There are three main domestic league tables in the United Kingdom: the
Complete University Guide (
CUG),
The Guardian, and
The Times/
The Sunday Times.
Complete University Guide The
Complete University Guide is compiled by Mayfield University Consultants and was published for the first time in 2007. The ranking uses ten criteria, with a statistical technique called the
Z-score applied to the results of each. The effect of this is to ensure that the weighting given to each criterion is not distorted by the choice of scale used to score that criterion. The ten Z-scores are then weighted (as given below) and summed to give a total score for each university. These total scores are then transformed to a scale where the top score is set at 1,000, with the remainder being a proportion of the top score. The ten criteria are: • "Academic services spend" (0.5) – expenditure per student on all academic services – data source:
Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA); • "Degree completion" (1.0) – a measure of the completion rate of students (data source: HESA); • "Entry standards" (1.0) – average
UCAS Tariff score of new students under the age of 21 (data source: HESA); • "Facilities spend" (0.5) – expenditure per student on staff and student facilities (data source: HESA); • "Good honours" (1.0) – the proportion of first and upper-second-class honours,
phased out (data source: HESA); • "Graduate prospects" (1.0) – a measure of the employability of graduates (data source: HESA); • "Research quality" (1.0) – a measure of the average quality of research – data source:
Research Excellence Framework (REF); • "Research intensity" (0.5) – a measure of the fraction of staff who are research-active (data source: HESA / REF); • "Student satisfaction" (1.5) – a measure of the view of students on the teaching quality (data source:
National Student Survey); • "Student–staff ratio" (1.0) – a measure of the average staffing level (data source: HESA).
The Guardian The Guardian ranking uses nine different criteria, each weighted between 5 and 15 per cent. Unlike other annual rankings of British universities, the criteria do not include a measure of research output. A "value-added" factor is included which compares students' degree results with their entry qualifications, described by the newspaper as being "[b]ased upon a
sophisticated indexing methodology that tracks students from enrolment to graduation, qualifications upon entry are compared with the award that a student receives at the end of their studies". Tables are drawn up for subjects, with the overall ranking being based on an average across the subjects rather than on institutional level statistics. The nine criteria are: • "Entry scores" (15%); • "Assessment and feedback" (10%) – as rated by graduates of the course (data source: National Student Survey); • "Career prospects" (15%) (data source:
Destination of Leavers from Higher Education); • "Overall satisfaction" (5%) – final-year students' opinions about the overall quality of their course (data source: National Student Survey); • "Expenditure per student" (5%); • "Student-staff ratio" (15%); • "Teaching" (10%) – as rated by graduates of the course (data source: the National Student Survey); • "Value added" (15%); • "Continuation" (10%).
The Times/The Sunday Times The Times/The Sunday Times university league table, known as the Good University Guide, is published in both electronic and print format. Since 1999, the guide also recognises one university annually as
University of the Year. It ranks institutions using the following eight criteria: • "Student satisfaction (+50 to −55 points)" – the results of national student surveys are scored taking a theoretical minimum and maximum score of 50% and 90% respectively (data source: the National Student Survey); • "Teaching excellence (250)" – defined as: subjects scoring at least 22/24 points, those ranked excellent, or those undertaken more recently in which there is confidence in academic standards and in which teaching and learning, student progression and learning resources have all been ranked commendable (data source:
Quality Assurance Agency;
Scottish Higher Education Funding Council;
Higher Education Funding Council for Wales); • "Heads'/peer assessments (100)" – school heads are asked to identify the highest-quality undergraduate provision (data source:
The Sunday Times heads' survey and peer assessment); • "Research quality (200)" – based upon the most recent Research Assessment Exercise (data source:
Higher Education Funding Council for England (Hefce)); • "A-level/Higher points (250)" – nationally audited data for the subsequent academic year are used for league table calculations (data source: HESA); • "Unemployment (100)" – the number of students assume to be unemployed six months after graduation is calculated as a percentage of the total number of known desbefore completing their courses is compared with the number expected to do so (the benchmark figure shown in brackets) (data source: Hefce, Performance Indicators in Higher Education). Other criteria considered are: • "Completion" – the percentage of students who manage to complete their degree; • "Entry standards" – the average UCAS tariff score (data source: HESA); • "Facilities spending" – the average expenditure per student on sports, careers services, health and counselling; • "Good honours" – the percentage of students graduating with a first or 2.1; • "Graduate prospects" – the percentage of UK graduates in graduate employment or further study (data source: HESA's survey of
Destination of Leavers from Higher Education (DLHE)); • "Library and computing spending" – the average expenditure on library and computer services per student (data source: HESA); • "Research" (data source: 2021 Research Excellence Framework); • "Student satisfaction" (data source: National Student Survey); and • "Student-staff ratio" (data source: HESA). == Disparity with global rankings ==