Top 10 Indian College Rankings in 2018
Union HRD Minister Shri Prakash Javadekar Releases ‘NIRF India Rankings
2018’ for Higher Education Institutions
NIRF rankings help set new benchmarks of performance and improve quality of Higher Education: Shri Prakash Javadekar Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru bags 1st Position in Overall Ranking IIT Chennai tops in Engineering and IIM Ahmedabad tops in Management Category
NIRF rankings help set new benchmarks of performance and improve quality of Higher Education: Shri Prakash Javadekar Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru bags 1st Position in Overall Ranking IIT Chennai tops in Engineering and IIM Ahmedabad tops in Management Category
The Union Minister of
Human Resource Development, Shri Prakash Javadekar, released the NIRF India
Rankings 2018 in various categories on the basis of performance of Higher
Educational Institutions in a programme held in New Delhi today. Minister of
State Human Resource Development, Dr. Satya Pal Singh released the report on
the NIRF Rankings during the event. 69 top institutions in 9 categories
were given awards at today’s event. Shri R. Subrahmanyam, Secretary,
Higher Education, M/o HRD; Shri Surendra Prasad, Chairman NBA; Prof. D. B.
Singh, Chairman UGC; Shri Anil Sahsrabudhe, Chairperson AICTE and
representatives of award winning higher education institutions were present on
the occasion.
Speaking on the
occasion, Shri Prakash Javadekar said that the idea behind these rankings is to
promote quality in education and encourage competition to perform better and to
set up new benchmarks of performance in Higher education space. He lauded the
efforts of the team under National Institutional Ranking framework (NIRF) for
bringing out the most authentic ranking system of the country. The Minister
also congratulated all the winner institutions for their excellent performance.
The Minister said
that to promote quality education, we are providing support for setting up and
upgrading of 10 public and 10 private Institutions of Eminence (IOEs) so as to
enable them to reach amongst top 100 of world institutions ranking. The list of
20 IOEs will be released soon. He further said that various initiatives of the
HRD Ministry like GIAN, RUSA, SWAYAM, SWAYAM Prabha, TEQUIP III, Smart India
Hackathon, etc are in direction to further boost the Quality, Research and
Innovation in education.
While addressing on
the occasion, Dr. Satya Pal said that to become global leader in education we
have to create our own brands so that other countries may follow us. He said
that healthy competition gives us a chance to improve and opportunity to excel
in various aspects of life. He further said our main focus should be on quality
of research which can contribute to the development of the society as a whole.
He stressed upon a mechanism which can develop holistic campus in the country.
Secretary, M/o HRD
said that the NIRF rankings are the corner stone of various higher education
reform measures taken up by the HRD Ministry over the last four years. New
categories i.e. law, architecture and medical have also been added in this
year’s rankings, Shri Subrahmanyam disclosed.
In this third edition
of India Rankings, a total of 2809 institutions have participated in 9
categories. Collectively they have submitted 3954 distinct profiles, some in
multiple disciplines/categories. This includes 301 Universities, 906
Engineering Institutions, 487 Management Institutions, 286 Pharmacy Institutions,
71 Law Institutions, 101 Medical Institutions, 59 Architecture Institutions and
1087 General Degree Colleges.
“India Rankings 2018”
have ranked institutions in the disciplines/categories mentioned above, and
have also provided a common overall rank across all disciplines for those
institutions which have more than 1000 enrolled students.
The parameters used
for India Rankings 2018 are broadly similar to those used in previous years.
However, some of the sub-parameters have been further tweaked for greater
robustness and accuracy. In particular for evaluating Research Impact,
parameters for quality of publications have been enhanced to include the number
of highly cited papers, (i.e., number of papers lying in the top 25
percentile of citations) in addition to the usual parameters of publications
per faculty and citations per paper.
The performance
metrics have been optimized to provide a good discrimination over a large range
of possible values. All research related information, including publications,
citations, highly cited papers and even patent information about institutes was
collected from third party databases to obtain an objective and unbiased
picture. For this year’s Perception inputs, a large database of
eminent academic and industry peers and employers was deployed.
The data received
from both institutional and third party sources were subject to extensive
scrutiny for consistency and correctness by a team of experts. The Rankings
List includes 100 institutions each in the Overall, University, Engineering and
General College Categories, and 50 each in Management and Pharmacy, 25 in
Medical and 10 each in Architecture and Law. Additional rankings in suitably
bunched forms are also being provided. Four institutions, which could not
easily fit into any of the above categories, have been chosen for a special
mention for excellence on a few parameters like Research etc.
