Pakistani Universities and Their Web Presence

Posted on October 27, 2007
Filed Under >Junaid Siddiqui, Education, Science and Technology
45 Comments
Total Views: 75326

Junaid Siddiqui

Last year at ATP, there was a post on the HEC (Higher Education Commission)’s Ranking of Pakistani Universities. That single post generated so much interest that in the past one year it has got 30000 hits on it. It not only shows the immense interest among prospective university students but also shows lack of career counseling or guidance available to them.

I have written this article in a hope of building further on HEC’s rankings as well as to show that Pakistani universities have very far to go to make up to any internationally recognized University Ranking.

Spanish National Research Council biannually publishes Webometrics Ranking of World Universities. The raking is based on data obtained from popular search engines. Universities for this purpose are identified based on their institutional web domains. The methodology of ranking is based on the following quantitative indicators:

Size (S). Number of pages from a university’s domain recovered from search engines.
Visibility (V). The total number of unique external links received (inlinks) by a university’s site.
Rich Files (R). Number of rich files available on a university’s domain recovered from search engines. The file types considered include Adobe Acrobat (.pdf), PostScript (.ps), Microsoft Word (.doc) and Microsoft Powerpoint (.ppt). This is considered as it is relevant to academic and publication activities of a university.
Scholar (Sc). Number of papers and citations for a university’s domain available on Google Scholar.

Following formula is used to rank universities:
Webometrics Rank (position)= 4*RankV+2*RankS+1*RankR+1*RankSc

The ranking criteria is quantitative is nature for which data can be easily obtained through some simple search engine queries. What is, however, interesting to note about the ranking results (last published in July 2007) is that they compare rather well with other world rankings of universities such as the Shanghai Jiao Tong University ranking or The Times World University Rankings.


SESRTCIC, a research center of OIC, has recently released a preliminary Academic Ranking of Universities in the OIC Countries, which is based on the research output data of the universities of OIC member states. Most of the top ranking Middle Eastern universities in the composite index of OIC ranking are also among the top Middle Eastern universities in the Webometrics ranking. The Webometrics ranking, therefore, seems to be a good indicator of global standing of a university.

Given that Webometrics ranking is based on quantitative parameters we can expect that a populous country like Pakistan should have at least few of its universities, let us say, in the top 2000. However when we look at the Webometrics ranking of Pakistani universities, it is disappointing to see that there are no universities in even top 3000 and there are only two universities in top 4000 rankings. They are Lahore University of Management Sciences (rank 3071), Aga Khan University, Karachi (rank 3422) and the Punjab University, Lahore (rank 4685).

Universities form the centers of intellectual and scholarly activities in any country and the Webometrics ranking of our universities is an indicator of the dismal situation we have in our country. Interestingly the two universities in top 4000 (LUMS and AKU) are the same universities that Dr. Pervez Hoodbhoy identified as the two Pakistani universities closest to the universities located in free societies across the world.

Independent thought is the foundation that allows intellectual activities to flourish which seems to be missing from the fabric of most of our higher education institutions. The recent article on BBCUrdu.com about the kind of thoughts promoted at our long established Karachi University is one example of what is happening at our universities.

Whether it be the education in the disciplines of natural sciences or social sciences the situation is the same. When we go into the classrooms what we find is an environment that restricts the thinking of our students than opening it up. This is yet another aspect of our society which needs immediate and radical measures.

About the Author: Junaid Siddiqui is a Civil Engineering graduate of NED University Karachi and now a lecturer at King Fahad University of Petroleum and Minerals.

45 responses to “Pakistani Universities and Their Web Presence”

  1. Zermeena Khan says:

    NED University of Engineering and technology is the one every one forgot to mention. NED has been trying its level best to promote engineering education. It is giving out scholarships, not only to the deserving and meritorious students but also to the ones who are needy. By doing so, they are buildind up the confidence of those people who are ready to give up. It has given the students the environment to learn. I am a student of this university, I feel like studying and being the best whenever I am in it’s boundaries and outside it’s boundaries. I think to provide the environment is the most important aspect of them all

  2. Tahir says:

    show me the links of the best universities of pakistan

  3. HUMAYUN says:

    Assalamualaikum
    I BELEIVE THAT HEC MUST HAVE RANKED UET TAXILA AT NO. 1 RATHER THAN NO.6
    LIVE LONG UET TAXILA
    LIVE LONG MECHANICAL ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT OF TAXILA

  4. yousuf says:

    welll our university ranking is very low as compared to world university becouse they lacking reasearches and quality of education and at this era where it is necessary to those things.
    our government should promote education standard our hec is doing not enough job which they should be.
    if we continually lack behind with allaround the university in the world we will suffer further and bright students will Go to STudy abroad.

  5. Noor Ahmed says:

    Shah Abdul Latif University is best in providing the Business Studies

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*