Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is the world's best university for a record-breaking seventh consecutive year. The fifteenth edition of the QS World University Rankings , released today by global higher education analysts QS Quacquarelli Symonds, sees MIT hold outright the record it previously shared with Harvard University.
QS rank the world's 1000 best universities, which come from 85 different countries. Over 65 million stakeholders will view the rankings on http://www.TopUniversities.com this year.
Key Facts
- US institutions retain all the top four positions (Stanford 2nd, Harvard 3rd, Caltech 4th);
- The UK's top institution has changed for the first time since 2004, with the University of Oxford (5th) usurping its longtime rival, the University of Cambridge (6th);
- Both UK and US universities record more improvements than drops, representing stabilization for both sectors after recent regressions;
- Continental Europe's best university is ETH Zurich (7th, up from 10th);
- Asia's two best universities are the National University of Singapore (11th) and compatriot Nanyang Technological University (12th);
- China achieves its first top-20 position in the QS World University Ranking since 2006: Tsinghua University places 17th;
- Latin America continues to struggle, especially in QS's research metric, but Argentina's Universidad de Buenos Aires reaches its highest-ever rank (73rd, up from 75th);
- Both Malaysia and Russia record consistent, noteworthy improvements.
The full rankings can be found at http://www.TopUniversities.com from Wednesday 6th June, 21:00 BST.

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