29 June 2013 Issue No:278
UNESCO has released a new publication, Rankings and Accountability in Higher Education: Uses and misuses, which debates the pros and cons of classifying universities. A UNESCO release says the book brings together “the people behind university rankings and their critics to debate the uses and misuses of existing rankings”.
The book arose from the “Global Forum Rankings and Accountability in Higher Education: Uses and misuses”, the first global consultation on the subject, organised by UNESCO, the OECD and the World Bank in May 2011. This brought together researchers, academics, policy analysts, students and institutional leaders.
The release says the book develops many of the issues addressed during that landmark consultation and is the first in a new UNESCO series, Education on the Move, aimed at bringing the latest thinking in education to specialists worldwide.
The book features comments from people on five continents to provide a comprehensive overview of current thinking on the subject and sets out alternative approaches and complementary tools for a new era of transparent and informed use of higher education ranking tables.
It presents two sides to the debate:
1: Rankings purport to measure higher education quality, but:
2: However, rankings can claim achievements in the following areas:
The book arose from the “Global Forum Rankings and Accountability in Higher Education: Uses and misuses”, the first global consultation on the subject, organised by UNESCO, the OECD and the World Bank in May 2011. This brought together researchers, academics, policy analysts, students and institutional leaders.
The release says the book develops many of the issues addressed during that landmark consultation and is the first in a new UNESCO series, Education on the Move, aimed at bringing the latest thinking in education to specialists worldwide.
The book features comments from people on five continents to provide a comprehensive overview of current thinking on the subject and sets out alternative approaches and complementary tools for a new era of transparent and informed use of higher education ranking tables.
It presents two sides to the debate:
1: Rankings purport to measure higher education quality, but:
- There are more than 16,000 higher education institutions in the
world, and global rankings focus attention on the performance of less
than 100 – or less than 1%. The pervasiveness of focusing on the top
institutions obscures the fact that the majority of students attend
non-elite institutions.
- Rankings throw no light on how a nation’s higher education system educates all its students and citizens.
- Rankings encourage nations to focus disproportionately on a
handful of elites, which could undermine national or regionally
strategic priorities and capacity for the knowledge society.
- Focus should be on ensuring the system is world class rather
than on the performance of the individual ‘world-class university’.
- Aligning national priorities to meet the criteria of rankings is an abdication of national sovereignty.
- Because national budgets are a zero-sum-game (spending in one
area means taking from somewhere else), governments risk subverting
other policy objectives in order to conform to indicators designed by
others for other purposes.
- Disproportionate emphasis on research can undermine teaching and learning.
2: However, rankings can claim achievements in the following areas:
- They have acted as a wake-up call about the value and importance of
higher education, especially for nations that may not have been
investing sufficiently.
- They have placed consideration of higher education quality within a wider comparative and international framework, which has challenged self-perceptions of greatness so there is no more room for self-promotion.
- With the onslaught of global rankings, the higher education
world has become more competitive but also multi-polar. Many more
countries are making a contribution to knowledge creation and
dissemination.
- While rankings do not measure what is meaningful about the
quality of higher education, they have drawn our attention to the
importance of good quality comparative information about performance and
productivity, value for money and return on public investment.
- Good quality, international comparative information is
essential for underpinning strategic leadership and decision-making at
the national and institutional levels.
- Comparable information on institutions, teaching and research
makes it easier for students and researchers to make informed choices on
where and what to study and where to work.
- Improved data-based or evidence-based decision-making can
prompt discussions about what constitutes success and encourage
benchmarking to identify and share best practices.
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