Although the Central
Government funded institutions, in general continue to do well, some of the
state-funded and private universities also appear prominently. Some private
institutions and universities have consistently occupied good positions, and
some have been rising in their ranks, thus indicating that they offer value for
money to their students. Maintenance of consistent or improved positions over
previous years clearly indicates that it has not been a one-time random event.
This should augur well for Higher Education.
The ranking of
General Degree Colleges which was started last year, saw a much more
enthusiastic participation this year, with 1087 colleges in the fray. This
represents an increase by almost 100% over last year. The ranking list throws
interesting light on their geographical spread. Almost all renowned
institutions are represented in this year’s ranking. Similarly participation
for a place in the overall rank increased nearly 25% over the last year.
This year also saw
the beginning of limited ranking of institutions in new areas like Medicine,
Law and Architecture.
List of top 10 India
Rankings 2018 is as follows:
Overall:
|
Indian
Institute of Science, Bengaluru
|
1
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Madras
|
2
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Bombay
|
3
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Delhi
|
4
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Kharagpur
|
5
|
|
Jawaharlal
Nehru University, New Delhi
|
6
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Kanpur
|
7
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Roorkee
|
8
|
|
Banaras
Hindu University, Varanasi
|
9
|
|
Anna
University, Chennai
|
10
|
Management
|
Indian
Institute of Management Ahmedabad
|
1
|
|
Indian
Institute of Management Bangalore
|
2
|
|
Indian
Institute of Management Calcutta
|
3
|
|
Indian
Institute of Management Lucknow
|
4
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Bombay
|
5
|
|
Indian
Institute of Management Kozhikode
|
6
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Kharagpur
|
7
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Delhi
|
8
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Roorkee
|
9
|
|
Xavier
Labour Relations Institute, Jamshedpur
|
10
|
University
|
Indian
Institute of Science, Bengaluru
|
1
|
|
Jawaharlal
Nehru University, New Delhi
|
2
|
|
Banaras
Hindu University, Varanasi
|
3
|
|
Anna
University, Chennai
|
4
|
|
University
of Hyderabad
|
5
|
|
Jadavpur
University, Kolkata
|
6
|
|
University
of Delhi
|
7
|
|
Amrita
Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Coimbatore
|
8
|
|
Savitribai
Phule Pune University
|
9
|
|
Aligarh
Muslim University, Aligarh
|
10
|
Colleges
|
Miranda
House, Delhi
|
1
|
|
St.
Stephens`s College, Delhi
|
2
|
|
Bishop
Heber College, Tiruchirappalli
|
3
|
|
Hindu
College, Delhi
|
4
|
|
Presidency
College, Chennai
|
5
|
|
Loyola
College, Chennai
|
6
|
|
Shri
Ram College of Commerce, Delhi
|
7
|
|
Lady
Shri Ram College for Women, New Delhi
|
8
|
|
Ramakrishna
Mission Vidyamandira, Howrah
|
9
|
|
Madras
Christian College, Chennai
|
10
|
Pharmacy
|
National
Institute of Pharmaceutical Education and Research Mohali
|
1
|
|
Jamia
Hamdard, New Delhi
|
2
|
|
Panjab
University, Chandigarh
|
3
|
|
Institute
of Chemical Technology, Mumbai
|
4
|
|
Birla
Institute of Technology & Science, Pilani
|
5
|
|
National
Institute of Pharmaceutical Education and Research Hyderabad
|
6
|
|
Manipal
College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Manipal
|
7
|
|
Bombay
College of Pharmacy, Mumbai
|
8
|
|
SVKM`s
Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies, Mumbai
|
9
|
|
JSS
College of Pharmacy, Mysore
|
10
|
Medical
|
All
India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi
|
1
|
|
Post
Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh
|
2
|
|
Christian
Medical College, Vellore
|
3
|
Architecture
|
Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
|
1
|
|
Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee
|
2
|
|
School of Planning & Architecture New Delhi
|
3
|
Law
|
National Law School of India University, Bengaluru
|
1
|
|
National Law University, New Delhi
|
2
|
|
Nalsar University of Law, Hyderabad
|
3
|
Engineering
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Madras
|
1
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Bombay
|
2
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Delhi
|
3
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Kharagpur
|
4
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Kanpur
|
5
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Roorkee
|
6
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Guwahati
|
7
|
|
Anna
University, Chennai
|
8
|
|
Indian
Institute of Technology Hyderabad
|
9
|
|
Institute
of Chemical Technology, Mumbai
|
10
|
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