‘Undermines the country’s long-term future’: More than half of Australia’s universities dive in global rankings

📌 Diğer 📰 Sydney Morning Herald 🕐 3 gün önce
‘Undermines the country’s long-term future’: More than half of Australia’s universities dive in global rankings

See how your university is ranked against its global competitors.

More than half of Australia’s universities have plummeted in global rankings thanks to years of inadequate funding and “the devaluation of science and education as public goods” harming the country as a whole, says the Centre for World University Rankings.

The University of NSW and the University of Melbourne maintained their positions at the top of the heap, ranking No.52 and No.64 two years in a row. The Australian National University dropped from 90 to 93, the University of Sydney fell from 94 to 100 and the University of Queensland rounded out the top five at 103 for the second year running.

World rankings are a major factor for many international students’ choice about where to study, and those students are a major funding source for Australia’s tertiary institutions.

Sydney’s universities were a mixed bag – the University of Technology, Sydney, moved up from 314 last year to 308 in 2026, Macquarie University sank from 341 to 344, the Australian Catholic University rocketed from 919 to 900 and the University of Western Sydney rose from 487 to 488.

In Melbourne, Monash University improved from 117 to 113, Deakin University moved up 11 places to 354, RMIT rose from 424 to 417, La Trobe University went from 460 to 463, Swinburne University of Technology improved from 499 to 497 and Victoria University dropped from 1105 to 1163.

Australian universities are facing a reckoning, with major changes coming to domestic students’ funding, huge reliance on international students as the government seeks to curb their numbers, the changing role of AI for teaching and learning and revelations this week about a class size crisis.

Gwilym Croucher, deputy director of the Centre for the Study of Higher Education at the University of Melbourne, said that the global education landscape was becoming more competitive.

“The short story is, we are pretty lucky to have the Australian unis. Much of the news from overseas is grim,” he said.

Elsewhere in the world, the United States’ Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Stanford University topped the global rankings, followed by the United Kingdom’s Cambridge University and Oxford University.

Ninety-eight per cent of China’s universities rose in the rankings, led by Tsinghua University at No.36. The centre attributed China’s success to continued investment in higher education.

Dr Nadim Mahassen, president of the Centre for World University Rankings, said successive Australian government funding failures had devalued universities and education.

“Australian universities are struggling to delive

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