Non-Russell
Group universities rise, knocking former favorites out of top slots
The Universities of Bath, Surrey and
Lancaster have charged ahead of their Russell Group peers in the Guardian
league table of universities, knocking University College London (UCL) out of
its traditional place in the top 10.
The University
of Cambridge underlines its dominance by
coming top of the table for the fourth year in a row and increasing the gap
between itself and its ancient rival Oxford, which remains in second place. St
Andrews, in third, is followed by Bath, Imperial College, Surrey, LSE, Durham,
Warwick and Lancaster.
Cambridge has also performed well
across the Guardian's subject tables, which rank universities according to
areas of study and will be published in full on Tuesday. It tops 17 of the
subject tables, while Oxford takes the number one spot in just four.
The universities of Bath and Surrey,
both recent entries in the top 10, have continued to rise. Dame Glynis
Breakwell, vice-chancellor of Bath, says her university's performance is down
to its focus on employ ability and student satisfaction, both of which form part
of the algorithm the Guardian uses to rank institutions.
"We're
putting a lot of attention into finding really good placements, which is
increasingly difficult to do because of the economic climate," says
Breakwell. "Over 60% of Bath students will go out on a year-long professional placement as
part of their degree. This gives them fantastic opportunities to learn about
what employers want and for them to make contact with potential
employers."
The Guardian's league tables rank
universities according to: spending per student; their student/staff ratio;
graduate career prospects; what grades applicants need to get a place; a
value-added score that compares students' entry qualifications with their final
degree results; and how satisfied final-year students are with their courses,
based on results from the annual National Student Survey.
It was happy finalists who helped to
push Surrey University up to sixth place, from eighth place last year and 12th
two years ago. The university has been working hard to listen more closely to
student opinion, says Surrey's vice-chancellor professor sir Christopher
Snowden.
"We've increased the scale of
the academic representation from the students – they now have a large number of
representatives who meet with senior management. They also have special
sessions with the deans and the staff involved in delivery. The idea is that we
can address concerns more rapidly."
Other climbers include the
Universities of Glyndŵr (from 108 to 64), Derby (from 79 to 50) and Falmouth
(76 to 53).
Anglia Ruskin has seen the biggest
drop (from 67 to 105), caused in part by a rising student/staff ratio. In civil
engineering there are now 22.7 students per member of academic staff, where
previously there had been just 14.3.
Birmingham City also fell (from 61
to 88), as did Bournemouth (52 to 71), Aberystwyth (88 to 106), Greenwich (70
to 87), Chester (46 to 61) and Bristol (23 to 34).
The chief factor causing UCL's drop
out of the top ten was a fall in the number of leavers getting graduate-level
jobs, says Matt Hiely-Rayner, from Intelligent Matrix, the independent
consultancy that compiles the tables.
"There have been big falls in
the numbers going on to graduate-level jobs or further study, particularly in
psychology and chemistry. Another contributor is a drop in overall student
satisfaction."
As for the LSE, a drop in its employ ability score and spending per student caused it to lose its place in the
top three.
Universities hoping to climb the
league tables, Hiely-Rayner advice, should "identify their areas of
weakness and concentrate on improving those. They should do that according to
their own internal analysis, not just what the league tables say."
The
shadow minister for higher education, Liam Byrne, says: "The Guardian university guide is a powerful weapon in the prospective student's
arsenal. Its unrivaled analysis of university performance is complemented by a rigorous data set – from student satisfaction rates to employ ability statistics
– enabling young people to make an informed choice on where to study."
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