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The World's Best Universities

The Huffington Post/U.S. News And World Report     First Posted: 10/18/11 10:31 AM ET   Updated: 12/18/11 05:12 AM ET

Harvard University may be America's top-ranked national university, along with Princeton University, in U.S. News & World Report's latest Best Colleges rankings, but a competitor across the pond is now stealing some of that thunder.


For the second year in a row, the United Kingdom's University of Cambridge topped Harvard in the U.S. News World's Best Universities rankings, released today and based on data from the 2011 QS World University Rankings. Developed by QS Quacquarelli Symonds, a leading global career and education network, the World's Best rankings showcase the top international universities, from North and South America to Europe and Asia and beyond.

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Six distinct indicators were evaluated to rank the top 400 universities worldwide: academic reputation, employer reputation, faculty-student ratio, proportion of international faculty, proportion of international students, and citations per faculty. The gap between Cambridge and Harvard was incredibly small—a difference of about 0.7 points in their overall scores—and can be attributed to Cambridge's more impressive faculty-student ratio.

Despite Harvard falling slightly behind a U.K. university, U.S. schools dominated the top 400 list, with six American institutions appearing in the top 10 (Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Yale University, University of Chicago, University of Pennsylvania, and Columbia University). The highest showing by a non-American or non-British university was Canada's McGill University, at No. 17. Asia's highest ranking came via University of Hong Kong (HKU), at No. 22.

[See photos of the top 10 World's Best Universities.]

A separate ranking of the top 100 Asian universities highlights the dynamism of the Asian region, where countries such as China, South Korea, and India are investing heavily in higher education to cater to both domestic and international students. This year, to better reflect the region's unique character, a distinct methodology from the top 400 global rankings was used, with indicators such as Asian academic reputation and Asian employer review.

The leaders of the pack came from Hong Kong, with Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) and HKU taking the first and second spots, respectively. The gap between the two was very narrow—a difference of 0.2 points in their overall scores—with HKUST's research productivity giving it the edge. Japan, whose economy is slowly recovering from the devastating March 2011 earthquake and tsunami, was nonetheless dominant in the Asian rankings, with five Japanese schools in the top 10.

Meanwhile, China, the world's largest source for international students at U.S. universities, made strides with its own schools. Peking University and Tsinghua University were both among the top 20 best Asian universities, performing very well in the academic and employer reputation indicators. India didn't fare as well, due to low citations scores; its highest entries were three Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT Kanpur, Delhi, and Bombay) at No. 36, No. 37, and No. 38, respectively.

[Read about Asian M.B.A. programs on the rise.]

Like Asia, Latin America is undergoing significant development, propelled by rising economic powerhouse Brazil. The country's Universidad de São Paulo took the No. 1 spot in the top 100 Latin American universities rankings, beating Chile's Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile by 0.4 points in its overall score. The new Latin rankings use a distinct methodology, evaluating indicators such as Latin American academic reputation, Latin American employer review, and proportion of staff with Ph.D.'s.

Brazil was the clear leader, fielding three institutions in the top 10 and eight in the top 20. The country's huge investments in higher education to fuel economic growth, and its prioritization of research, have paid off: Brazilian universities performed particularly well in measures such as papers per faculty and proportion of academics with Ph.D.'s.

Meanwhile, Mexico—with two institutions in the top 10 of the Latin rankings—showcased strong reputations across the region, despite lower performance in research measures for most of its universities. The fifth-ranked Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) had the highest academic reputation, while seventh-ranked Tecnológico de Monterrey (ITESM) had the second-highest employer reputation.

Going beyond global and regional comparisons, the new World's Best Universities subject rankings examine the top schools worldwide in 24 subjects (top 30 for chemical engineering and top 50 for all other subjects). Divided into five broad categories—arts and humanities; engineering and technology; life sciences; natural sciences; and social sciences—the individual subject rankings are based on academic reputation, employer reputation, and citations per paper.

MIT dominated all engineering and technology rankings, taking the top spot in the computer science; civil engineering; chemical engineering; electrical engineering; and mechanical, aeronautical, and manufacturing engineering fields. Other American institutions that had strong showings in that category include Stanford University, University of California—Berkeley, and California Institute of Technology (Caltech).

[Learn key American university terms in the U.S. Higher Education Glossary.]

