Tag: Asia

  • NUS Is Asia’s Top University, NTU 55th in Tmes Higher Education World University Rankings

    NUS Is Asia’s Top University, NTU 55th in Tmes Higher Education World University Rankings

    SINGAPORE – The National University of Singapore (NUS) and Nanyang Technological University (NTU) have both made a good showing in the latest Times Higher Education World University Rankings published today (Oct 1).

    As the only Asian university in the global top 30, NUS was crowned Asia’s top university – a first for NUS in the ranking’s 12-year history – while NTU scaled six spots to rank 55th globally in the 2015-2016 rankings.

    The rankings are based on 13 separate performance indicators to reflect a university’s strengths in five areas: Teaching, research, citations, industry income and international outlook. It draws on data from 1,100 institutions, 11 million academic papers and more than 11,000 academic surveys to list the top 800 universities across 70 countries.

    In the latest rankings, NUS was at 26th spot globally. In the previous 2014-2015 edition of the rankings, NUS ranked a spot higher at 25th place and was the second best Asian university, behind the University of Tokyo (ranked 23rd globally).

    In the latest list, the University of Tokyo dropped to 43rd place, just behind China’s Peking University (ranked 42nd). After NUS, these were the next highest ranked Asian institutions.

    Screenshot showing the scores of NTU and NUS in five areas.

    Within the five areas that the universities were scored, NUS was placed in the top 10 in the area of international outlook, which considers a university’s international-to-domestic-student ratio, international-to-domestic-staff ratio and international collaboration. In the areas of teaching (the learning environment) and research (volume, income and reputation), NUS was in the top 30.

    NTU was in the top 20 in the areas of industry income – an indicator for knowledge transfer activity – and international outlook. Neither university placed in the top 30 in the area of citations, which is the research influence indicator that looks at universities’ role in spreading new knowledge and ideas.

    NUS President Professor Tan Chorh Chuan said: “We are pleased that NUS has been placed among the leading universities in the world and top in Asia.” He credited the university’s achievements to “strong support from the government, as well as commitment to excellence by our faculty, staff and students”.

    Pointing to NTU’s leap to 13th place from 39th in the Quacquarelli Symonds World University Rankings a fortnight ago, NTU President Professor Bertil Andersson said: “Although the two indices use different methodologies, they show one common trend – that NTU is on a rapid upward trajectory.” At the 55th spot, NTU has leaped 114 places on the Times Higher Education World University Rankings over the last four years.

    “We will continue to work hard to be a leading global university that is academically and intellectually rigorous and vibrant, and one that serves the needs of Singapore and Singaporeans,” said Prof Andersson. Still, he noted that while rankings are useful for young universities like NTU as it allows them to be benchmarked with the best, “rankings do not shape our strategies”. “We are focused on our fundamentals – to create a world-class environment for learning, teaching and research,” he said.

    Times Higher Education World University Rankings’ editor Phil Baty said NTU’s “consistent rise is particularly impressive” given the 13 rigorous performance indicators used for the rankings. “Singapore is one of the most exciting countries in global higher education at the moment, and NTU is at the heart of that,” he added.

    On NUS, Mr Baty said its new position as Asia’s top university and among the very best of the world’s elite research universities is “thoroughly deserved”. “NUS has proven its strength in depth against the highest global standards,” he said.

    Source: Times Higher Education World University Rankings

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • New York Times Lists Singapore As The Best Place To Visit In Asia

    New York Times Lists Singapore As The Best Place To Visit In Asia

    The New York Times (NYT) has listed Singapore as the top place to visit in Asia, and no. 6 in a global list of 52 places to visit in 2015.

    NYT published this list on Jan 9.

    In its list, NYT cited Singapore’s 50th birthday celebrations as the main attraction.

    “It’s a year-long birthday party, and the world is invited,” the US newspaper wrote in the travel feature.

    Highlights include the Chingay parade in February, the new National Gallery Singapore, and the National Day Parade in August, NYT pointed out.

    NYT’s top recommendation for 2015 is Milan in Italy, which is hosting the 2015 World Expo from May through October.

    The Times said its list was culled from a few hundred ideas from its contributing writers, which it then selected from.

    “We aim for a selection of places that we expect to be particularly compelling in the coming year; reasons might include a museum opening, a new transportation option or a historical anniversary,” it explained in an article How we Chose our List.

    Earlier, travel guide Lonely Planet also included Singapore in its top 10 countries to visit in 2015.

    The company said in October last year: “As one of the world’s most multicultural cities, Singapore is always celebrating something.

    “But Asia’s smallest state has an extra special reason to put on her party hat in 2015, for it’s her Golden Jubilee.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com