Par Isabelle Rey-Lefebvre. L’université scientifique Lyon 1 Claude Bernard propose, en partenariat avec les autres universités de la ville et de Saint-Etienne et l’ensemble des lycées de l’académie, une année universitaire préparatoire à l’intention des bacheliers pro et techno. Un tel accompagnement coûte cher et est entièrement pris en charge par l’université, dans le cadre du plan Réussite en Licence, mais cette action dès les premiers mois est un des plus efficaces leviers de la lutte contre l’échec. Suite...
Xenophobic Britain drives foreign students away, claims professor
By Graeme Paton. Foreign students are being deterred from courses at British universities because of “public paranoia” over immigration, leading vice-chancellors have warned. A culture of hostility towards international students has been allowed to build up as a result of the Coalition’s drive to cut levels of net migration, it was claimed. Read more...
University leavers lack the essential skills for work, employers warn
By Graeme Paton. Large numbers of students are leaving university lacking the basic skills needed to get by in the workplace, according to new research. More than half of employers said all or almost all graduate recruits started work without vital attributes, such as team work, communication, punctuality and the ability to cope under pressure. Read more...
Top 100 world universities 2013/14 – QS rankings
The QS annual world university rankings were published today, with MIT maintaining its position as the top-ranked university worldwide.
IN PICTURES: Top 10 world universities 2013
The QS World Universities 2013/14 rankings, published today, saw MIT maintain its position as the top-ranked university worldwide. Read more...
Six British universities named among best in the world
By Graeme Paton. Record numbers of British universities have been named among the world’s elite despite warnings that institutions risk being overtaken by global competitors during the financial crisis. New international league tables published today list six British universities in the top 20 compared with just four a year earlier. Read more...
More private school pupils applying to foreign universities
By Graeme Paton. Rising numbers of pupils from the country’s leading private schools are turning their backs on top British universities in favour of degree courses abroad, according to new research. Figures suggest nine out of 10 headmasters have witnessed an increase in sixth-formers seeking courses in the United States, Holland, Canada and Australia over the last two years. Read more...
QS University Rankings: an explainer
Danny Byrne explains the research methodology and six main criteria behind the QS World University Rankings 2013
Top 200 QS World University Rankings 2013
The primary aim of the QS World University Rankings 2013 is to help students make more informed comparisons between their international study options. The rankings compare the world's top 800 institutions across broad areas that are of interest to prospective students: research, teaching, employability and international outlook. More...
World university rankings: how much influence do they really have?
By Grete Luxbacher. With government policy increasingly shaped by global rankings, Grete Luxbacher surveys the impact of the biggest tables.
Explore the Top 200 QS World University Rankings 2013
Global university rankings are a competitive business – not only for universities, but for the companies that research and publish them. They are simultaneously criticised and lauded. And while few can agree on which methodology is the most robust, there is consensus that global university rankings are here to stay, that no ranking is all encompassing and that their influence is growing. Students, universities and governments are taking note and action. The first international rankings, the Academic Ranking of World Universities or Shanghai Rankings, were published in 2003 by Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China. More...
The NSA's next move: silencing university professors?
By Jay Rosen. A Johns Hopkins computer science professor blogs on the NSA and is asked to take it down. I fear for academic freedom.
This actually happened yesterday:
A professor in the computer science department at Johns Hopkins, a leading American university, had written a post on his blog, hosted on the university's servers, focused on his area of expertise, which is cryptography. The post was highly critical of the government, specifically the National Security Agency, whose reckless behavior in attacking online security astonished him. More...
Who are the winners and losers in the world university rankings?
By Kerry Eustice, Libby Page, Nancy Groves. Plus how teachers can beat stress and what new students need to know to keep healthy on campus. University rankings are the subject of fevered debate. Even Barack Obama is getting involved: US higher education may be getting "Obamarank", as presidential plans have been nicknamed, to lower the costs of US college education by publicly ranking institutions according to their value for money. More...