LASU tops UNILAG… here are six Nigerian varsities that made THE's top 1000+
The University of Ibadan (UI) has surpassed Covenant University (CU) as Nigeria's best establishment in the 2021 Times Higher Education's (THE) rankings.
In 2019, Covenant University had held its situation as the best in Nigeria, as per THE's 2020 report for the world college rankings.
This was after CU usurped UI in 2018.
Be that as it may, in the 2021 rankings delivered on Wednesday, UI rose to the 401-500 band while CU saw a drop from 2018's 636 situation to stay at top 1000.
Second on the rundown is the Lagos State University (LASU), which was set somewhere in the range of 501 and 600, while the University of Lagos (UNILAG) positioned between 601–800.
Likewise on the rundown is the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN), and the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), the two of which positioned on a figure surpassing 1000.
The following are the six Nigerian colleges that made the rundown:
UI (401 – 500)
LASU (501 – 600)
UNILAG (601-800)
Agreement University (801 – 1000)
UNN (1001+)
OAU (1001+)
The University of Oxford claims best position for the fifth continuous year while the University of Cambridge dropped three places and was positioned at 6th on the planet.
The following are the best 10 colleges on the planet — with a year ago's situation in sections.
(1) Oxford University (UK)
(4) Stanford University (US)
(7) Harvard University (US)
(2) California Institute of Technology (US)
(5) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (US)
(3) Cambridge University (UK)
(13) University of California, Berkeley (US)
(8) Yale University (US)
(6) Princeton University (US)
(9) University of Chicago (US)
THE's most recent world rankings incorporate in excess of 1,500 colleges across 93 nations and locales, making it the biggest and most assorted college rankings to date.
The association said it understood its rankings utilizing 13 "deliberately aligned" execution markers to give correlations "trusted by understudies, scholastics, college pioneers, industry and governments."
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