Cambridge loses top spot to MIT in world university rankings
America's prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology has grabbed the top slot from UK's Cambridge University in a list of world university rankings for 2011-2012.
However, UK universities have taken four of the six top slots in a global university 'league table' by QS World University Rankings.
With MIT leading the list, Cambridge fell to No. 2 spot and Harvard University ranked third in list of rankings.
"The rise of MIT coincides with a global shift in emphasis toward science and technology," QS head of research Ben Sowter said, adding 'MIT perfects a blueprint that is now being followed by a new wave of cutting-edge tech-focused institutions, especially in Asia'.
University College, London (UCL), Oxford and Imperial took fourth, fifth and sixth places respectively. Seventh place was awarded to Yale University, followed by University of Chicago, Princeton University and the tenth position to California Institute of Technology.
Sowter warned higher fees and new visa rules could see UK universities struggle next year. Students trying to get ahead of a trebling in fees for English undergraduates had produced a surge in applications to start university in autumn 2011, Sowter told BBC News.
"We won't know for sure until the 2012 results come in, but we may see a drop off next year," he said. He also said tougher visa rules for international students could deter some from applying to UK universities.
Just 40 per cent of UK employers agreed visa regulations had helped them hire international graduates - globally the figure was 70 per cent said Sowter.
The UK Government has been widely criticised by MPs within the past week for tightening the student-visa system. Both argued overseas students should be reclassified so that they would not count towards migration limits, to allow the UK to continue to expand its share of the overseas student market.
The QS rankings rate the world's top 400 universities, evaluating each institution's strengths in research, teaching, the employability of its graduates and international outlook.
"If we are serious about staying on top, the government must concentrate investment where it will have the most impact - in our world-class research-intensive universities," director general of the Russell Group of research-based universities Dr Wendy Piatt said.
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