Monday, September 3, 2012

Sleeping octopus: Four indicators for determining world rankings of universities - Presence, Impact, Openness, and Excellence, WUaS may hire graduate student instructors eventually with these criteria in mind, How to extend remarkably GENERATIVITY in all these categories at free, open, wiki World University and School?

http://www.rossum.com/philip10/1/30_600.jpg

I'm interested in the following, four indicators for World University and School, in our planning to become a kind of online MIT / Harvard, (which are already consistently at the top of Webometric's rankings), and in all 3,000-8,000 languages, especially in terms of hiring graduate student instructors, who wish to become professors, in virtual spaces to facilitate the Conference Method, potentially engaging MIT OCW online courses with MIT professors live :  


Presence, which measures the volume of information published on the web; 

Impact, built from the links received from third parties; 

Openness, counting the number of documents that are freely available from scientific repositories and 

Excellence, which only includes the quality papers that are among the 10% most cited of each discipline.



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Here's the reference I've added to World University and School's wiki, Courses page - 


Webometrics Ranking of World Universities. 2012. Webometrics Ranking of World Universities. ("... the fourteenth edition of Web Ranking Universities. The July 2012 edition includes nearly 21,000 higher education institutions worldwide, classified according to their academic and research performance, prestige and international visibility and their commitment to open access policies. Access to the Rankings portal: http://www.webometrics.info/. The report provides the results for four indicators: Presence, which measures the volume of information published on the web; Impact, built from the links received from third parties; Openness, counting the number of documents that are freely available from scientific repositories and Excellence, which only includes the quality papers that are among the 10% most cited of each discipline."). Madrid, Spain: Webometrics Ranking of World Universities.



Here's the letter from an internet researcher's email list which mentions these rankings: 

"It just have been published the fourteenth edition of Web Ranking Universities. The July 2012 edition includes nearly 21,000 higher education institutions worldwide, classified according to their academic and research performance, prestige and international visibility and their commitment to open access policies.

Access to the Rankings portal: http://www.webometrics.info/

In this edition, some indicators have been modified to increase the Ranking utility and reflect more accurately the recent, especially the pursuit of excellence. The Ranking, published by a nonprofit research group belonging to a public academic institution, can be distinguished from other similar classifications because it is not based on prestige obtained from decades old prizes, nor it is mission or discipline biased (biomedical research at the expenses of other activities) or succumb to commercial or political interests as shown by suspicious over-representation of certain countries.

The report provides the results for four indicators: Presence, which measures the volume of information published on the web; Impact, built from the links received from third parties; Openness, counting the number of documents that are freely available from scientific repositories and Excellence, which only includes the quality papers that are among the 10% most cited of each discipline.

As in previous editions Harvard, MIT, Stanford and Berkeley lead the world ranking. The first non-US University is Sao Paulo (15), which thanks to its commitment to the open publication overcame Cambridge (20) that should improve its current repository. Asia is performing well, with Tokyo, National of Taiwan, Kyoto, National of Singapore and Tsinghua among the Top 100, followed closely by Shanghai Jiao Tong and Hong Kong.

Besides of Cambridge, the European universities are represented in the top 50 by Oxford (25), ETH Zurich (29) and the University College of London (43). The Imperial College is still out due to its confusing web naming practices. Charles University is the only Central & Eastern European University with a rank among the top 100.

The performance of Canadian (22 in the Top 500) and Australian (15 in the top 500) universities is outstanding. Only two African universities (Cape Town and Stellenbosch) appears in the top 500

Besides the Ranking of Universities the portal provides access to rankings of Research centers (8000), Hospitals (16000) Business Schools (1500) and Repositories (1600). Among the research centers, the U.S. National Institute of Health (NIH) and the NASA in that top the list

Ranking of Research Centers: http://research.webometrics.info/"


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Interesting to learn of other, great universities in a variety of countries, which I may add to this wiki list: 

How to engage information technology, as well as invite teachers and learners, to extend remarkably generativity in all these categories at free, open, wiki World University and School? 





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