World University Rankings 2023: the opportunities and threats ahead

Biggest ever World University Ranking reveals how Africa rises as US’ crown slips

十月 12, 2022
Times Square, New York
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World University Rankings 2023: results announced

Browse the full results of the World University Rankings 2023

Download a copy of the World University Rankings 2023 report

In the 1990s British newspapers published “magic eye” pictures – diagrams made up of thousands of small dots from which, if you squinted, 3D images would emerge. Comprehensive datasets offer something similar: when sliced in the right way, millions of datapoints reveal trends and insights. That is what we aim to do with the World University Rankings: our 13 metrics, grouped into five pillars, combine data on 1,799 universities from 104 countries and regions. It is a goldmine of revealing trends.

This year, the data show that many countries are in strong positions when it comes to higher education, but they also suggest that America’s crown is slipping.

China, Saudi Arabia and UAE all continue to climb, although cracks may be starting to appear in the Chinese system.

Africa is showing a marked improvement, with the largest increment in universities ranked, up from 71 to 97. Five countries entered the rankings for the first time ever, all of them African: Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

Although things are looking bright, the ranking data are only just beginning to reflect the chaos of the pandemic. And beyond Covid-19, war was started in Europe and other geopolitical tensions are bubbling.

The higher education landscape is certainly changing. So, what are the biggest opportunities and threats facing universities? We asked leaders from top institutions across the world to answer this question, in respect to four areas the World University Rankings measure: research, teaching, knowledge sharing and internationalisation.

We’ve heard from Brian Schmidt, vice-chancellor of the Australian National University and Nobel prizewinner, who fears that prioritising applied research over basic will hamstring progress. He believes the modern world treats entrepreneurs as kings, but it is academics who hold the keys to solving humanity’s problems.

Meric Gertler of the University of Toronto is positive that research will be boosted by the steady rise in international collaboration, the power of which was made apparent during the pandemic. He is deeply concerned about rising geopolitical tensions, however, saying the effects on international research collaboration of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine are already being felt.

Rianne Letschert, president of Maastricht University in the Netherlands, sees getting internationalisation right as the greatest challenge in the coming years, but is clear that the motive should not be revenue.

We also interviewed four vice-chancellors of top universities who happen to be stepping down imminently (a decision they made unrelated to their interviews with THE!). You can hear what Louise Richardson of the University of Oxford, Stephen Toope of the University of Cambridge, Andrew Hamilton of New York University, and Alice Gast of Imperial College London all think of the challenges ahead.

Change is certainly afoot for global higher education, but armed with data, hopefully we can stay one step ahead of the trends.

Countries/regions represented

Country/region

Number of institutions in top 200

Top institution

Rank

United States

58

Harvard University

2

United Kingdom

28

University of Oxford

1

Germany

22

Technical University of Munich

30

China

11

Tsinghua University

16

Australia

10

University of Melbourne

34

Netherlands

10

Wageningen University & Research

59

Canada

7

University of Toronto

18

South Korea

6

Seoul National University

56

Switzerland

6

ETH Zurich

=11

France

5

Paris Sciences et Lettres – PSL Research University Paris

47

Hong Kong

5

University of Hong Kong

31

Sweden

5

Karolinska Institute

49

Belgium

4

KU Leuven

42

Austria

3

University of Vienna

=124

Denmark

3

University of Copenhagen

=114

Spain

3

University of Barcelona

182

Italy

2

University of Bologna

=161

Japan

2

The University of Tokyo

39

Singapore

2

National University of Singapore

19

Finland

1

University of Helsinki

110

Ireland

1

Trinity College Dublin

=161

New Zealand

1

University of Auckland

=139

Norway

1

University of Oslo

126

Russian Federation

1

Lomonosov Moscow State University

=163

Saudi Arabia

1

King Abdulaziz University

=101

South Africa

1

University of Cape Town

160

Taiwan

1

National Taiwan University (NTU)

=187

后记

Print headline: Magic eye on changes

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