
August 2006
On this page:
Commercial Initiatives:
• El Mundo “50 Carreras
Non-commercial Ranking:
• Ranking 2005
<http://aula.elmundo.es/aula/especiales/2006/50carreras/index.html>
Methodology
El Mundo’s ranking system utilizes information obtained from college and university instructors and compares it with statistical data available for all the nation’s institutions of higher education. The newspaper also takes into account information provided by outside bodies that evaluate university quality for a small portion of their final rankings. The criteria for ranking each university breaks down as follows:
A) Professor Survey – accounts for 40% of the final evaluation. A random, anonymous and voluntary survey designed to elicit information from professors as to which universities they think are the most prestigious to be employed by, what are strong and weak points of their particular university, and to review the principle research of the university department they teach in.
B) University Information – accounts for 50% of the final evaluation.
Based on information provided by universities and their faculties. This information is generally analyzed and compared with historical information from each institution. The information is organized into the following categories:
Top 10 Public Universities (2006/2007)
Institution |
Ranking |
Politécnica de Madrid
|
1 |
Autónoma de Madrid
|
2 |
Autónoma de Barcelona
|
3 |
Complutense de Madrid
|
4 |
Pompeu Fabra
|
5 |
Politécnica de Catalunya
|
6 |
Barcelona
|
7 |
Carlos III
|
8 |
Politécnica de Valéncia
|
9 |
Granada
|
10 |
Source: elmundo.es
Top 5 Private Universities (2006/2007)
Institution |
Ranking |
Navarra
|
1 |
Ramon Llull
|
2 |
Deusto
|
3 |
Pontifica Comillas
|
4 |
Ceu San Pablo
|
5 |
Source: elmundo.es
Faculty results are available from a drop-down menu on the ranking home page:
http://aula.elmundo.es/aula/especiales/2006/50carreras/index.html
Conducted by a team of Spanish researchers based in the United States and Spain, Ranking 2005 builds on research originally published in 20002 and offers an elaborate measure of institutional quality at Spanish universities using 71 sub-indicators, a reduction of almost 30 indicators from the 2000 initiative. Ranking 2005 assesses quality standards at Spain’s 47 public universities, representing 92 percent of Spanish tertiary enrollments, and 16 private universities. In the final ranking, only public universities are compared; however, data results are summarized for all institutions in the research paper. Data is derived mainly from official sources such as the Spanish National Institute of Statistics.
The Ranking 2005 researchers use four different criteria, measured by 11 main indicators, as proxies for quality at Spanish institutions of higher education. The four categories are as follows:
Weightings are assigned approximately as follows
Universities received an overall score on a scale of 1 to 10.
General findings from the study are as follows:
Ranking 2005 of public universities in Spain
Rank |
Public University |
Score
|
1 |
Complutense de Madrid
|
9.6
|
2 |
Autónoma de Madrid
|
9.5
|
3 |
Barcelona
|
9.2
|
4 |
Pompeu Fabra
|
9.0
|
5 |
Autónoma de Barcelona
|
8.9
|
6 |
Santiago
|
8.4
|
7 |
Alcalá de Henares
|
7.9
|
8 |
Salamanca
|
7.8
|
9 |
Valencia
|
7.8
|
10 |
Rey Juan Carlos
|
7.8
|
11 |
La Laguna
|
7.8
|
12 |
Córdoba
|
7.6
|
13 |
Miguel Hernández de Elche
|
7.4
|
14 |
Granada
|
7.2
|
15 |
Las Palmas
|
6.9
|
16 |
Sevilla
|
6.9
|
17 |
Murcia
|
6.8
|
18 |
Cantabria
|
6.8
|
19 |
Valladolid
|
6.8
|
20 |
Politécnica de Cataluña
|
6.8
|
Source: De Miguel, J.M et al. “Spanish Universities and the Ranking 2005 Initiative,” Higher Education in Europe 30 2 (2005): 199-215.
** Schools are sorted by second and third decimal points where they are equal after one decimal point.
© 2006 World Education Services
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