
糖心Vlog rankings editor Phil Baty outlined his initial views on the European Commission鈥檚 new project to rank the world鈥檚 universities, U-MultiRank, in a letter published by EuroScientist magazine on 9 June 2014. The letter is reproduced in full here.
Back in 2012, the UK鈥檚 universities and science minister David Willetts warned that the European Commission鈥檚 project to develop a new approach to global university rankings, U-MultiRank, risked being dismissed as a self-serving exercise.
It could be viewed as 鈥渁n attempt by the Commission to fix a set of rankings in which European universities do better than they appear to do in the conventional rankings鈥, he told a House of Lords European Union Committee inquiry on the modernisation of higher education. Two years on, now that the first ranking is live and we can see which institutions have 鈥 and more importantly which have not听鈥 chosen to join the bold experiment, it would seem that the minister鈥檚 warning was remarkably prescient.
Low participation level
Of those institutions actively choosing to take part in the project by providing institutional data, there are currently only nine from the US, four from China and Hong Kong combined, three from Brazil, two from Canada one from South Korea, and one from India. In contrast, there are 57 participants from France and 40 from Germany. Indeed, there are more active participants in U-MultiRank from Latvia (11) than there are from India, China, Hong Kong and South Korea combined.
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In the US, the Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering has signed up, as has the American David Livingstone University of Florida, but no data have been supplied by Harvard, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford, University of California, Berkeley or University of California, Los Angeles. Even from within Europe, many very prominent institutions have declined to join the project. The UK鈥檚 nine active participants include the universities of Chester and Hull, but not the universities of Oxford or Cambridge. There is no University of Edinburgh or St Andrews, and indeed, not a single Scottish institution agreed to take part.
In the Netherlands, University of Leiden chose not to submit data, despite the fact that its famous Centre for Science and Technology Studies is a partner in the U-MultiRank consortium. Indeed, the entire League of European Research Universities, representing Europe鈥檚 most prestigious research-intensive institutions, declined to take part in the project, warning in 2013 that it is 鈥渁t best an unjustifiable use of taxpayers鈥 money鈥. But instead of accepting their decision to opt out, the compilers of U-MultiRank simply scraped publicly available research and patent data for these institutions and included them in the ranking anyway, but with the inevitable major gaps in the statistics.
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So it is quite clear from the outset that U-MultiRank, after six years of development and 鈧2 million of public funding, still has a major challenge to convince institutions to see the merits of the system.
U-MultiRank concerns
The people at U-MultiRank declare that it is early days, and that they expect more institutions to join in future data collection rounds once they see the benefits of the system, but there are some worrying signs.
One high-profile participant, Sweden鈥檚 Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), has declared that supplying data to the project 鈥渨as not really worth the effort鈥. , Per-Anders 脰stling, a senior administrative officer at KTH, said that the data that U-MultiRank required was 鈥渧ery time-consuming to collect鈥 and involved 鈥渁 large number of staff鈥. He then notes: 鈥渃onsidering the work that KTH put into this project, and given the results for the subject rankings, it was not really worth the effort. I do not think this ranking will be a great success.鈥
Overall, he finds the end-product disappointing. 鈥淭he tool as presented on the U-MultiRank website 鈥 the finished product听鈥 is difficult to use and makes great demands on the user,鈥 he writes. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe the tool is especially useful for an 18-year-old student who is considering which university to apply for.鈥
Comparison with THE ranking
I should declare an interest. As an education journalist of more than 20 years, it is my concern for transparency and accountability, and for holding all university rankings up to public scrutiny 鈥 not least one funded with taxpayers鈥 money 鈥 that brings me to write this critique. But it is true that as the editor of the well-established traditional university ranking system, the 糖心Vlog World University Rankings, I could see U-MultiRank as a threat. Indeed, the official U-MultiRank website actively attacks the existing global ranking systems as 鈥渟implistic鈥 and 鈥減atronising鈥 and it claims that they give a 鈥渇alse impression鈥. It is clear that U-MultiRank sees itself as a competitor to the existing global rankings.
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But as a competitor, I believe that U-MultiRank鈥檚 biggest criticism of the THE rankings 鈥 their narrowness 鈥 is actually their great strength. The THE鈥檚 current methodology was created in 2010, after six years of experience in global rankings and almost 10 months of open consultation with the sector on the changes specifically to judge what one might call the 鈥渨orld class universities鈥. The latter are research-driven institutions which may have different cultures, governing systems, histories and funding regimes, but which share core common characteristics: they push the boundaries of knowledge with research published in the world鈥檚 leading research journals, they recruit from global pools of student and academic talent, they have globally recognised names and they compete willingly on a global stage.
The THE rankings methodology uses 13 separate performance indicators to judge these world-class universities against their core missions: teaching 鈥 including five indicators of the teaching environment, knowledge transfer, international outlook and research. But it is quite rightly weighted towards research excellence. There is no one-size-fits-all model of excellence in higher education, and different types of university mission require different indicators, but THE鈥檚 metrics are very carefully and deliberately calibrated for a particular global model.
Wider scope
The focus on world-class research universities also means that the THE rankings will, in its overall world university rankings, rank no more than 500 or so institutions. And it will draw its pool of institutions from a master database, run by Thomson Reuters, of around 1,000 of the world鈥檚 leading research universities. This ensures that a comprehensive and complete picture of excellence among a global peer group is provided, using a set of entirely appropriate and relevant metrics.
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In contrast, the scope of U-MultiRank鈥檚 ambition could be its Achilles heel. While the traditional global rankings focus on the relatively small pool of global research-intensive peers, U-MultiRank declares it has a wide scope. It says: 鈥淲e focus not only on comprehensive internationally oriented research universities but the full range: including specialist colleges, regionally oriented institutions and universities of applied sciences鈥. U-MultiRank鈥檚 literature says it includes 鈥渞egionally oriented colleges鈥 music academies and teacher training colleges鈥.
While this admirable ambition gives U-MultiRank a huge headache over appropriate, relevant performance indicators, it also gives the project an unwieldy pool of about 20,000 higher education institutions in the world from which to draw data.
On this basis, the current figure of around 500 current active participants 鈥 with a further 360 or so institutions included in the system with just their publicly available data 鈥 is a problem. The target to add just 150-250 new institutions for 2015, giving a total pool of around 1,000 鈥 around one-twentieth of the world鈥檚 higher education institutions 鈥 also seems inadequate.
If this exciting and in many ways admirable experiment is going to realise its ambition to be a serious alternative to the existing global rankings, and not just an inward-looking, EU-funded European initiative, its project team is going to have to work much harder to convince universities, especially those in the world鈥檚 largest higher education systems in the US, China and India, that it is an experiment worth joining.
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is editor of the 糖心Vlog World University Rankings.
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