What's new

Indian Universities Still Lag in World Rankings

fast

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Apr 5, 2011
Messages
1,033
Reaction score
0
None of India's universities appear in the top-200 lists of the leading world university ranking surveys, compiled by Times Higher Education, Quacquarelli Symonds and Shanghai Jiao Tong University.

Indian institutions fare worse than their counterparts in South Korea, Turkey and Israel, not to mention those in Brazil, Russia, China and South Africa, its companions among the so-called BRICS economies.

The results have caused dismay at the highest levels of government. India’s president, Pranab Mukherjee, speaking at Puducherry University’s convocation in September, said, “It is a sad reflection on us when the universal rankings of universities comes out.” Earlier this year, at a conference of academic heads of state-run universities, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh rued that “it is a sobering thought that not one Indian university figures in the top-200 universities of the world today.”

At 25.9 million, India has the world’s second-highest number of students enrolled in higher education, according to Ernst & Young. Yet although 58.9 percent of these students are enrolled in private colleges and universities, the smartest applicants are drawn to publicly funded ones, including the 17 much-lauded Indian Institutes of Technology (I.I.T.s) and the 13 Indian Institutes of Management (I.I.M.s). In the 2013 global rankings, only publicly funded institutions featured anywhere at all.

Competition to get into elite state-run colleges is fierce. Last year, 512,000 applicants sought admission for 9,647 spots in the 15 technology institutes and the Indian School of Mines. Indian news media regularly report on the exorbitant percentages required of graduating high school students to gain a spot at state-run institutions like Delhi University or Bombay University, sometimes upward of 99 percent in certain colleges for degrees in commerce or technology.

Although publicly funded colleges and universities are meant to be autonomous, in reality the government has a degree of control. “Our education sector is, in some respects, overregulated and undergoverned,” said Shashi Tharoor, head of the Ministry of Human Resource Development, which oversees higher education, in a telephone interview. “We need to be less regulated and better governed.”

The three ranking surveys use methodologies that emphasize academic research and faculty citation in journals, followed by other measures like employer reputation, academic reputation, faculty-student ratio, and the international composition of faculty and students. Indian universities lose out on many of these fronts. In addition to lack of research citations, they perform badly on other metrics like faculty-to-student ratios and lack of internationalism.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/25/w...nd-in-world-rankings.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

Indian Universities Not Among the Best | careermitra.com

According to a recently concluded survey for arriving at the annual list of the world’s top 400 universities, no Indian University had made into the top 100 universities. Only IIT Bombay managed to get into the 301 to 350 university pool, the survey has been conducted by Times Higher Education magazine. Till last year the magazine ranked only 200 universities world wide only this year Times Magazine ranked 400 universities.

IITs are considered to be the the premier Institutes in India but the world sees far lesser than the hype that has been given to these Institutes of national importance. Recently Infosys Emeritus Chairman Narayana Murthy made remarkable comments on the quality of students entering the IITs, he had expressed his views in an IIT Summit which was held in New York. Mr. Murthy had slammed the coaching Institutes which train students just to solve problems for the sake of clearing IITJEE instead of emphasizing on overall career development. Mr. Murthy has also called for a better selection process for IITs.

The top 5 universities this year



World Rank Institution Country / Region Overall score
1 California Institute of Technology United States
94.8
2 Harvard University United States
93.9
2 Stanford University United States
93.9
4 University of Oxford United Kingdom
93.6
5 Princeton University United States
92.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom