and graduate employers.
The fundamental tenet of this ranking, as we have said in previous years, is that academics know best when it comes to identifying the best institutions.
So the biggest part of the ranking score - worth 40 per cent - is based on the result of an academic peer review survey. We consult academics around the world, from lecturers to university presidents, and ask them to name up to 30 institutions they regard as being the best in the world in their field.
Responses over the past three years are aggregated, although only the most recent response from anyone who has responded more than once is used. For our 2009 tables, we have drawn on responses from 9,386 people. With each person nominating an average of 13 institutions, this means that we can draw on about 120,000 data points.
The ranking also includes the results of an employer survey of 3,281 major graduate employers, making up 10 per cent of the overall result.
• Times Higher Education-QS World University Rankings 2009: full coverage and tables
THE SCORECARD
THE SCORECARD