News
UB ranked one of world’s best universities
Times Higher Education has named UB as one of the world’s top 200 universities.
UB is ranked 198th in the 2012-13 Times Higher Education World University Rankings, up from last year’s ranking among the top 201 to 225 universities worldwide. The assessment uses 13 performance indicators to analyze how well a university is doing in core missions, including teaching, research, knowledge transfer and international outlook.
“This is very good news. Moving into the top 200 will enhance UB’s already-strong reputation overseas and help us attract outstanding students from around the world,” says Stephen C. Dunnett, vice provost for international education.
“International students are particularly conscious of university rankings and UB’s steady ascent in various international rankings in recent years—a reflection of our strong institutional commitment to excellence—is certainly well recognized and appreciated by students and their families overseas,” Dunnett says.
Times Higher Education is a leading higher education magazine and the recognition of UB as a top-200 university demonstrates UB’s growing global reputation. The data for the rankings were collected by Thomson Reuters, which considered about 700 institutions in 69 countries.
In recent years, UB has invested in recruiting additional high-quality faculty, attracting researchers from around the world to Western New York. These faculty members conduct research on some of the world’s most pressing problems and provide students with an excellent education in the classroom.
Under President Satish K. Tripathi, UB has embarked on the next phase of its UB 2020 plan for academic excellence. With the support of the NYSUNY 2020 legislation, signed into law last year by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, UB is in the midst of a historic transformation. The university is hiring 250 new faculty over the next five years, offering new programs to enrich students’ academic experiences and opening new facilities on its three campuses, with the goal of becoming one the world’s leading public research universities and increasing its regional economic impact.
Abroad, the university has cultivated relationships with distinguished educational institutions throughout the world, cooperating with international partners on student exchanges, joint research projects and the delivery of degree programs overseas.
At home, UB consistently places in the top 20 in the United States for international student enrollment, according to annual data published by the Institute of International Education. In 2010-11, for instance, UB had 5,185 foreign students, the 17th-largest population in the nation.
Reader Comments
Howard R. Wolf says:
This is good news, indeed. An old friend of mine teaches at a liberal arts college which prides itself on its "reputation" and refuses to submit data for objective evaluation. It believes that its kind of achievement (left undefined) does not lend itself to quantification beyond its own self-evaluation. I am pleased that UB's growing accomplishments are "transparent" and "public." I came to UB in 1967 before one brick had been laid on the "new" campus. I never could have imagined that an impressive city of learning would rise on a marsh. Howard Wolf
Posted by Howard R. Wolf, Emeritus Professor and Senior Fellow (English), 10/08/12