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Kenyan universities fail quality test among world’s best in new ranking
57 per cent of those polled by a new Synovate survey say they would prefer to pursue their degrees and diplomas in universities abroad than join local ones. Photo/JARED NYATAYA
Posted Monday, August 23 2010 at 00:00
The global competitiveness of Kenya’s universities has once again come under the spotlight following a poor showing in a new ranking.
None appears among the top 1,000 in a survey by the Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU), in which Africa is represented by only three — all of them from South Africa.
They are University of Cape Town at 259, University of Witwatersrand at 393 and University of Kwazulu-Natal at 473.
Harvard leads a pack of 17 US universities, which appear top on the list.
In terms of regional representation, Europe has 208, the Americas 184, while Asia/Pacific have 106 universities in the top 501 ranking.
The survey used benchmarks such as number of alumni and staff winning Nobel Prizes and Fields Medals, number of highly cited researchers selected by Thomson Scientific, number of articles published in journals of Nature and Science, number of articles in Science Citation Index - Expanded and Social Sciences Citation Index, and per capita performance with respect to the size of an institution.
The absence of Kenyan and indeed other African universities from the list means most graduates coming from the continent are disadvantaged and less prepared to join the global labour force.
ARWU says the findings are taken seriously by universities, governments, the public and the media worldwide.
“There is enormous attention given to every league table that is published as well as its quality ranking. And they are taken seriously by students, government and especially by the media,” said Ms Ellen Hazelkorn, the main author of a new study by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) which studied the influence of university rankings.
High ranking means more prestige and ability to attract foreign students and high-profile scholars.
The OECD study found that 57 per cent of institutions “believe league tables and rankings are influencing the willingness of other institutions to form partnerships with them.”
A series of another global university rankings have also cast doubt on the competitiveness of Kenyan universities.
Conducted by Spanish Research firm Webometrics, the ranking focuses on an institution’s online visibility, generation of research and scholarly activity — key academic tools by which modern institutions of higher learning should be judged.
In its latest survey that included 12,000 institutions, Webometrics ranked only two Kenyan universities — Nairobi and Strathmore — among the top 50 in Africa.
The University of Nairobi is at number 26, the highest ranking in Kenya, while Strathmore is at position 31.




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