This chart shows the changes in world university rankings from 2011 to 2024, based on data surveyed by The Times Higher Education (THE) Ranking. It visually represents the ranking shifts of top universities worldwide, assessing their performance based on criteria like teaching, research, citations, international outlook, and industry income.
The Times Higher Education (THE) Ranking is an annual university ranking system that evaluates and ranks the performance of universities worldwide. This system uses various metrics such as teaching, research, citations, international outlook, and industry income to measure the excellence of universities.
Rank | Name | Indicator |
---|---|---|
1 | University of Oxford | 98.50 % |
2 | Stanford University | 98 % |
3 | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | 97.90 % |
4 | Harvard University | 97.80 % |
5 | University of Cambridge | 97.50 % |
6 | Princeton University | 96.90 % |
7 | California Institute of Technology | 96.50 % |
8 | Imperial College London | 95.10 % |
9 | University of California, Berkeley | 94.60 % |
10 | Yale University | 94.20 % |
11 | ETH Zürich | 93.10 % |
12 | Tsinghua University | 92.40 % |
13 | The University of Chicago | 92.10 % |
14 | Peking University | 91.80 % |
15 | Johns Hopkins University | 91.10 % |
16 | University of Pennsylvania | 91 % |
17 | Columbia University | 90.90 % |
18 | University of California, Los Angeles | 90.10 % |
19 | National University of Singapore | 90 % |
20 | Cornell University | 89.50 % |