The University of Nairobi has been ranked among the best 200 universities in the emerging world economies.
The university emerged position 174 out of 200 in the BRICS & Emerging Economies Rankings category of the UK's Times Higher Education magazine.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NAIROBI |
Kenya is represented in the ranking for the first time.
Other
countries that participated for the first time include Nigeria, Ghana,
Jordan, Qatar and Oman while Egypt returned to the ranking, having had
no institutions represented last year.
The 2016 rankings included 200 institutions from 35 countries, up from 100 from 18 countries in 2015.
Times
Higher Education World University Rankings Editor Phil Baty said the
list are based on established and trusted thirteen performance
indicators.
Mr Baty said the indicators were specially
calibrated to reflect the development priorities of universities in
emerging economies.
“Kenya
is one of several countries to have made its debut in this year’s BRICS
and Emerging Economies Rankings, with the University of Nairobi
featuring in joint 174th place,” he said.
Mr Baty went
on: “This achievement is in part due to expanding the ranking to cover
200 universities and 48 countries but it is an important milestone for
Kenya’s universities to be recognised in such a prestigious ranking.”
He
said all the core missions of the modern global university - research,
teaching, knowledge transfer and international activity - were
considered.
The invitation-only academic survey
included responses from more than 10,000 senior academics in 2014-15 and
research excellence were assessed through the examination of more than
11 million research papers, up from six million last year with 51
million citations up from 50 million last year.
Arts, humanities and social sciences were placed on an equal footing with the sciences.
China
dominates the rankings this year with 39 universities, Taiwan came
second with 24 universities, while India was third with 16.
The
best university was Peking University (China) followed by Tsinghua
University (China), third was Lomonosov Moscow State University
(Russia), fourth was University of Cape Town (South Africa).
Others
were National Taiwan University (Taiwan), University of the
Witwatersrand (South Africa), University of Science and Technology of
China (China), Zhejiang University (China), University of São Paulo
(Brazil) and Shanghai Jiao Tong University (China).
Some
of the the indicators that were used in the ranking include research
income from industry, academic staff, teaching and the learning
environment.
No comments