University of Alberta Edmonton Clinic Health Academy, Home of The Faculty of Nursing |
The QS World University Rankings by Subject 2016 features 42 subjects, making it the largest ever release of its kind. The subject ranking is compiled from the top 200 universities and this year sees six subjects added to the list, including nursing, archeology and mining engineering.
"There are thousands of nursing programs in the world, and to be considered one of the best is just amazing," says Anita Molzahn, dean of nursing. "We strive for excellence in all that we do, and external rankings like the QS help confirm that we are on the right path."
The university cracked the top 50 in the world in pharmacy and pharmacology (32), education (41), archeology (42), mining engineering (44), and English language and literature (50).
Other U of A subjects that made their way into the top 100 included agriculture and forestry, accounting and finance, chemistry, communications and media studies, earth and marine sciences, chemical engineering, environmental sciences, mathematics, medicine, philosophy and psychology. In all, the U of A ranked among the top 200 in 33 of the 42 subjects considered.
Of the 945 institutions listed in the published range of results, only four Canadian universities rank among the top 10 universities in the world for their programs, with University of Toronto taking the top Canadian school, followed closely by the University of Alberta, the University of British Columbia and University of Guelph.
The 2016 results draw on the opinions of 76,798 academics and 44,426 employers, alongside analysis of 28.5 million research papers and over 113 million citations.
Published annually since 2011, the QS World University Rankings by Subject highlights the world’s top-performing institutions in a broad spectrum of individual academic areas. The rankings aim to help prospective students identify leading universities in their chosen field of study. For its subject-area rankings, QS ranks universities based on academic reputation, employer reputation, academic citations and research impact.
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