Ranks evaluate Laurier

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Graphic by: Lena Yang
Graphic by: Lena Yang

Last Thursday was report card day for the provinceโ€™s universities, as the annual Macleanโ€™s magazine university rankings were released.

Wilfrid Laurier University didnโ€™t see any major changes โ€“ placing tenth overall out of 15 universities in the comprehensive category, compared to 11th from last year โ€“ but university officials expressed satisfaction with the results.

โ€œI thought Laurier should be pretty pleased with where we are. Weโ€™ve only been in the comprehensive category for a couple years now, so being tied for tenth I think is a good place for us and a recognition of areas we continue to be strong in,โ€ said Deborah MacLatchy, vice president of academic and provost for Laurier.

The comprehensive category includes universities that have a mixture of undergraduate and graduate programs, as well as research activity.

โ€œReally, itโ€™s probably a fair assessment,โ€ said Stephen Franchetto, vice president: student affairs for the Wilfrid Laurier University Studentsโ€™ Union.

โ€œItโ€™s going to take a few years before weโ€™re able to move up, especially in the comprehensive category, where thatโ€™s also reliant on things like graduate programs and things like research, where we havenโ€™t traditionally been, but is becoming a growing piece of what the university does here.โ€

For most of the categories, Laurier ranked near the middle of the 15 universities within their comprehensive grouping.

When asked what this says about the university, MacLatchy responded, โ€œI think it reflects that Laurier has gone through a period of intense growth. Weโ€™ve grown more, grown faster than any university in Ontario.โ€

She also noted that universities moving up or down the rankings are also often the result of incremental changes, as sometimes schools are close together in rankings.

โ€œWe really have no bad universities in Canada, so, therefore, youโ€™re ranking amongst very good institutions,โ€ she said.

In the ranking of best overall university, Wilfrid Laurier ranked 22nd out of 49, moving up from the 25th spot last year. It remained at 35 for โ€œleaders of tomorrow,โ€ and improved marginally in both innovation and quality.

Franchetto doesnโ€™t believe that the rankings always give the full picture of what a university is offering its students.

For example, larger class sizes may be reflective of reduced government funding for universities.

โ€œThat really reflects a lot of budgets getting tighter and universities having to make difficult choices and just not really having a lot of room to invest in new faculty,โ€ Franchetto said.
Laurier was ranked low in first and second-year class sizes, at an average of 94.7 students, as well as in student-to-faculty ratio, at 29.3.

Both MacLatchy and Franchetto believe that, for better or for worse, the rankings do matter to prospective students.

โ€œI think it would be silly to not recognize that prospective students and parents are looking for information and I think the Macleanโ€™s ranking can provide one piece of information,โ€ said MacLatchy. โ€œI hope itโ€™s not the only piece of information students are deciding on universities.โ€

โ€œI think they carry a lot of weight,โ€ added Franchetto, noting that current students also take pride in the schoolโ€™s reputation.

He emphasized, however, the importance of looking at where the rankings come from.

โ€œThey need to take these and look at whatโ€™s behind them and look at the context. Especially the government context of how they can shape these,โ€ said Franchetto.


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