By Samantha Spooner
WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM - Aug 4 2015
AS the Times Higher Education (THE) Africa universities summit kicked
off July 30 at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa, the main
buzz of the event was the landmark unveiling of a new African university
ranking.
And it’s here, just released Friday, though only ranking the top 30
of Africa’s approximately 2,600 higher education institutions.
These results are essentially based on the amount of citations there are
for the university’s work. They are derived from the methodology for
the current world university ranking, using the 13 factors
(below), combining THE’s own enormous database of statistics along with
the Elsevier’s Scopus database – a system that highlights some of the
continent’s top performers in terms of how often research papers are
referred to and cited by other academics globally. This methodology is
designed for the research-led globally facing university. Times Higher
Education emphasised that not everyone in Africa will find the metrics
appropriate to their mission or their strategic priorities making this
ranking a starting point of a longer, inclusive conversation involving
African institutions.
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