International News

Asia: Asia University Rankings 2016

Singapore is home to the best two universities in Asia for the first time, while China and Japan have the highest density of top institutions in the continent, according to the Times Higher Education Asia University Rankings 2016.

The National University of Singapore (NUS) claims pole position, while its neighbour Nanyang Technological University (NTU) is in joint second place (with China’s Peking University) — the highest positions for the two Singaporean institutions in the rankings’ four-year history.

Singapore’s success in the table follows its rise in THE’s flagship World University Rankings; NUS has climbed 14 places in this table since 2012 to reach #26 last year, while NTU has risen 119 places since 2011 to #55.

While mainland China and Japan each host almost a fifth of institutions in the extended Top 200 table (39 each), China has the upper hand, after a shift in power towards the nation in 2015. The country has 22 universities in the Top 100, including two in the Top 10, while Japan has just 14 in the upper half of the table, and its top-ranked institution — the University of Tokyo at #7 — has lost its place at the summit of the list.

Gerard Postiglione, chair professor in higher education at the University of Hong Kong, says the Singapore government’s “strategic” positioning of its universities as “competing in the global economy” and generous financial support for research are two reasons why the city state has “shone the brightest” in the ranking. He adds that collaborations with world-class universities outside Asia — such as the partnership behind the Yale-NUS liberal arts college — have benefited Singapore’s universities. “Singapore also has a very high-quality school system and its immigration policy makes it possible to bring in talented people,” he says.

China’s special administrative region, Hong Kong, has also performed well with six representatives, all in the Top 45, while South Korea and Taiwan are the most-represented countries after China and Japan, with 24 institutions each.

Institutions from 22 countries, eight more than last year, feature in this year’s ranking, with several countries, including Bangladesh, Indonesia and Qatar, being represented for the first time. Among the Indian universities featured in the Top 100 are the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore (#27), Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay (#43), IIT-Kharagpur (#51) and IIT-Delhi (#60).

The THE Asia University Rankings use the same 13 performance indicators as the World University Rankings, but have been recalibrated to reflect the attributes of Asia’s higher education systems.