LONDON/PRNewswire/
--
Singapore leads, China rises, Japan stalls
and India struggles
National
University of Singapore confirms its leadership
as Asia's top
institution in the seventh QS
University Rankings: Asia published today on http://www.TopUniversities.com
(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20140618/691283 )
NUS's success is mirrored by Nanyang
Technological University which climbs to
4th, its highest ever position. While Singapore is
holding firmly to the gold medal, its rival education
hub, Hong
Kong, claims silver with Hong Kong
University placing second, followed
by Hong Kong
University of Science and
Technology (5th), Chinese
University of Hong Kong (6th) and
City University
of Hong Kong (9th). Korea takes the bronze
medal with KAIST(3rd),
Seoul National
University (8th) and Postech
(10th).
2015
2014 Top 10
1
1
NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF
SINGAPORE
SG
2
3
UNIVERSITY OF HONG
KONG
HK
3
2
KAIST - KOREA ADVANCED
INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
KR
4
7
NANYANG TECHNOLOGICAL
UNIVERSITY
SG
5
5
THE HONG KONG
UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
HK
6
6
THE CHINESE UNIVERSITY
OF HONG KONG
HK
7
8
PEKING
UNIVERSITY
CN
8
4
SEOUL NATIONAL
UNIVERSITY
KR
9
11
CITY UNIVERSITY OF
HONG KONG
HK
10
9
POHANG UNIVERSITY OF
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY (POSTECH)
KR
©QS
Quacquarelli Symonds 2004-2015 http://www.TopUniversities.com
There
are 25 Chinese institutions among the top 100 and 16 of them have
improved their position this year, mainly due to a surge in
research citations.
Peking University (7th) gains one position while
Tsinghua University (11th) rises three places.
"The majority of the ranked Chinese institutions are increasing
their research output, spurred by the impressive and sustained
level of public and private investment, second only to the US" says
QS head of research Ben
Sowter. "However, the country's leading universities
are still lagging behind in terms of research citation numbers,
which reveal the impact of the research they produce."
By
contrast, only 9 Indian institutions feature among the top 100,
with the Indian Institute of Science (34th),emerging as
the country's leading representative.
Japan remains
the second most represented country in the rankings with 68
institutions, behind China which
now boasts 74. Yet, fourteen of the nineteen Japanese universities
featured among the top 100, lost ground compared to 2014.
Taiwan continues
to pull above its weight, with 28 institutions ranked, including 12
among the top 100.
While Malaysia has
21 listed, with six in top 100.
The other countries featured among the top 300
are: Thailand (11
universities), Pakistan (10), Indonesia (7),Vietnam and Bangladesh (2), Sri
Lanka, Brunei and Macau (1).