Indian Institute of Science is the only institution that figures somewhere between 300 and 400 in the list
India’s higher educational institutions have once again failed to find a respectable place in the world’s top 500 universities.
Bangalore-based
Indian Institute of Science (IIS) is the only institution that figures
somewhere between 300 and 400 as ranked by the Academic Ranking of World
Universities (ARWU) for 2013.
American universities
have captured 17 positions of the top 20 slots, with two going to the
British universities and one being occupied by the Swiss Federal
Institute of Technology at Zurich. Of the 500 universities ranked,
American universities captured a total of 182 slots; European
universities occupied 200 slots — but only three made the top 20. As
many as 17 Chinese universities were included as well.
Harvard
University has been described as the world’s best university with a
score of 100; followed by Stanford University with a score of 72.6.
University of California, Berkeley; Massachusetts Institute of
Technology; and University of Cambridge have scored around 71 points.
The
IIS has just about held on to its last year’s slot but improved its
performance in the Departments of Chemistry and Computer Science. In the
former, the Institute has jumped two ranks from 45 in 2012 to 43 this
year and in the latter from a range of 101-150 in the past to 51-75 in
2013.
In Natural Science and Mathematics, and
Engineering Technology and Computer Science, the score remains stagnant,
ranging between 151-200 and 76-100 respectively.
ARWU,
also known as Shanghai Rankings, considers every university that has
any Nobel Laureates, field medallists, highly cited researchers, or
papers published in Nature or Science. In addition, universities with
significant amount of papers indexed by the Science Citation
Index-Expanded (SCIE) and the Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) are
also included. In total, more than 1000 universities are actually
ranked, and the best 500 are published on the web.
Universities
are also ranked by several indicators of academic or research
performance, and the per capita academic performance of an institution.
For each indicator, the highest scoring institution is assigned a score
of 100, and other institutions are calculated as a percentage of the top
score.
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