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Innovation & Impact Summit goes online

Participants in virtual mini-summit will get an exclusive look at the University Impact Rankings 2020 and can join in discussion with our data scientists

Published on
April 8, 2020
Last updated
September 16, 2022
School of sardines swimming in ocean
Source: iStock

The biggest-ever dataset on the impact made by universities worldwide, as measured against the yardstick of the United Nations鈥 Sustainable Development Goals, will be launched on 22 April as the highlight of an online mini-summit, 探花视频 has announced.

As work to develop a vaccine for Covid-19 dominates the international scientific community, the need for research universities and their ability to support the response to global development challenges is more acute than ever.

More than 850 institutions from 89 countries and regions contributed to the THE Impact Rankings, which assess institutions鈥 performance last year across all 17 UN SDGs. This represents significant growth in the scale and breadth of the dataset, which was first published in 2019.

Phil Baty, THE鈥檚 chief knowledge officer, said: 鈥淭he THE Impact Rankings redefine what excellence in global higher education actually looks like, and they paint a much richer, a聽much more diverse, and a聽much more inclusive picture of global excellence than the one we have traditionally come to recognise through traditional university rankings.鈥

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The mini-summit on 22聽April will begin at 09:00 (BST) with an open debate examining the value of the UN聽SDGs as a framework for assessing national and regional innovation. From 10.30, a data masterclass led by THE鈥檚 chief data officer, Duncan Ross, featuring expert analysis from leaders of Elsevier and the consultancy Vertigo Ventures, will reveal the insights and trends from the new data, concluding with the publication of the dataset at 12.00.

鈥淲hat our Impact Rankings show, more than anything, is the incredible commitment to the Sustainable Development Goals that is shared by universities across the world, and how in different ways they are focusing their efforts to these global objectives in very local contexts,鈥 Mr Ross said.

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鈥淲e see universities in India delivering on 鈥楽DG聽6 鈥 Clean water鈥; universities from Japan and Korea leading on 鈥楽DG聽9 鈥 Industry and innovation鈥; and above all, in these times, universities across the world working together on 鈥楽DG聽3 鈥 Good health and well-being鈥,鈥 Mr Ross explained.

The masterclass will be followed by a live, worldwide Q&A session during which participants will be able to interrogate the data and question THE鈥檚 data scientists about the methodology and meaning of the results. THE will also host discussions exploring how universities can best utilise this new demonstration of their impact to support their individual and collective efforts in developing their reputations, their research capacity, and their fundraising and recruitment efforts.

鈥淧lease join us on 22 April for this essential global dialogue with leading researchers and policymakers on the power of transformative impact,鈥 Mr Baty concluded. 鈥淲e hope that you share your own institutional strategies in engaging with the SDGs and their degrees of success on a platform that can highlight perhaps lesser-known yet powerful examples of impact that have the ability to radically reinvent our criteria for strong university performance.鈥

Leah.Reitman@timeshighereducation.com

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