TU/e suffers a further drop in the Times Higher Education ranking
Eindhoven has dropped from 167 to 186 in the annual World University Rankings published by British magazine Times Higher Education. Another Dutch university, namely the University of Twente, has dropped out of the top 200. A concerning development, says compiler Phil Baty.
The institution to lose its place amongst the global élite is the University of Twente. As a result, this year there are eleven Dutch universities in the top 200. Seven of these are in the top 100. This is the second year in a row that a Dutch institution has disappeared from the higher regions of the rankings.
Concerning
Wageningen is the new Dutch number one. It has taken over the lead from Delft, which drops nine places to a shared 67th position with Leiden. Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam has made the biggest leap forward, rising from 166 to 138. For the second year in a row, TU/e has made a significant drop, from 167th tot 186th position. And this while TU/e had climbed to 141st position in 2017.
The ranking looks not only at universities’ reputation, but also their staff-to-student ratio, the number of international students and tutors, cooperation with the business community and the impact of their scientific research. Dutch universities generally score well on citation impact, but lag behind when it comes to their educational environment. The business community has also been contributing less to research in recent years.
“The Netherlands’ performance is still very impressive,” says ranking compiler Phil Baty, “but the direction of travel is concerning.” In his view, the Dutch universities have some serious obstacles to overcome, especially with regard to accessibility for foreign students and academics.
Dip
According to the University of Twente (UT), one reason why it and the other Dutch technical universities, Delft and Eindhoven, have fallen back in this year’s rankings is their decreasing citation impact. A one-off dip in the number of PhD graduations and a growth in student numbers – which depresses the staff-to-student ratio score – also play a role, explains a spokesperson for the university.
Nevertheless, Twente still claims to be a world leader. “Given the young age of the UT and our modest size,” says the spokesperson, “we are vulnerable to newcomers. Also, small changes to the scores can have major repercussions for our position.” The university plans to focus even more strongly on publications in international scientific journals and intends to restore the numerical balance between students and academic staff. The resources being reserved by the Dutch government for the technical universities will help with this.
Superpowers
The rise of Asian universities in the Times Higher Educationrankings continues unabated: the number in this year’s top 200 has risen from two to 24. Baty emphasises, however, that the so-called “Anglo-Saxon superpowers” are not going to give up their lead any time soon. Oxford in the UK retains the number-one spot for the fourth year in a row, and the United States dominates the list with 60 institutions in the top 200 – fourteen of them among the first twenty.
Due to the fierce international competition, many European universities have slipped down the league table. “Economic instability and increasingly isolationist political tendencies on the continent threaten to undermine a great deal of the excellent work done by European universities”, says Baty. For Europe to continue to perform well, it must keep on attracting leading academics through investment in research as well as providing a welcoming environment for “people from all sections of the population”.
Of course, rankings of this kind also attract criticism. There are claims, for example, that researchers and universities use a variety of tricks to improve their scores. Moreover, educational achievements play little or no part in the assessments.
Dutch universities in the THE rankings
University | 2020 ranking | 2019 ranking |
Wageningen University & Research | 59 | =59 |
University of Amsterdam | =62 | 62 |
Delft University of Technology | =67 | 58 |
Leiden University | =67 | 68 |
Erasmus University Rotterdam | 69 | 70 |
University of Groningen | 73 | =79 |
Utrecht University | =75 | =74 |
Maastricht University | 127 | =128 |
Radboud University Nijmegen | =128 | =123 |
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam | 138 | 166 |
Eindhoven University of Technology | =186 | =167 |
Tilburg University | 201-250 | 201-250 |
University of Twente | 201-250 | =184 |
© HOP. Source: World University Rankings 2020, Times Higher Education (‘=’ means position shared).
Top-ten universities in the THE rankings
University | Country | 2020 ranking | 2019 ranking |
University of Oxford | United Kingdom | 1 | 1 |
California Institute of Technology | United States | 2 | 5 |
University of Cambridge | United Kingdom | 3 | 2 |
Stanford University | United States | 4 | 3 |
Massachusetts Institute of Technology | United States | 5 | 4 |
Princeton University | United States | 6 | 7 |
Harvard University | United States | 7 | 6 |
Yale University | United States | 8 | 8 |
University of Chicago | United States | 9 | 10 |
Imperial College London | United Kingdom | 10 | 9 |
© HOP. Source: World University Rankings 2020, Times Higher Education.
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