Times Higher
Education World University
Rankings data reveal the top 15 universities in Africa
South
Africa’s University of Cape Town has topped a Times Higher Education snapshot ranking of the best
universities in Africa thanks to its highly-cited research, a strong
international outlook and an ability to attract large sums of money from
industry.
It
leads a strong showing for the country, which claims two-fifths (six) of the
list’s 15 places, including the University of the Witwatersrand in second place, Stellenbosch University in third, the University of KwaZulu-Natal in fifth and the University of Pretoria in sixth place.
Uganda’s Makerere University is the only institution outside South
Africa to make the top five in fourth place.
Overall,
institutions from seven countries feature in the ranking, which uses the samemethodology as the flagship THE World University Rankings. It has been
published ahead ofTHE’s
second Africa
Universities Summit, which will be held at the University of Ghana from 27 to 29 April 2016.
Egypt
is the second-most represented nation in the table with three institutions – Suez Canal University, Alexandria University and Cairo University taking ninth, 10th and 11th place,
respectively – while Morocco comes third with the University of Marrakech Cadi Ayyad in 12th place and Mohammed V
University of Rabat in
15th place. Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria and Uganda each have one institution in the
ranking.
Nico
Cloete, director of the Centre for Higher Education Trust and coordinator of
the Higher Education Research and Advocacy Network in Africa, said that four institutions
in the list – Cape Town, Makerere, Nairobi and Ghana – have “adopted strategies to become
research-led flagship universities” in their country and seen “significant
increases in doctoral graduates and research outputs during the last five
years”.
A 2014
report, An Empirical
Overview of Eight Flagship Universities in Africa: 2001-2011,
co-written by Dr Cloete, found that of the institutions analysed, those outside
South Africa enrolled “low proportions of postgraduate students”, ran
“professional” master's programmes rather than ones that offered training in
high-level research and had “high proportions of junior, under-qualified
academics, leaving available low numbers of potential research leaders”.
In
contrast, it found that more than 30 per cent of students at the University of Cape Town in 2011 were postgraduate students
while almost two-thirds (62 per cent) of its permanent academics had doctoral
degrees.
Phil
Baty, THE rankings editor, said: “This
snapshot ranking is based on the same criteria as the World University Rankings
but we are keen to develop a bespoke range of metrics, following a public
consultation, for a full Africa University Ranking.”
The THE Africa Universities Summit will be on the theme “globalisation
and policy directions for African higher education” and will discuss whether
both public and private institutions are essential to a strong university
sector in the continent and consider what are the best ways to educate Africa’s
youth.
Best universities in Africa
2016: top 15
Rank
|
Institution
|
Country
|
1
|
South Africa
|
|
2
|
South Africa
|
|
3
|
South Africa
|
|
4
|
Uganda
|
|
5
|
South Africa
|
|
6
|
South Africa
|
|
7
|
Ghana
|
|
8
|
Kenya
|
|
9
|
Egypt
|
|
10
|
Egypt
|
|
11
|
Egypt
|
|
12
|
Morocco
|
|
13
|
South Africa
|
|
14
|
Nigeria
|
|
15
|
Morocco
|
No comments:
Post a Comment