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A total of 20 Indian universities are ranked among the BRICS top 200, in the new edition of the QS University Rankings: BRICS. The six highest-ranked are all members of the prestigious Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT) group: the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi (IITD) is 13th, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IITB) 15th, Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur (IITK) 16th, Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IITM) 17th, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur (IITKGP) 20th and Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee (IITR) 37th – with the close places of the first five in particular reflecting a strong consistency in quality.
The University of Delhi and University of Calcutta also both make the BRICS top 50, and a further seven universities in India are within the top 100. While this is a relatively strong performance (a quarter of the top-20 spots is certainly respectable), the ranking is likely to fuel concerns expressed by India’s new government about the country’s failure to keep pace in international university rankings with fellow fast-developing economy China. The latter has a total of 71 institutions in the BRICS top 200, including six within the top 10.
International reputation
Like all of the rankings produced by QS, the QS University Rankings: BRICS includes two indicators designed to assess universities’ international reputation. This is based on major global surveys of academics and employers. A strong international reputation among graduate recruiters is clearly one of the key strengths of the Indian Institutes of Technology, as well as the University of Delhi, which joins the IITs of Bombay, Delhi and Madras within the BRICS top 10 as rated by employers.
International reputation among academics lags just a little behind, with the same three Indian universities topping the list: Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (13th in the academic survey), Indian Institute of Technology Delhi (15th) and University of Delhi (16th). A total of eight universities in India make the BRICS top 50 according to academics, while 14 are included among employers’ 50 leading BRICS institutions.
Academic staff
Faculty/student ratio is a relative weak point for Indian universities compared to those in other BRICS countries, reflecting the country’s struggle to expand its higher education provision rapidly enough to meet its burgeoning and education-hungry young population. Only one Indian institution, Manipal University, makes the BRICS top 100 on this measure.
However, while academic staff levels are low compared to student enrolments, universities in India do boast some of the best-qualified academic faculties among the BRICS group, claiming some of the strongest scores for proportion of academic staff with a PhD. This is once again a strong point especially for the Indian Institutes of Technology, with the IITs of Madras, Kharagpur and Roorkee sharing the number one spot on this indicator.
Research
Research productivity is another area of strength for universities in India, which claim six of the top-10 spots when comparing BRICS institutions on the number of papers published per faculty member. This correlates with the highly qualified, if stretched, academic staff at India’s leading institutions. Here again the highest scorers are almost all within the IIT group, with the notable exception of the University of Mumbai, which ranks 5th among BRICS universities on this indicator, two places behind the Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur.
In terms of research impact, however, the list looks somewhat different. India’s highest entrant when considering citations per paper is Panjab University, which comes third among BRICS institutions on this measure. The University of Delhi and Banaras Hindu University also make the top 25, followed by the University of Madras (31st), while the highest ranked IIT this time is the Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee (40th).
Internationalization
The picture in terms of internationalization – assessed by proportion of international faculty members and international students – is not quite so promising. Only Pondicherry University appears within the BRICS top 100 for proportion of international faculty, and just two Indian universities are within the top 100 for proportion of international students. These two, however, do stand out; the University of Madras comes 11th on this indicator, and Manipal University 26th.
To compare universities in India with other BRICS institutions on all eight indicators, visit the interactive ranking table (sign in or register for full functionality).