The THE world rankings and their regional offshoots have always been a source of entertainment mixed with a little bit of bewilderment. Every year a succession of improbable places jumps into the upper reaches of the citations indicator which is supposed to measure global research impact. Usually it is possible to tell what happened Often it is because of participation in a massive international physics project, although not so much over the last couple of years, contribution to a global medical or genetics survey, or even assiduous self-citation.
However, after checking with Scopus and the Web of Science, I still cannot see exactly how Babol Noshirvani University of Technology got into 14th place for this metric, equal to Oxford and ahead of Yale and Johns Hopkins, in the latest world rankings and 301-350 overall, well ahead of every other Iranian university?
Can anybody help with an explanation?
Discussion and analysis of international university rankings and topics related to the quality of higher education. Anyone wishing to contact Richard Holmes without worrying about ending up in comments can go to rjholmes2000@yahoo.com
Friday, September 08, 2017
Tuesday, September 05, 2017
Highlights from THE citations indicator
The latest THE world rankings were published yesterday. As always, the most interesting part is the field- and year- normalised citations indicator that supposedly measures research impact.
Over the last few years, an array of implausible places have zoomed into the top ranks of this metric, sometimes disappearing as rapidly as they arrived.
The first place for citations this year goes to MIT. I don't think anyone would find that very controversial.
Here are some of the institutions that feature in the top 100 of THE's most important indicator which has a weighting of 30 per cent.
2nd St. George's, University of London
3rd= University of California Santa Cruz, ahead of Berkeley and UCLA
6th = Brandeis University, equal to Harvard
11th= Anglia Ruskin University, UK, equal to Chicago
14th= Babol Noshirvani University of Technology, Iran, equal to Oxford
16th= Oregon Health and Science University
31st King Abdulaziz University, Saudi Arabia
34th= Brighton and Sussex Medical School, UK, equal to Edinburgh
44th Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Italy, ahead of the University of Michigan
45th= Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology, best in South Korea
58th= University of Kiel, best in Germany and equal to King's College London
67th= University of Iceland
77th= University of Luxembourg, equal to University of Amsterdam
Thursday, August 24, 2017
Comment by Christian Scholz
This comment is by Christian Schulz of the University of Hamburg. He points that the University of Hamburg's rise in the Shanghai rankings was not the result of highly cited researchers moving from other institutions but the improvement of research within the university.
If this is something that applies to other German universities, then it could be that Germany has a policy of growing its own researchers rather than importing talent from around the world. It seems to have worked very well for football so perhaps the obsession of British universities with importing international researchers is not such a good idea..
If this is something that applies to other German universities, then it could be that Germany has a policy of growing its own researchers rather than importing talent from around the world. It seems to have worked very well for football so perhaps the obsession of British universities with importing international researchers is not such a good idea..
I just wanted to share with you, that we did not acquire two researchers to get on the HCR List to get a higher rank in the Shanghai Ranking. Those two researchers are Prof. Büchel and Prof. Ravens-Sieberer. Prof. Büchel is working at our university for over a decade now and Prof. Ravens-Sieberer is at our university since 2008.
Please also aknowledge, that our place in the Shanghai Ranking was very stable from 2010-2015. We were very unpleasent, when they decided to only use the one-year list of HCR, because in 2015 none of our researchers made it on the 2015-list, which caused the descend from 2015 to 2016.
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