NZ universities rise in world rankings

The University of Otago is ranked 151st in the world.
The University of Otago is ranked 151st in the world.

New Zealand universities are climbing up the world rankings as academics focus more on world-leading research.

Five of the country's eight universities have risen in the latest QS rankings. Waikato University is the stand-out success, leaping more than 100 places in three years to 292nd place - in the top 1.1 per cent of the world's 26,000 universities.

The only local university that dropped this year is the University of Auckland, but it has slipped only one place and at 82nd in the world it is still New Zealand's leading university.

Otago University, at 151st, ranks second in the country.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology tops the world list for the sixth year in a row, followed by Stanford, Harvard and Caltech.

The list, produced by London-based consultancy Quacquarelli Symonds Ltd, is mainly driven by a survey asking 75,000 academics to rank the top universities in their fields, and appears to favour English-speaking institutions. The US, Britain and Australia have the most universities in the top 50 and in the top 100.

But Auckland University vice-chancellor Stuart McCutcheon said the rankings had a real impact on all universities.

"What matters to international students looking for somewhere to study, what matters to international academics looking for jobs, and what matters to international universities looking for partners, is the rankings," he said.

QS partnered with Times Higher Education to produce the first rankings in 2004. The partners split in 2009 and now produce rival rankings.

New Zealand universities generally fell in the rankings over the first decade from 2004. Auckland University, for example, slipped from a high point of 46th place in 2006 to a low of 94th in 2013.

That was largely because only 200 universities worldwide were ranked in the first three years. The numbers have grown to 916 last year and 959 this year.

However, all eight New Zealand universities have lifted their rankings since 2013. Universities NZ director Chris Whelan said the biggest driver was the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF), which allocates research funding to universities based on a formula in which the biggest factor is publications in international journals.

"It's meant we have actually had quite a single-minded focus on lifting the level and impact of our research," he said.

He said Professor Neil Quigley, an economist who was deputy vice-chancellor for research at Victoria University in Wellington before becoming Waikato University vice-chancellor in 2015, had lifted both Victoria and Waikato up the ranks.

"Victoria showed its single biggest increase in PBRF when he was there because he knew how to drive research that was likely to get impact and high visibility," Whelan said. "I think he has taken that model to Waikato."

Victoria has jumped 46 places since 2013, to 219th place, closing the gap on Canterbury University which has risen 24 places to 214th.

Waikato was ranked in a group between 401st and 410th in 2013, and is now 292nd.

Lincoln University has also jumped dramatically from between 481st and 490th in 2013 to 319th. Massey University rose 27 places to 316th.

Rankings for Otago University (up 18 to 151st) and AUT University (441st to 450th) have been stable.

Quigley said his approach at both Victoria and Waikato was that academics were expected to "make a contribution to the international literature".

"That is our job - to be producing innovative work and communicating it not just to our students in the classroom and through local channels, but in the international literature," he said.

But Tertiary Education Union president Dr Sandra Grey said the focus on international journal articles for both the PBRF and the world rankings discouraged academics from doing research for public agencies, iwi and the community, and forced them to spend less time with students.

"We have a system now where peer-reviewed journal articles, which is a very particular type of knowledge dissemination, has become the be all and end all of what our managers want," she said.

"As a result students are missing out, employers are missing out and communities are missing out."

The QS World University Rankings use six metrics to calculate university performance:

Academic Reputation (40%)
Employer Reputation (10%)
Faculty/Student Ratio (20%)
Citations per faculty (20%)
International Faculty Ratio (5%)
International Student Ratio (5%)

Comments

This is great news for all NZ Universities. Notably one of the things missing from this story and one shared on the University of Otago website is the fact that one School/Dept had the highest ever ranking of any department at any NZ university to date - the School of Physical Education, Sport & Exercise Sciences ranked 7th in 'sport-related' research. This is something that not only Dunedin and the U of Otago should be celebrating but NZ in general.