The Straits
Times
Tuesday, June 14
The National University of Singapore (NUS) has kept the
top spot in an annual ranking of Asian universities, while Nanyang
Technological University (NTU) moved up one place to third.
Singapore Management University (SMU) entered the
rankings for the first time in 60th place.
London-based education and career consultancy
Quacquarelli Symonds (QS), which is releasing its rankings this
morning, has expanded the top Asian universities list to include
the region's 350 best universities, 50 more than in the previous
year.
QS has also added another metric - staff with a PhD -
in order to add another dimension to its analyses of teaching
quality.
The QS Asia University Rankings uses 10 key performance
indicators to compare Asian universities, including academic
reputation, employer reputation, faculty-student ratio, papers per
faculty, the proportion of international faculty and students, and
proportion of inbound and outbound exchange students.
QS said NUS, ranked No. 1 for the third year running,
achieved a perfect score in four metrics: academic reputation;
employer reputation; citations per paper, which measures research
impact; and international faculty, measuring an institution's
ability to attract staff worldwide.
NTU also achieved a perfect score in four metrics:
employer reputation; citations per paper; international faculty;
and the proportion of outbound exchange students, which is used to
assess a university's success in forging international partnerships
with universities worldwide.
NUS president Tan Chorh Chuan said strong government
support has enabled the local universities to push for
excellence.
He added: "At NUS, our priority is in preparing
future-ready graduates and developing top talent, driving
innovation and forging strategic collaborations with academic and
industry partners, and delivering impact from world-class
research."
NTU president Bertil Andersson noted that NTU, despite
strong competition from older and more established universities,
stands out as No. 1 in Asia for citations per paper.
"This good result is further proof that NTU's
investments in research have paid off," he said.
Asked to comment on SMU's debut in the rankings, QS
said it included the 16-year-old institution this year as it now
offers degrees in information systems and social sciences.
It called SMU's 60th placing a "great achievement" as
it is not a comprehensive university.
It added that SMU ranks 25th regionally for citations
per paper and had perfect scores for two indicators of
internationalisation: international faculty and outbound exchange
students.
SMU provost Lily Kong said the university "is highly
committed to delivering high-quality teaching and research, for
which ranking is only one possible - if imperfect - indicator".
The University of Hong Kong retained its second place,
while China's Tsinghua University rose six places to fifth.
The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology was
placed fourth.