The University of Queensland is in the top five Australian universities and
the only Queensland university to perform well in a table of teaching quality
published for the first time in August 2005.
The table (below) uses the Federal Government's own data to rank the quality of
learning and teaching at 38 publicly-funded Australian universities.
The seven indicators used to rank universities were: graduates' views of the
enhancement of their generic skills, of teaching quality and of their overall
satisfaction with their university program; the percentage of graduates in
full-time employment; those continuing to further full-time study; drop-out
rates; and pass rates.
UQ was the first university in Australia to introduce a scheme rewarding
teaching excellence and UQ has been the recipient of more awards than any other
university in the national Australian Awards for University Teaching.
Good Universities Guide
The results are reinforced by the fact that UQ has again received the best overall rating of all Queensland universities and one of the best Australian university rankings in the 2007 edition of the Good Universities Guide (GUG), an independent consumer guide that provides ratings, rankings, comment and information about Australian higher education institutions.
UQ received the maximum five-star rating for six key GUG indicators including “student demand”, “positive graduate outcomes” (reflecting both graduate employment and continuation to further study), “staff qualifications”, “research grants”, “research intensiveness” and “toughness to get in” (St Lucia campus).
Which is the real university when it comes to teaching?
| Rank | University | Location | Score |
|
1 |
University of Wollongong |
NSW |
34.24 |
|
2 |
Australian Maritime College |
Tas |
30.79 |
|
3 |
University of Melbourne |
|
29.93 |
|
4 |
Swinburne University of Technology |
Vic |
29.33 |
|
5 |
University of Queensland |
|
28.73 |
|
6 |
Australian National University |
ACT |
26.95 |
|
7 |
University of New England |
NSW |
25.56 |
|
8 |
University of Canberra |
|
24.25 |
|
9 |
University of Ballarat |
Vic |
24.08 |
|
10 |
University of Sydney |
|
23.93 |
|
11 |
Murdoch University |
WA |
23.49 |
|
12 |
University of Western Australia |
|
23.42 |
|
13 |
Australian Catholic University |
|
22.73 |
|
14 |
Monash University |
Vic |
22.16 |
|
15 |
Macquarie University |
NSW |
19.96 |
|
16 |
La Trobe University |
Vic |
19.83 |
|
17 |
Charles Sturt University |
NSW |
19.44 |
|
18 |
University of TechnologySydney |
|
18.72 |
|
19 |
Victoria University |
|
18.65 |
|
20 |
University of the Sunshine Coast |
Qld |
18.44 |
|
21 |
Deakin University |
Vic |
18.35 |
|
22 |
Griffith University |
Qld |
18.25 |
|
23 |
Edith Cowan University |
WA |
17.91 |
|
24 |
Curtin University of Technology |
WA |
17.45 |
|
25 |
University of Newcastle |
NSW |
16.31 |
|
26 |
Flinders University |
SA |
16.02 |
|
27 |
University of Southern Queensland |
|
15.39 |
|
28 |
Southern Cross University |
NSW |
14.83 |
|
29 |
RMIT |
Vic |
14.49 |
|
30 |
James Cook University |
Qld |
14.17 |
|
31 |
Queensland University of Technology |
|
13.67 |
|
32 |
University of New South Wales |
|
13.56 |
|
33 |
University of Western Sydney |
|
12.85 |
|
34 |
University of Tasmania |
|
12.00 |
|
35 |
Central Queensland University |
|
11.49 |
|
36 |
University of Adelaide |
|
10.54 |
|
37 |
University of South Australia |
|
10.11 |
|
38 |
Charles Darwin University |
NT |
9.05 |
(Table source: Ian Dobson, Educational Policy Institute, as published in the Australian newspaper, 12 August 2005)
