Rankings which assess the quality and accessibility of
higher education in countries across the world, have been published today by QS
Quacquarelli Symonds. Fifty countries across six continents have been
represented, with researchers looking at access, system strength and a
country's top performing institution to compile the tables. Here are the top
10.
10. Japan
With two universities in the top 50 institutions in
the world, according to QS, Japan takes tenth place in the rankings. Kyoto
University and the University of Tokyo take 38th and 39th place respectively.
The capital city, Tokyo, was also ranked as the third best city in the world
for students, with a low student to general population ratio.
9. South Korea
Similar to Japan, South Korea has two universities in
the top 50 world institutions, with its top ranked Seoul National University
coming in in 36th. KAIST, Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology,
positions 43rd, with the capital city, Seoul, coming 10th in the student city
rankings.
8. China
Tsinghua University is one of China's most renowned
higher education institutions and is situated in the north-west of Beijing in
the former imperial gardens of the Qing Dynasty. The institution is the highest
ranked university in China, scoring 25th overall. Peking University, in 41st
position, is the country's other top 50 university.
7. Netherlands
The Netherlands has five universities in the top 100
institutions in the world, according to OS, the highest ranked of which is the
University of Amsterdam in 55th. Maastricht University (pictured) while only
ranking 169th in the world, achieves eighth place in the Top 50 under 50 years
of age table. The institution is popular with international students with
nearly half of all undergraduate programmes offered in English.
6. France
France's capital, Paris, was last year named the top
city in the world to be a student with both the Ecole normale supérieure, Paris
and the Ecole Polytechnique situated in or near the city. The former places an
impressive 23rd in the overall rankings, while the Ecole Polytechnique ranks
40th.
5. Canada
With three universities in the top 50 world rankings,
Canada makes it into the top five countries for higher education, according to
QS. McGill University ranks in 24th, while the University of Toronto features
in 34th and the University of British Columbia scrapes into the top 50. Canada
can often prove a cheaper alternative to US study and involves a simpler
application process.
4. Australia
With seven universities in the top 100 world
university rankings, it's unsurprising that Australia makes the top five in
this list. Only the US and the UK have more universities in the top 100. The
highest ranked university, The Australian National University, comes in in 19th
place overall, and scores particularly highly for academic reputation and
international faculty.
3. Germany
While only four German institutions make it into the
top 100 universities in the world, with the highest ranked Technische
Universität München only scoring 60th place, the fee system in Germany
certainly makes it a desirable place to study for students. In 2014, the last
of Germany's states abolished tuition fees, meaning that now all students can
access education for free - aside from a small admin fee and living costs.
2. United Kingdom
Ranking in second place for higher education, the UK
has 18 universities in the top 100 world institutions, with the highest, the
University of Cambridge, ranking in third place. The University of Oxford (6),
University College London (7) and Imperial College London (8) also feature in
the top 10.
1. United States
Coming top of the table is the United States, with 30
universities in the top 100, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT) taking top spot overall. According to QS, the US set the benchmark for
all four criteria used to rank countries, including access, system strength,
flagship and economy.










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