Beni Suef University ranks 16th locally...and 107th Arab in the QS World Ranking
Beni Suef University ranks 16th locally...and 107th Arab in the QS World Ranking
Media Center
Dr. Mansour Hassan, President of Beni Suef University, announced today that the university ranked 16th among Egyptian universities, and 107th among Arab universities in the QS World University Rankings 2025.
The university president explained that the classification is based on the evaluation of universities in terms of global reputation, strength of scientific research, teaching resources, employment reputation, percentage of incoming students, percentage of foreign professors teaching at the university, and number of research citations, noting that this year's version of the classification is the largest ever, as it includes 246 universities from 20 Arab countries.
Dr. Mansour Hassan stressed that the university is keen to support researchers in all forms of support, and to work continuously and permanently to overcome all obstacles they face during their research journey, with the aim of advancing the scientific research system within the university and bringing the university to the best scientific position among local, regional and international ranks.
Dr. Sama El-Daq, Director of the International Classification and Sustainable Development Office, pointed out that universities in the Arab region are working greatly to develop their academic and research status and nurture the thriving international partnerships in the region, while Egyptian universities remain the most represented in the classification, with 36 Egyptian universities, reflecting the strong competition in the region to excel in higher education and provide more independent and detailed fields through which students and faculty members can measure the extent of success. Egyptian universities also excel in the quality of scientific research, as they include the largest number of universities in the list of the top 100 universities in the region in the indicators of "number of times cited per research paper" compared to any other country.