Within the framework of the internationalization of higher education, competition to attract top foreign students and personnel is increasing between universities.
A strong international profile is essential in order to be in with a chance.
This is why there is great interest in international ranking lists. For more information on the Dutch position in international rankings, please refer to the website of the VSNU (Association of Universities in the Netherlands).
The Times World University Ranking
An influential ranking list is The
Times Higher Education
– QS World University Rankings, published by the British publisher TSL Education Ltd. The University of Groningen figures in the Top 150 – at number 138 in the world.
> THES: Ranking 2009
Academic Ranking of World Universities
The Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU) is a global Top 500 published annually by the Shanghai Jiao Tong University.
In 2009, the University of Groningen’s ranking confirmed again the strong position of its research.
Globally, Groningen figures at a shared number 101. (Europe: joint 33th place).
> ARWU
Leiden Ranking
In March 2007, the Leiden CWTS placed ‘The Leiden Ranking’ on its website.
This is a Top 100 of European universities based on four different criteria.
In the most important ranking list, the University of Groningen is in the European Top 25.
Our relative citation impact is 1.26 times higher than the global average, which translates into a joint 23rd place in the European Top 100.
> CWTS
CHE Excellence Ranking
According to the German Centre for Higher Education Development (CHE), the University of Groningen is a member of the so-called Excellence Group of the best universities in Europe.
The Excellence Group has 56 members, which is 1.3 percent of the approximately 4,500 European institutions of higher education.
Prospective Master’s and PhD students can use this ranking list, published in cooperation with Die Zeit, to compare universities with each other.
> CHE Excellence Ranking 2009
Essential Science Indicators (ESI) Citation Impact
Thomson Reuters’ ESI is a publicly available web application based on the well known citation database ISI Web of Science. It allows comparison of the number of publications and citations of the world’s 1% most cited universities and research institutes. The citations to publications ratio (CPP, i.e. relative citation impact) is generally considered to be the most objective indicator of research quality in the Natural, Life and Medical Sciences.
Summed over all 22 Fields that ESI distinguishes, the University of Groningen figures in the global Top-100 of most productive universities. When these large research universities are compared in terms of CPP, Groningen ranks 56th (number 16 in the European Top-20).
ESI also provides rankings per Field. These show that the University of Groningen belongs to the Top 4% of the world’s best universities in Chemistry and Materials Science and to the Top 15- 33% in Plant & Animal Science, Environment/Ecology, Microbiology and Physics.
>
The University of Groningen Ranking of Research Universities
Webometrics
The Webometrics Ranking of World Universities is composed by the Spanish Centro Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC) and is based mostly on the number and distribution of academic publications on the internet.
Globally, the University of Groningen figures at number 94, in Europe at number 19. The Webometrics Ranking confirms Groningen’s international position.
> Webometrics Ranking
Taiwan Performance Ranking of Scientific Papers for World Universities
Since 2007 the Higher Education Evaluation and Accreditation Council of Taiwan (HEEACT) has published a global Top 500 of universities, based on eight productivity and citation impact indicators borrowed from Thomson Reuters’ Web of Science. The University of Groningen takes an overall 103rd place in the 2009 ranking list, and is in the global Top 100 for three of the six disciplines: Clinical Medicine (87th), Natural Sciences (94th) and Social Sciences (99th).
> HEEACT
Best Places to Work ranking list
The University of Groningen is in fourth place on the international list of Best Places to Work in Academia 2009, published by the American journal The Scientist. The University owes its high place to the Rosalind Franklin Fellowship Programme, among other things.
> Find out why University of Groningen won the fourth place internationally
> Read the complete survey