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Editorial | Top-flight Hong Kong universities have done their homework

  • Local institutions have deservedly risen up the world rankings of the best places to study; the challenge now is to keep up the momentum

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HKU ranked fourth-highest in Asia, after the National University of Singapore, Peking University and Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University. Photo: Dickson Lee

Universities in Hong Kong seem to have done their homework, finding ways to recover from the setbacks of the pandemic and civil unrest. Six public institutions in the city scored higher in a major global ranking, even earning a nod for being among the world’s most improved institutions.

UK-based education information firm Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) said the rises reflected the better reputation universities now had with employers, and progress in research performance.

The University of Hong Kong (HKU) scored its best showing since QS launched the table in 2004. The city’s oldest tertiary institution climbed to 17th place from 26th last year, and was Asia’s fourth-highest after the National University of Singapore, Peking University and Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University.

The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) rose 11 spots to 36, its best performance since 2010. Hong Kong University of Science and Technology recovered from its worst showing last year when it was ranked 60th, cracking back into world’s top 50 with a 47th ranking.

Polytechnic University and City University (CityU) were not far behind, each rising eight places to 57th and 62nd, respectively. After sliding to 295th last year, Baptist University improved to 252nd. Lingnan University was the only local institution to drop, falling to the 711st-720th range from the 641st-650th range.

The QS ratings for 1,503 tertiary institutions across 106 countries and regions were based on academic reputation, reputation among employers, academic staff-to-student ratio, citations per faculty, international faculty ratio, international student ratio, sustainability, employment figures and international research network.

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