THE World University Rankings explained

Learn about how the Times Higher Education World University Rankings are put together and how you can use them to help your students find their best-fit universities

Seeta Bhardwa's avatar

Seeta Bhardwa

THE Counsellor
27 Feb 2024
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Before students even hit their 20s, they are faced with one of the most important decisions of their lives: which university to choose. And school counsellors are instrumental in helping students to make this choice. 

For 20 years, the Times Higher Education World University Rankings have been providing young people and their families with trusted guidance to help with this decision.

The rankings grow and adapt every single year to include more countries and more universities. 

This enables you to evaluate a greater range of institutions, whether your students are looking to study abroad or domestically.

With our in-house data team, we can ensure even greater transparency over the core raw data. More of this raw data is now publicly available as “key statistics” for each university: the number of students, the student gender ratio, the staff-to-student ratio and the percentage of international students.

Each university is judged in five categories covering the core missions of all world-class, global universities: Teaching (the learning environment); Research Environment (volume, income and reputation); Research Quality (citation impact, research strength, research excellence and research influence); International Outlook (staff, students and research); and Industry Income (income and patents).

The scores in these categories for each ranked university are available under “performance breakdown”. This means that, in addition to browsing universities by overall rank or searching for a specific institution, you can sort the table by the different metrics to make a decision based on particular priorities.

The full methodology can be found here

WUR methodology

 

Teaching: the learning environment

For any student and any subject, the most relevant factor is the teaching environment: what it is like to learn at the university.

The Teaching metric is measured by five performance indicators: teaching reputation, staff-to-student ratio, doctorate-to-bachelors ratio, doctorates-awarded-to-academic-staff ratio and institutional income. 

These give a good indication of the prestige, facilities and resources of the teaching environment, all of which will have a direct impact on the student.

This category is also underpinned by the Academic Reputation Survey, which asks scholars from around the world to share which institutions they believe are excelling in teaching and learning. 

Research Environment

A university might excel in teaching but not in research: a good teacher does not necessarily a good researcher make. But the quality and volume of research at an institution is nonetheless relevant for students seeking the best academic experiences. 

If students have the opportunity to learn from leading researchers, they will benefit both intellectually and practically. They will learn not just about the research they are doing, but will also pick up essential skills that will benefit them in any careers they choose. 

At the best research institutions, students will also be able to take advantage of resources and facilities available only in such environments.

The Research Environment metric is measured through research reputation, research income and research productivity. 

Research Quality

The ultimate test of the quality of research is its impact, for all research aims to be influential and important.

The Research Quality category looks at citation impact, research strength, research excellence and research influence. 

The greater the number of citations of a university’s work, the more likely it is that you will engage with scholars who are leading and expanding the discussions in the field.

The last three metrics were new metrics for 2023 and look at how research from a university is used and the volume of output each year. 

International Outlook

Universities are no longer compared just with rivals in their own cities, or even their own countries; world-leading universities are competing globally and attracting students and researchers from across the world.

International Outlook is therefore a mark of a top institution, relevant both to international and domestic students.

It is measured by three indicators: proportion of international students, proportion of international staff and international collaboration. 

The benefits of an international environment on campus range from cultivating open-minded discussions with diverse opinions to improving cross-cultural relations.

But at a more basic level, an isolated institution without international connections simply cannot count itself among the world’s best universities in an increasingly global and mobile world.

Industry Income

Industry income is increasingly becoming a priority for universities and students. It indicates the commercial impact of an institution’s research, which is itself a reflection of the industrial value of the research.

The Industry Income indicator is of fundamental importance if students want to understand the real-world application of research and how much a university is dedicated to supporting their local and national economies. 

This category is calculated by collecting data across two metrics: industry income and patents. 

The Subject Rankings

In addition to the THE World University Rankings, 11 individual subject rankings allow you to delve deeper across different disciplines: Arts and Humanities; Clinical, Pre-clinical and Health; Engineering and Technology; Life Sciences; Physical Sciences; Social Sciences; Law; Psychology; Education; Computer Science; and Business and Economics.

The 13 performance indicators are the same, but the weighting of each indicator is adjusted for the particular features and priorities of the discipline.

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