Arab universities have little representation in the major university-ranking systems –
Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU),
World University Rankings (WUR), and
QS World University Rankings (QS). ARWU is compiled by
Shanghai Jiao Tong University, and lists the top 500 universities. Universities are ranked 1-500, with 1-100 individually ranked, 101-200 ranked in groups of 50 (101-150, 151-200), and the remainder are ranked in groups of 100 (201-300, 301-400, 401-500). ARWU gauges performance using a variety of markers, including the number of Nobel Prize-winners among alumni and faculty, number of published papers in academic journals, number of references to papers published by university faculty, and per capita academic performance. The top-ranked Arab university in ARWU is
King Saud University (Saudi Arabia), at #151-200. The remaining ranked Arab universities are
King Abdulaziz University (Saudi Arabia, #201-300);
King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (Saudi Arabia, #301-400); Cairo University (#401-500);
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (Saudi Arabia, #401-500); and
University of Jordan (#801-900). WUR is produced by Times Higher Education, which utilizes 13 "performance indicators" across five general fields: teaching, research, citations, industry income, and international outlook. Universities are ranked 1-400, with 1-200 individually ranked, 201-300 ranked in groups of 25 (201-225, 226-250, etc.), and 301-400 ranked in groups of 50 (301-350, 351-400). There are only two Arab universities ranked in the top 400 of WUR, both in Saudi Arabia: King Abdulaziz University (#351-400), and King Saud University (#351-400). There are, however, a few more universities ranked in the separate "Asia University Rankings":
King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (Saudi Arabia, #62);
United Arab Emirates University (#86); and American University of Beirut (#87). The QS rankings, produced by Quacquarelli Symonds, uses six indicators to rank universities: academic reputation (as determined from surveys), employer reputation (as determined from surveys), faculty-student ratio, citations per faculty, proportion of international students, and proportion of international faculty. Universities are ranked 1-800, with 1-399 individually ranked, and 400-800 ranked into progressively larger groups (the final 100 are simply ranked as 700+). The top-ranked Arab university is again in Saudi Arabia:
King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (#216). The QS rankings include the highest number of ranked Arab universities, mostly because this system ranks many more universities (800) than either ARWU (500) or WUR (400). Arab universities ranked by QS are: American University of Beirut (#250); King Saud University (Saudi Arabia, #253);
American University in Cairo (#348); King Abdulaziz University (Saudi Arabia, #360); United Arab Emirates University (#421-430);
American University of Sharjah (UAE, #431-440);
University of Jordan (#498);
Imam Mohammad Ibn Saud Islamic University (Saudi Arabia, #491-500);
Sultan Qaboos University (Oman, #501-550); Cairo University (#551-600);
Qatar University (#551-600);
Umm Al-Qura University (Saudi Arabia, #551-600);
Abu Dhabi University (UAE, #601-650);
Ain Shams University (Egypt, #601-650);
King Khalid University (Saudi Arabia, #601-650); Université Saint Joseph (Lebanon, #601-650); Al Azhar University (Egypt, #651-700);
Jordan University of Science and Technology (#651-700);
Alexandria University (Egypt, #700+);
King Faisal University (Saudi Arabia, #700+);
Kuwait University (#700+);
University of Baghdad (#700+); and
University of Bahrain (#700+). The three major ranking systems subdivide their rankings into major world regions, QS World University rankings now publishes a regional ranking for the "Arab Region". In an attempt to address the lack of a distinct Middle East/North Africa region, IIE published the Higher Education Classification in the Middle East and North Africa, in 2012, which surveys the higher education sectors in Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and the United Arab Emirates. The study evaluates six dimensions of higher education in these countries: institutional characteristics (i.e. public or private), curriculum organization/system, student profile, cultural orientation (Arab, American, French, or British), regional engagement, and international engagement. The study encountered several obstacles in collecting data, including a reluctance to participate on the part of governments and institutions, lack of centralized institutional data, and political instability (the study was developed during and after the major protests in 2011; for this reason, Egypt was excluded from the study completely). many scholars and educators are critical of the rankings' usefulness. In general, critics argue that the rankings are highly subjective and the methodologies are faulty. Among the most common criticisms of the rankings are: that they rely too heavily on "reputation," a subjective marker that is determined by worldwide surveys of academics and administrators; that many regions of the world outside the U.S. and Western Europe are underrepresented in the surveys; that "research impact" is too focused on quantity of publications and not quality; that student and employer perspectives are notably absent from the ranking methodologies; and that Nobel Prize-winners are given a disproportionate amount of weight in the methodologies (particularly in the ARWU rankings). Some scholars and educators in the Arab world have joined in the critique of the rankings, sharing the concern that the supposed "objective" rankings are really quite subjective, and further arguing that the rankings are biased in favor of Western universities. Others in the Arab world have pointed to a lack of financial resources (especially outside the Arab States of the Persian Gulf), difficulties publishing research in English-language journals, and the limited ability of Arab scholars to participate in international conferences and collaborations as important factors that explain Arab universities' poor showing in the rankings. The fact that Saudi Arabia boasts the top Arab university in each of the three ranking systems is often attributed to high levels of government funding for education, an emphasis on research in the science and engineering fields. A review of university ranking methodologies identified limitations. Scholars from the Arab region proposed two methods tailored for a global ranking and an Arab ranking. They argue that current frameworks bias outcomes against Arab institutions and call for re-calibrating indicator weights to reflect institutional differences. The proposals seek adjustments to metrics and weighting to enable more comparable assessments. ==References==