U.S. universities similarly led the pack in two other broad categories: life sciences and social sciences. In the former, Harvard took the lead in biological sciences and psychology; in the latter, while Harvard took the No. 1 spot atop the accounting and finance; economics and econometrics; politics and international studies; and sociology rankings, Stanford topped the statistics and operational research rankings.

Only the arts and humanities and natural sciences categories showed some variety at the top. Although Harvard once again took the top spots in the majority of the specific subject disciplines, the U.K.'s University of Oxford was ranked No. 1 for geography and area studies, and Cambridge dominated both the linguistics and physics and astronomy subject rankings.

See U.S. News's coverage of the World's Best Universities for rankings, photos, and more.

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Harvard University may be America's top-ranked national university, along with Princeton University, in U.S. News & World Report's latest Best Colleges rankings, but a competitor across the pond is no...
Harvard University may be America's top-ranked national university, along with Princeton University, in U.S. News & World Report's latest Best Colleges rankings, but a competitor across the pond is no...
 
 
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03:55 PM on 11/08/2011
Columbia, Penn, and Chicago above Stanford and Cal? Get serious.
01:28 AM on 10/27/2011
Where is CalTech?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mikeyaz17
a conservative's worst nightmare
02:28 PM on 11/08/2011
in california
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:07 PM on 10/26/2011
With very few exceptions (Stanford being one) the top universities do not devote a lot of their time and resources to "sports." Case in point, the current number 1 and 2 NCAA football programs (LSU and U of Alabama) did not even make the list of 400. These 2 institutions and many others should put more efforts in academics and less in sports.
08:30 PM on 10/27/2011
I completely agree. At my school we're wasting tons of money we don't have adding on to the athletic complex while most of the engineering classes are extremely overcrowded. It makes me sick.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
americanalien
Veteran Commenter
02:58 PM on 10/23/2011
America's education system reflects the problems with its society at large. It is excellent at the top (the Ivy League for example) for a privileged few who can afford it or who may be lucky enough to win a scholorship; however for those less fortunate in society the system presents an almost insurmountable obstacle of underfunded schools and sub-standard education that is typical of third world countries. This is particularly true for those living in inner-city neighborhoods.
11:18 AM on 10/21/2011
I go to an Ivy league college and spent a semester at University of Edinburgh. There was no comparison in the academics. My home university is so much more rigorous. I did really well at Edinburgh with a small fraction of the effort. The tests are not difficult, they grade papers easily and there is little work. This seemed to be the general sentiment among all of my friends who studied at top UK universities. You should be pushed and challenged in college and that is what top US universities do. I was generally satisfied with the professors and facilities at Edinburgh and it was a great place to study abroad. But to see it ranked so close to my home university is ridiculous.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Grant Brooke, M.Div.
05:10 PM on 10/19/2011
Having been at a U.S. university and British one, in the top-10, I would say U.S. excels at taught-degree programs (more class work, contact time, student support, etc), and the U.K. excels at research degrees... allows for support, but with freer thinking.

Also, where it is ok to go to mid-tear U.S. program, there is a vast drop-off in the UK between Cambridge, Oxford, UofL, Kings, LSE, and everywhere else.
03:56 PM on 11/08/2011
Maybe research degrees in the humanities, but certainly not in science and engineering. There is just no comparison.
10:52 AM on 10/19/2011
No way do the British universities remotely compare to the top US universities. Maybe in medieval studies or art history, but no way in math, science, medicine, computers, engineering, etc. It is a joke to compare Oxford to MIT or Caltech. They are in different leagues. The American ivy league colleges are top ranked in almost all fields and disciplines that is what makes them so unique and prestigious.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
americanalien
Veteran Commenter
02:46 PM on 10/23/2011
But yet still America is falling behind the rest of the industrialized world in Math, Science, and other disciplines. We may have excellent universities but they are very exclusive and only a privileged few ever get access to them. Our elementary and secondary education is seriously lacking in this country. The problems with public schools have been well documented.

Thankfully, President Obama has been trying to improve things. However if the Republicans get back in power, we will almost certainly accelerate our decline to the bottom as far as education is concerned.
08:33 PM on 10/27/2011
American universities are the last strong point of our education system. Our K-12 sucks, and everyone knows it. Most colleges here are struggling with under prepared freshmen coming in and failing back out.
04:00 PM on 11/08/2011
The US may be behind in many aspects of K-12 education, but the top universities, especially their graduate programs, have both students and faculty recruited from a very wide international group. They don't need nor do they include the average K-12 student. Only the very best from both home and abroad.

