Thursday, September 26, 2019

Trinity College Dublin: Time to forget about THE?:

Global rankings, especially THE's, have been very useful to British universities, at least to those sitting at the apex of the system. If a Russell Group university falls in the rankings then it is the fault of impending Brexit and/or the terrible austerity inflicted on the nation's research prowess. If it rises then this is cause for congratulation but with a hint of foreboding. How can they keep advancing with Ebenezer Scrooge controlling  the treasury and the bitter winds of Brexit howling at the door? The universities have reciprocated by not inquiring about how THE constructs its rankings, particularly the citations and industry income indicators. 

Across the Irish Sea, universities have for the most part also been loyal to THE. Trinity College Dublin (TCD) has continued to submit data to THE and also to QS and has passively accepted the results of the rankings even when they show the institution going down and down. The steady decline is usually blamed on the meanness of the Irish government and its failure to provide sufficient funds.

I have dealt with Trinity's misfortunes here,  herehere, and here, In 2015 TCD fell seven places in the QS world rankings and 22 in THE's. In contrast it had been rising in the Shanghai ARWU rankings since 2004 and in the Round University Rankings (RUR) since 2010, although everybody pretended not to notice this.

This year history repeats itself all over again. TCD has fallen in THE world rankings from 120th place to 164th. Again this supposedly is the fault of the Irish state to provide enough money.

But we get a very different picture when we look at the Shanghai Rankings. TCD has risen from 167th place to 154th, getting close to the 101-150 band. Leaving aside the Nobel and Fields Awards, Trinity has gained 6.6 points for highly cited researchers, 1.4 for publications, and 1.4 for productivity per capita. It has, however, fallen 0.6 for papers in Nature and Science.

Looking at RUR, TCD has risen from 75th to 57th for Research and 35th to 29th for international diversity. It has fallen slightly for financial sustainability from 191st to 197th and for Teaching from 275th to 335th, mainly because of a fall in the number of academic staff.

It seems perverse for TCD to keep on about its decline in the THE rankings when it can point to a steady rise in the Shanghai rankings which are not perfect but are certainly more stable, consistent and realistic than THE. 

Does THE really want to be judged by rankings that apparently think that Anadolu University is best for Innovation, Luxembourg for International Orientation and Aswan for research impact measured by Citations?

But if TCD really insist on sticking with THE then I suggest that they recruit a few researchers taking part in the Global Burden of Disease Study, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.*

They should also think about amalgamating with the Royal College of Surgeons.

*assuming no methodological change




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