The latest edition of the Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings has just been published, along with a big dose of self-flattery and
congratulations to the winners of what is beginning to look more like a lottery
than an objective exercise in comparative assessment.
The background to the story is
that at the end of last year THE broke with their data suppliers Thomson Reuters (TR) and
announced the dawn of a new era of transparency and accountability
There were quite a few things wrong
with the THE rankings, especially with the citations indicator which supposedly measured research impact and was given
nearly a third of the total weighting. This meant that THE was faced with a
serious dilemma. Keeping the old methodology would be a problem but radical
reform would raise the question of why THE would want to change what they claimed was a uniquely trusted and sophisticated methodology with carefully calibrated indicators.
It seems that THE have decided to
make a limited number of changes but to postpone making a decision about other
issues.
They have broadened the academic
reputation survey, sending out forms in more languages and getting more
responses from outside the USA. Respondents are now drawn from those with publications
in the Scopus database, much larger than the Web of Science, as was information
about publications and citations. In addition, THE have excluded 649 “freakish” multi
– author papers from their calculations and diluted the effect of the regional modification
that boosted the scores in the citations indicator of low performing countries.
These changes have led to implausible fluctuations with some institutions rising or falling dozens or hundreds of places. Fortunately for THE, the latest winners are happy to trumpet their success and the losers so far seem to have lapsed into an embarrassed silence.
When they were published on the 30th
of September the rankings provided lots of headline fodder about who was up or
down.
The Irish Times announced that the rankings showed Trinity College Dublin had fallen while University College Dublin was rising.
In the Netherlands the University of
Twente bragged about its “sensationally higher scores”.
Study
International asserted that “Asia Falters” and that Britain and the US were still
dominant in higher education.
The London Daily Telegraph claimed that
European universities were matching the US.
The Hindu found something to boast about
by noting that India was at last the equal of co-BRICS member Brazil.
Russian media celebrated the
remarkable achievement of Lomonosov Moscow State University in rising 35 places.
And, of course, the standard THE narrative was trotted out again. British universities are wonderful
but they will only go on being wonderful if they are given as much money as
they want and are allowed to admit as many overseas students as they want.
The latest rankings support this narrative
of British excellence by showing Oxford and Cambridge overtaking Harvard, which
was pushed into sixth place. But is such a claim believable? Has anything happened
in the labs or lecture halls at any of those places between 2014 and 2015 to cause
such a shift?
In reality, what probably happened
was that the Oxbridge duo were not actually doing anything better this year but
that Harvard’s eclipse came from a large drop from 92.9 to 83.6 points for THE’s
composite teaching indicator. Did Harvard’s teaching really deteriorate over twelve
months? It is more likely that there were relatively fewer American
respondents in the THE survey but one cannot be sure because there are four
other statistics bundled into the indicator.
While British universities appeared to do well, French ones appeared to perform disastrously. The École Normale Supérieure
recorded a substantial gain going from 78th to 54th place
but every other French institution in the rankings fell, sometimes by dozens of places. École Polytechnique went from
61st place to 101st, Université Paris-Sud from 120th to 188th , the University of Strasbourg from the 201-225 band to 301-350, in every case because of a
substantial fall in the citations indicator. If switching to Scopus was intended to help non-English speaking countries it did not do France any good.
Meanwhile, the advance of Asia has apparently come to an end or gone into screeching reverse. Many Asian universities slipped down the ladder although the top Chinese schools held their ground. Some Japanese and Korean
universities fell dozens of places. The University of Tokyo went from 23rd
to 43rd place, largely because of a fall in the citations indicator from 74.7 points to 60.9 and the University of Kyoto from 59th to 88th with another drop in the score for citations. Among the casualties was Tokyo Metropolitan University which used to advertise its perfect score of 100 for citations on the THE website. This year, stripped of the citations for mega-papers in physics, its citation score dropped to a rather tepid 72.2.
The Korean flagships have also foundered. Seoul National University fell 35 places and the Korean Advanced Institute of Technology 66, largely because of a decline in the scores for teaching and research. Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH) fell 50 places, losing points in all indicators except income from industry
The most catastrophic fall was in
Turkey. There were four Turkish universities in the top 200 last year. All of
them have dropped out. Several Turkish universities contributed to the Large Hadron
Collider project with its multiple authors and multiple citations and they also benefited from producing comparatively few
research papers and from the regional modification, which gave them artificially high scores for the citations indicator in 2014 but not this year.
The worst case was Middle East Technical
University which had the 85th place in 2014, helped by an outstanding
score of 92 for citations and reasonable scores for the other indicators. This year
it was in the 501-600 band with reduced scores for everything except Industry
Income and a very low score of 28.8 for citations.
The new rankings appear to have
restored the privilege given to medical research. In the upper reaches we find
St George’s, University of London, a medical school, which according to THE is the world's leading university for research impact, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, a teaching hospital affiliated to Humboldt University and the Free University of Berlin, and Oregon Health and Science University.
It also appears that THE's methodology continues to gives an undeserved advantage to small or specialized institutions such as Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna in Pisa, which does not appear to be a truly independent university, the Copenhagen Business School, and Rush University in Chicago, the academic branch of a private hospital.
These rankings appear so far to have got a good reception in the mainstream press, although it is likely that that before long we will hear some negative reactions from independent experts and from Japan, Korea, France, Italy and the Middle East.
THE, however, have just postponed the hard decisions that they will eventually have to make.