In that sense, universities started a form of outsourcing way before corporations.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
deluk
disgusted.
06:25 PM on 11/07/2011
nonsense, stop kidding yourself, Britain has historically been the most innovative country in the world, leaving everybody else standing, this didn't happen because we only have universities specialising in "medieval studies or art history"
06:55 AM on 10/19/2011
Your ranking isn't credible.
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11:24 PM on 10/18/2011
I'd seriously like to see what kind of criteria is used to define"best." I'll bet it has nothing to do with teaching and everything to do with research money. Or the "graders" use the "famous" graduate criteria or some equally silly system that has nothing to do with students and learning. If George Bush can graduate from Yale, one has to wonder what "best" means. As one who spent 35 years in education, I can guarantee you that these universities may be interesting but I wouldn't say any of them or any other "great" university is "best." It's like saying: "Who was the "best actor of 2011 or any other year?" As one of many members of SAG, we know that the "best" is not definable. As with most things--"It depends…."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
morefromLA
A fighting liberal and proud of it
10:42 PM on 10/18/2011
How can this be considered a serious list without Bob Jones University?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
First Blast
res ad triarios venit
10:40 PM on 10/18/2011
Sometimes I wonder what the billions of people supressed by low quality education and low expectations would say if they could articulate themselves for one week from the advantage of an elite education?
They would burn this house down.
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LoneTree
Liberty is more precious than life.
05:14 PM on 10/19/2011
It would be interesting, yes. But the reality is that there isn't enough employment (and there aren't enough microphones) to absorb that magnitude of an increase in graduates from elite schools. If, through some miracle, the billions could become alumni of great universities, then we would have Harvard grads flipping burgers. Just like we have recent state school BAs working as grocery checkers today.
10:36 PM on 10/18/2011
Problem is that in the elite colleges in the USA but not the UK, undergraduates get taught by graduate students, in the less highly ranked colleges undergrads get taught by profs. That is one reason for not going to Harvard as an undergrad, the other is cost.
02:59 PM on 10/19/2011
Yeah, I grew up in Massachusetts and never even considered Harvard or MIT for exactly that reason. I ended up going across the country to Southern California where I was taught by actual professors, some of whom had been published with Nobel laureates.
01:37 PM on 10/26/2011
If you had done some actual research, you would have discovered that almost all Harvard classes are taught by professors. I've never taken a class at Yale taught by a graduate student.
01:55 PM on 10/21/2011
That's absolutely not true. I go to an Ivy League school and ALL of my undergrad classes are/ have been taught by professors. For discussion sections (if the class has one as a supplement) we'll meet with grad student TAs once a week to go over material. There might be a few seminars that are PhD candidate led, but all of the lectures are with a professor. And "PirateJohn", if you're so naive you probably couldn't get into Harvard or MIT.
10:32 PM on 10/18/2011
Cambridge just pips Harvard at the post, but tuition fees for Cambridge are very much lower, about one sixth, the fees at Harvard. This is a reflection of socialist education vs. capitalist education.
02:59 PM on 10/19/2011
Um, isn't Harvard a non-profit?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
varro
02:46 AM on 10/23/2011
Both UChicago (my alma mater) and Harvard have significant financial aid - at UChicago, the Odyssey Scholarships significantly reduce loans for students from families making under $75,000, replacing them with grants.
10:11 PM on 10/18/2011
Haavad....blah blah....Yale....blah blah blah.....Stanford....blah...Princeton.......blah blah BLAHHHH!
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blurredmolly
Ipswich, Mass. 1641
10:34 PM on 10/18/2011
Liberty U. grad, huh.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
unclelew
10:53 PM on 10/18/2011
Doesn't really sound like he graduated.
08:36 PM on 10/27/2011
So I take it you enjoyed Bob Jones?
ElCojonuo
I believe in WISDOM
08:24 PM on 10/18/2011
The ENGLISH SPEAKING WORLD best universities; yes, of course.
There are other peoples in the world that speak other languages that have outstanding Universities that are not listed here ( typical arrogance by those who have made an art of it ).
04:16 PM on 10/29/2011
True, but QS world rankings top 20 are still dominated by US, British and Canadian. The highest ranked non-english speaking uni is Zurich, which I think is something like 17th