The Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2012-2013
powered by Thomson Reuters are the only global university performance
tables to judge world class universities across all of their core
missions - teaching, research, knowledge transfer and international
outlook. The top universities rankings employ 13 carefully calibrated
performance indicators to provide the most comprehensive and balanced
comparisons available, which are trusted by students, academics,
university leaders, industry and governments.
1. California Institute of Technology
Caltech alumni include movie director Frank Capra, who graduated in 1918,
but its 124-acre campus predates nearby Hollywood. More than 30 Caltech
students have won Nobel prizes, and one alumnus - Harrison Schmitt -
has walked on the Moon. Home to Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, it has
a faculty of about 300 teaching around 2,000 students.
2. University of Oxford
Twenty-six British prime ministers, at least 30 other world leaders, 12
saints and 20 archbishops of Canterbury have been Oxonians. Oxford
virtually invented college life in the 13th century. The world's
third-oldest surviving university offers approximately 12,000
undergraduates a choice of 38 colleges and six permanent
private-residence halls.
Oxford was the first University in the
English-speaking world. Our aim is to remain at the forefront of centres
of learning, teaching and research. Oxford’s remarkable global appeal continues to grow.
Students from more than a hundred and forty countries and
territories make up a student population of over twenty thousand. Over a
third comes from outside the United Kingdom.
2. Stanford University
Founded in 1891 by railway tycoon Leland Stanford in remembrance of his
son, who died aged 16, Stanford is said to be, after Harvard, the US'
most selective university, accepting around 7 per cent of applicants.
Its alumni founded corporate giants including Hewlett-Packard and
Google. The world's third-richest university, it teaches about 7,000
undergraduate and around 4,000 graduate students.
Stanford University is led by President John Hennessy and Provost John Etchemendy. For more details on Stanford's governance, please visit Stanford Facts: University Governance
4. Harvard University
The oldest academic institute in the US, it dates from 1636 and is named
after its first benefactor, John Harvard. It has the global academy's
largest financial endowment and boasts more than 40 Nobel laureates. Its
210-acre main campus and 23 satellites house 10 faculties and the
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.
Harvard University is a private Ivy League research university in
Cambridge, Massachusetts. Its history, influence, and wealth have made
it one of the most prestigious universities in the world.
5. Massachusetts Institute of Technology
In 150 years, MIT has produced more than 70 Nobel laureates, eight of
whom are members of its current faculty. From its 168-acre Charles River
campus, more than 10,000 students are instructed in architecture and
planning; engineering; humanities, arts and social sciences; management;
science; and health sciences and technology.
6. Princeton University
Princeton University is a private research university located in
Princeton, New Jersey, United States.
It is one of the eight universities of the Ivy League, and one of the
nine Colonial Colleges founded before the American Revolution
At the heart of American academic life since its charter in 1746,
Princeton is one of the smallest of the private Ivy Leaguers, but can
boast more than 30 Nobel laureates among its past faculty and alumni.
Its 500-acre campus accommodates around 5,000 undergraduates and 2,500
postgraduates overseen by more than 1,100 academics.
7. University of Cambridge
Cambridge alumni loom large in the making of the modern world: Newton on
laws and motion; Rutherford splitting the atom; Darwin on evolution;
Turing's prototypical computer; Crick and Watson with DNA. Founded in
1209 by Oxford scholars who quit after a dispute with the local
citizenry, Cambridge now employs more than 8,500 staff and has over
18,300 students.
8.Imperial College London
With an emphasis on research, Imperial has four faculties - medicine,
natural science, engineering and business. Founded in 1907 as a
constituent college of the University of London, it became independent
in 2007. Its main campus in London's museum quarter and seven others
house more than 1,200 scholars and around 13,000 students.
9. University of California, Berkeley
Vitamin E was identified here, a lost Scarlatti opera found, the flu
virus identified and America's first no-fault divorce law drafted. A
gold-rush by-product, the university by San Francisco Bay was chartered
in 1868. To date, more than 20 faculty members have become Nobel
laureates. Today's student body consists of about 36,000 members, more
than 10,000 of them postgraduates.
10.University of Chicago
Chicago has more postgraduates than undergraduates, underlining its
focus on advanced academic exploration. The Chicago School of economics,
embracing Milton Friedman's pro-market philosophy, developed here, as
did the first self-sustained manmade nuclear reaction. Founded in 1890
with a grant by John D. Rockefeller, Chicago now operates 125 research
institutes and centres.
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