Higher Education Reform

University Rankings Driven by Corporate Interests

July 1, 2015 2871

university rankings _conceptualI feel like I’m watching the ads before the movie, and even when the movie finally begins there are product placements everywhere. When I tell academics that my research is about rankings and media, they all have stories about rankings regardless of where they live and work. There is the department head who sent out a note congratulating everyone on being a top medical school, and then sent another note a year later explaining that a decline in the school’s ranking was due to flawed methodology. Then there is the university that rebranded based on being No. 1 in a national ranking — only to go down and require expensive rebranding the year after. I’ve lost count of how many times I hear university leaders start with something like, “I know there are problems with the rankings, but I’m thrilled to tell you we are up in the rankings.”

Michelle L. Stack

Michelle L. Stack

That there is cognitive dissonance is not surprising. Academic leaders are supposed to know what good research is, and most know popular rankings are not it. But a top ranking brings resources and prestige. There are small rankings, with influence akin to home movies and then there are the blockbusters including the Times Higher Education World University Rankings and the QS Rankings. A plethora of books, blogs ,and reports detail how easy the rankings are to game and the narrowness of how excellence is measured.

Rankings owned by media or other multinational corporate entities have a responsibility to investors, not the public good. The Times Higher Education Ranking, for example, is owned by TES, which is owned by TSL, which in turn is owned TPG, one of the world’s largest private equity firms.

Embedded in popular rankings is the assumption that any world-class institution focuses on entrepreneurial fields, has famous academics (particularly Nobel Prize and Fields Medal winners) in their midst and lots of resources at their disposal. What gets left out in the formulas used by popular rankings is the responsibility of universities to the public good. Reputation can be bought. The QS produces international and national ranking table but, for an audit and licensing fee a universities can apply to be a QS star.

There are no indicators for how a university stands up against oppression in their institution and outside it, or how it is part of expanding conversations about the crisis facing the planet in particular inequality and climate change.

University leaders are in a tough situation. There is the longstanding narrative of most universities that they contribute to the public good, but there is also the business imperative. Visibility is central to universities dealing with public funding cuts, and visibility is through media. The result is that university leaders frequently enter into a Faustian bargain. They legitimize popular rankings through their own branding materials, and positive mention of rankings through speeches and media encounters. They pay through staff hours to provide data to rankers, and often even pay for ads on ranking websites. In exchange, universities get the visibility that brings in money, award-winning students and faculty — but at what cost?


Michelle Stack is associate professor in the Department of Educational Studies at the University of British Columbia, Canada. Her research centers on the role of media and market logics in the transformation of education; media education; and media-academic communication aimed at expanding public debate about what a good education is. Prior to becoming an academic Michelle was a communications director and policy consultant. Michelle can also be found on twitter at @MichelleLStack

View all posts by Michelle L. Stack

Related Articles

After the University, Where is Knowledge Headed?
Higher Education Reform
February 11, 2026

After the University, Where is Knowledge Headed?

Read Now
Notes on Political Repression, Academic Freedom, and the Future of the University
Higher Education Reform
February 4, 2026

Notes on Political Repression, Academic Freedom, and the Future of the University

Read Now
After the University? Examining Ghana’s Higher Education Crisis and Transformation
Higher Education Reform
January 28, 2026

After the University? Examining Ghana’s Higher Education Crisis and Transformation

Read Now
After the University? Braiding a Path Forward
Higher Education Reform
January 21, 2026

After the University? Braiding a Path Forward

Read Now
Higher Education In The UK Is In Crisis. We Need to Reimagine Its Very Purpose If It Is To Survive

Higher Education In The UK Is In Crisis. We Need to Reimagine Its Very Purpose If It Is To Survive

Education systems do not operate outside of society or in a vacuum, they reflect wider dominant socio-economic approaches and discourses-  the increasing […]

Read Now
Democracy and the Authoritarian Turn in British Higher Education

Democracy and the Authoritarian Turn in British Higher Education

It might seem that the current crisis of higher education is best illustrated by its most spectacular manifestations – perhaps Donald Trump’s […]

Read Now
What Is a University For, After Gaza?

What Is a University For, After Gaza?

What is a university for? Traditionally, education has long been seen as a foundation for ethical and intellectual life. Aristotle viewed learning […]

Read Now
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments