International Higher Education: Five-Year Trends
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Higher Education |
The world has changed a lot in the last five years, with the
effects of the global economic crisis of 2007-8 continuing to be felt by
individuals, businesses, governments and international organizations. Universities
have of course also been greatly affected – but what have been the biggest
changes in the world of international higher education since the crisis hit?
Martin Ince, convener of the HED Global Academic Advisory
Board, highlights five key trends in international higher
education over the past five years.
1. The continued increase in international student mobility
One surprise, perhaps, is
that international student mobility has continued to grow,
despite the international economic downturn experienced during this period. In
2009 there were just over 3.7 million students studying outside their home
country, according to the OECD publication Education at a Glance. In 2011,
the latest year for which we have the numbers, the total was 4.3 million. Of
these, 53% of internationally mobile students were from Asia, mainly India,
China and Korea.
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2. The rise of science and technology-focused universities
Comparing the HEd Five-Year
Trends® for
2008/09 and 2013/14, one of the most obvious changes is MIT’s climb from ninth
place to number one. But this is only part of the story. MIT is just one among
a number of universities focusing on science and technology subjects
which have strengthened their rankings performance over this period.
Other notable examples include the two Swiss Federal
Institutes of Technology, ETH Zurich and EPFL, which are both now ranked within
the world’s top 20. Meanwhile the UK’s Imperial College London and the US’s
California Institute of Technology (Caltech) now stand in 5th and joint
10th position.
3. Changing education hierarchy in Asia
The past five years also show significant changes to the education
hierarchy in Asia, where many countries have been investing heavily in
developing and internationalizing their higher education systems. One success
story comes from South Korea, which now has six universities ranked in the
world’s top 200 – up from three in 2008. The highest ranked of these, Seoul
National University (SNU), has climbed from 50th to 35th during this
period.
Elsewhere in Asia, progress has not been so clear. In 2008,
China had six top-200 universities and its leading institution, Peking
University, was tied with SNU in 50th place. This year China has one more
entry in the top 200, but Peking is only four places higher than five years
ago.
In India the picture is even less promising. India’s top two
entries, the Indian Institutes of Technology in Delhi and Bombay, were ranked
154th and 175th in 2008 – and have now fallen to 222 and 233. India’s
top general university, Delhi University, has fallen to 441-450, from 274 in
2008.
Japan has also lost ground. In 2008 there were 10 Japanese
universities in the top 200. In 2013 there are nine, with the country’s leading
institution, Tokyo University, falling from 19th to 32nd place.
Having been Asia’s top university five years ago, Tokyo is now behind the top
universities in Singapore and Hong Kong – the National University of Singapore
is ranked 24th and University of Hong Kong 26th.
4. Overall stability for Continental European universities
While much is changing in Asia, the picture for Continental
European universities over the past five years is generally one of
remarkable stability.
Mainland European universities tend to fare badly by
comparison with their UK counterparts, despite being in a rich, stable part of
the world with a massive cultural and scientific heritage and with strong
school systems.
But we are seeing some signs of change. The top Continental
European university, ETH Zurich, is now 12th in the world, compared to
24th in 2008. This makes it the highest-ranked university not working
mainly in English. Its francophone sister institution, EPFL, climbed to
19th this year.
The education systems of European countries like Belgium,
the Netherlands and Sweden continue to feature strongly in the middle tiers of
the rankings. More surprising is that France had only four top-200 universities
in 2008 and has only one more now. Although the École Normale Supérieure was in
28th place in both years, it has little elite company. Germany has a
stronger overall top-200 presence, with 13 universities currently ranked at
this level.​
5. Better visibility for universities worldwide
A final change over the past five years is that far more
universities, in a greater range of countries, are attaining international
visibility. In part, this is due to the enlarged scope of international higher
education rankings such as the HED Five-Year Trends, which has been gradually
expanded to now include 800 universities – compared to 200 in 2008.
This means, for example, that we are now able to see
excellent universities in Indonesia, the world’s fourth most populous nation.
There are eight in this year’s far deeper rankings, compared to none in the
more limited 2008 version. The same applies to Russia – which had only one
ranked institution in 2008, and now has 18 in the top 800 – and likewise to
other countries in Eastern Europe.
In Latin America, only three universities made the top 200
in 2008, but today’s more extensive rankings show world-class universities
across the region. These are led by Sao Paulo in Brazil at 127, up from 196
five years ago.
While South Africa and Egypt remain the only African
countries to make a significant impact on the rankings, Middle Eastern
countries have gained much greater visibility in the international higher
education world. Israel is still the only Middle Eastern country represented in
the top 200, but Saudi Arabia, Lebanon and the United Arab Emirates all have
universities well within the top 500 – and many with resources that promise
continued expansion in the next few years.
Hopefully the article that discusses the Five Year Trends can be useful and applicable, thank
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