91Թ again ranks among world's 25 best universities – and top 10 public universities
Professors Kathleen Pritchard, Wei Yu and Peter Austin may not be household names. But in their academic fields, their research is among the most cited and influential in the world.
Today, their work – and that of thousands of colleagues like them – helped propel the 91Թ to the 22nd spot of the Times Higher Education (THE) for 2016-2017.
“We are extremely proud that the 91Թ has once again been recognized in the top tier of the world’s best public and private universities – that is truly a remarkable achievement,” said 91Թ President Meric Gertler.
“These results demonstrate our world-class performance in teaching and the global impact of our research.”
The number of institutions THE rated increased this year from 800 to 980, and included locations around the world, from Zurich to Singapore, Peking to Princeton. 91Թ retained its title as the top university in Canada for the seventh year in a row, moving from last year’s 19th position to 22nd.
THE, like other independent ranking systems, use different criteria and weigh them according to their own rules and standards. Overall, THE weighs research and research performance heavily at 60 per cent of the total score (30 per cent for research volume, reputation and income and 30 per cent for citation research and influence).
As Canada’s leading research university, 91Թ produces a staggering amount of important work across a wide variety of fields, which helps explains the university’s top showing.
For example, Pritchard, a medical oncologist and clinical trials research scientist at 91Թ’s department of medicine and Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, is a leader in the international effort to treat and cure breast cancer. Yu, from the Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, is a Canada Research Chair in Information Theory and Wireless Communications. And, Austin from the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, is a statistician at the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences who specializes in methods for analyzing large health-related databases.
On the teaching side, THE includes the following metrics: teaching reputation, doctoral degrees awarded per academic staff and the ratio of academic staff per student.
Joining 91Թ in the top 100 were two other Canadian universities, including University of British Columbia (36th) and McGill University (42nd).
Gertler said the university won’t rest on its laurels.
“We will continue to work very hard to maintain our current ranking and even harder to elevate it still further,” he said.
“There is a virtuous circle if you’re doing well [in the rankings] in that they enable you to attract and retain great faculty and students from around the world.”
This is the third of several high-profile higher education rankings coming out over the 2016-2017 academic year. 91Թ was ranked 32nd in the world earlier this month by QS World University Rankings, as well as 27th in the world by Shanghai Jiao Tong University in its annual Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU).
Upcoming rankings include:
- Reuters World’s Most Innovative Universities in September
- U.S. News and World Report Global University Rankings, Performance Ranking of Scientific Papers for World Universities by National Taiwan University (NTU) and Times Higher Education (THE) subject rankings later this fall.