Five out of six New Zealand universities have dropped further
down the rankings in a global survey - but Otago University
has bucked the trend by climbing five places.
The QS World University Rankings ranks 700 global
universities against each other after interviewing 33,000
global academics and 16,000 graduate employees.
The University of Auckland is the only New Zealand
institution in the top 100, and dropped 14 spaces to 82 this
year.
The University of Otago is the only one to gain, moving up
five places to 130.
Victoria University in Wellington and Canterbury University
dropped more than 10 points each, and sit outside the top
200.
QS vice president John Molony said the New Zealand
universities had performed well since the ranking list began
in 2004 but appeared to be losing ground this year.
"Even if New Zealand universities are maintaining their
investment and performance or improving slightly this does
not appear to be enough to keep up with the global pack in
the current environment.''
The rankings are based on four quantitative areas; research,
teaching, employability and internationalisation.
The research ranking, measured in terms of citations per
faculty, dropped across all six universities, and the
universities are not doing well in the teacher-student ratio
or the international student ratio said Mr Molony.
Tertiary education union national president Sandra Grey said
one of the reasons behind the slide was the trend of more
students to every teacher after a tightening of university
budgets.
"In New Zealand over the last few years, as the squeeze has
gone on in terms of financing and the money that's going to
these institutions, we're seeing staff more and more
pressured and unable to give a good balance to the work that
they're doing.''
Canterbury University has been reported to be losing 350
staff over the next three years.
The declining figures could be a sign that the New Zealand
system isn't working and needs to be evaluated, she said.
"But if we're seeing this type of backward movement, we might
have to question whether really whether we've got our focus
right. Whether New Zealand really is focusing on what will
make us world-class institutions.''
She said that in the United States there was more public and
private money given to universities to make sure they were
well-resourced.
Tertiary Education minister Steven Joyce said this was one of
many ratings systems around the world, and they often worked
against each other.
He said he thought the Government and the nation had the
right approach with the current university system.
"It is a very competitive world out there and it's something
that the universities are very aware of and we're aware of as
well. But I think certainly if you look at the funding
increases we've been able to provide despite being in the
grip of a financial crisis...we're doing pretty well.''
He said university funding from tuition had gone up from $942
million in 2008 to $1.9 billion in 2011.
The University of Cambridge in Britain tops the list,
followed by United States institutions Harvard University and
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
The Australian National University is the top-ranked
institution across the ditch, coming in at 26, and is one of
five Aussie education providers in the top 50.
Top 5 universities:
1 - University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
2 - Harvard University, United States
3 - Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), United
States
4 - Yale University, United States
5 - University of Oxford, United Kingdom
New Zealand rankings:
The University of Auckland: 82, in 2010: 68
The University of Otago: 130, in 2010: 135
University of Canterbury: 212, in 2010: 189
Victoria University of Wellington: 237, in 2010: 225
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