September 8, 2011
The Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering was once again recognized as the top engineering Faculty in Canada by two well-respected international rankings.
For the fifth consecutive year, U of T Engineering was identified as the premier institution in Canada for engineering/technology and computer sciences by the 2011 Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU). U of T was named 21st in the world according to the ranking, which is prepared by researchers at the Center for World-Class Universities of Shanghai Jiao Tong University.
The QS World University Ranking of Engineering & Technology programs also named U of T Engineering as number one in Canada, a spot held since the Faculty ranking began in 2007. The Faculty ranked was also ranked 21st in the world.
“We are pleased to be recognized once again as one of the world’s top engineering Faculties,” states Professor
Cristina Amon, Dean of the Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering. “Our recognized leadership in Canada is a source of pride for all members of the U of T Engineering community.”
The ARWU ranking of research universities around the world is based on internationally comparable third-party quantitative data. The highest scoring institution is assigned a total score of 100, and other institutions are calculated as a percentage of the top total score. The scores are then placed in descending order.
ARWU: Canadian Universities in top 100
Engineering /Technology
2007
| 2008
| 2009
| 2010
| 2011
|
Toronto (19)
| Toronto (21) | Toronto (19) | Toronto (19) | Toronto (21) |
McGill (45)
| McGill (49) | McGill (49) | McGill (52-75) | McGill (52-75)
|
Waterloo (46)
| UBC (51-75)
| Waterloo (51-77) | Waterloo (52-75) | Waterloo (52-75) |
UBC (51-75)
| Alberta (76-107) | UBC (51-77) | Alberta (78-100) | Alberta (76-100) |
Alberta (51-75)
| Montreal (76-107)
| Alberta (78-100) | | |
Montreal (51-75)
| Waterloo (76-107)
| | | |
N.B. Universities ranked below 50 are listed in groupings of approximately 25 instead of being accorded a specific rank.The Engineering/Technology ranking is based on institutional scores in the following four indicators, each with a 25% weighting: highly cited research (HiCi); published articles in the field (PUB); percentage of articles published in the top 20% of journals in the field (TOP); and Engineering research expenditure (FUND). U of T Engineering ranks first in all four categories within Canada.
The full ARWU ranking is available on their
website.
The QS World University Ranking is based on a variety of sources, including the results from surveys of academic scholars (40% of the final score) and employers (10%), as well as quantitative data such as faculty-student ratio (20%), citations per faculty (20%) and proportion of international students and faculty (5% each).
QS World University Rankings 2011: Canadian Universities in top 100
Engineering & Technology


2007
| 2008
| 2009
| 2010
| 2011
|
Toronto (11)
| Toronto (10)
| Toronto (8)
| Toronto (14) | Toronto (21) |
McGill (27)
| McGill (18)
| UBC (17)
| McGill (29)
| UBC (41) |
UBC (30)
| UBC (22)
| McGill (20) | UBC (30) | McGill (42) |
Waterloo (35)
| Waterloo (30) | Waterloo (27) | Waterloo (39) | Alberta (99) |
Alberta (59)
| Alberta (46) | Alberta (46) | Alberta (74) | |
Montreal (88)
| McMaster (79) | Calgary (87) | | |
McMaster (89)
| Montreal (87)
| McMaster (89) | | |
Calgary (91)
| Calgary (90) | | | |
In April, the first subject ranking by QS World University Rankings also recognized U of T Engineering’s preeminence in each of its disciplines. The Faculty led all Canadian universities, placing 10th in Computer Science & Information Systems, 13th in Electrical Engineering, 14th in Chemical Engineering, 20th in Civil & Structural Engineering, and 31st in Mechanical, Aeronautical & Manufacturing among global universities.
The full QS World University Ranking is available on their
website.