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University ranking systems can harm higher education in Africa

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October 04, 2025

THE Sorbonne University, founded in Paris in 1253 and known globally as a symbol of education, science and culture, has just announced that, starting in 2026, it will stop submitting data to Times Higher Education rankings. It is joining a growing movement of universities questioning the value and methodology of these controversial league tables.

- SIOUX MCKENNA

University ranking systems can harm higher education in Africa

STUDENTS outside the Sorbonne University protest against the French government's budget reforms, in Paris, last month. The university has decided not to co-operate with ratings agencies for tertiary institutions.

(AFP)

Rankings companies add together various indices that purport to measure quality. The indices include research outputs, the results of reputation surveys, the amount of money they receive in research grants and donations and how many Nobel prize winners they have been employed.

Nathalie Drach-Temam, president of the Sorbonne, stated that the data used to assess each university's performance was not open or transparent, and the reproducibility of the results produced could not be guaranteed.

This echoes wider concerns about the lack of scientific rigour of ranking systems that claim to measure complex institutional performance through simplified metrics.

The problem is that the general public believe that the rankings offer an indication of quality. As a result, rankings have enormous influence over the market. This includes the choice of where to study and where to invest funding.

The university's decision aligns with its commitment to the Agreement on Reforming Research Assessment, which was signed by more than 700 research organisations, funders and professional societies, and the Barcelona Declaration, signed by about 200 universities and research institutes.

Both advocate for open science practices to make scientific research, data, methods and educational resources transparent, accessible and reusable by everyone without barriers. And both recommend "avoiding the use of rankings of research organisations in research assessment".

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