Showing posts with label NIRF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NIRF. Show all posts

Sunday, October 19, 2025

Top scientists flag corruption in NIRF rankings, urge overhaul of research metrics




Top scientists flag corruption in NIRF rankings, urge overhaul of research metrics

 Leading scientists warn that flawed NIRF methodology fuels low-quality publications, fake citations, and academic manipulation, threatening India's research credibility 

G.S. Mudur Published 13.10.25, 06:07 AM

University Grants Commission 

Leading Indian scientists have cautioned that government inaction on multiple appeals to reform an annual ranking exercise for higher education institutions introduced in 2016 threatens the quality and integrity of research in the country.

Scientists who wrote to the government four months ago, warning that the pursuit of high ranks in the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) has fostered “corruption and unethical practices”, said on Sunday they have yet to see any response.


Their concerns are centred on the NIRF methodology, which includes certain quantitative metrics such as the number of research papers and citations those papers receive. Citations are intended to measure academic influence and credit prior research.

The current methodology grants scores even to students, faculty and institutions engaging in manipulative practices, such as publishing “casual” papers that don’t contribute meaningfully to knowledge, 11 leading scientists wrote in a letter to multiple government departments on June 8.

Advertisement Examples include surveys on eating habits or awareness among students about food. While such papers do little to advance knowledge or train students in research methods, they receive as much credit as serious research, the scientists said.

They also expressed concern that some institutions appear to have instructed students or faculty to cite the work of their own colleagues — whether the citation is relevant or not — adding to the institutions’ citation counts.

A paper on fruit and vegetable consumption published by students and faculty from one university, for instance, had cited a study on diesel engines by others in the same university.

“Such practices have made scientific research a number game… detrimental to the overall ecosystem and reputation of Indian science,” the signatories wrote in their letter sent to the University Grants Commission, the principal scientific adviser to the central government, and the secretary in the higher education department.

The signatories included Partha Majumder, past president of the Indian Academy of Sciences, H.A. Ranganath, former vice-chancellor of Bangalore University, and L.S. Shashidhara, director of the National Centre for Biological Sciences, Bangalore, among others. The letter follows similar concerns some scientists have articulated on other platforms.

“Aspiration for high NIRF rankings has bred abject misuse and an unimaginable system of corruption and unethical practices,” the scientists wrote, cautioning that the manipulative and gaming practices overlooked by the NIRF will undermine academic integrity and quality.

They have sought revisions in the methodology to provide greater weight to qualitative aspects of research output than to existing quantitative measures.

One option would be to rank all institutions through the existing quantitative measures, then evaluate them on qualitative measures through an additional screening process.

“Despite having drawn the attention of the relevant government authorities, no action against such practices has been rapidly implemented,” said Majumder, a population geneticist and the founder director of the National Institute of Biomedical Genomics, Kalyani.

Queries sent by this newspaper to the University Grants Commission and the department of higher education seeking their perspectives on these concerns have evoked no response.

The National Board of Accreditation, the agency that runs the NIRF, announced earlier this year that the NIRF exercise would introduce negative scores for retracted papers or for citations of tainted papers.

But many believe these steps aren’t sufficient to curb the unethical practices.

“Negative marks for retracted papers is a welcome move, but not enough to address the large numbers of casual papers being produced only to increase scores and that do not get retracted,” said a physicist in a government institution who requested anonymity.

In their letter, the scientists said the ranking system had turned into a business model with no relevance to academic quality or integrity, driven by manipulative practices and papers published in so-called “predatory” or “paper-mill” journals that publish anything for a fee.

Under this model, some institutions push students and faculty to publish in bulk, flooding predatory journals with low-quality papers that inflate scores and attract more students — a cycle scientists say must be broken.

The scientists said the practice of publishing papers in predatory or paper-mill journals is “so rampant” that India should formally treat publication in such journals as an unethical practice, leading to negative consequences on the career of researchers or profile of institutions.

Universities call for complete revamp in Education Ministry’s NIRF rankings



Universities call for complete revamp in Education Ministry’s NIRF rankings 

There was a controversy over the National Rankings 2025 due to the ups and downs of some universities.

S. Lalitha Updated on: 18 Oct 2025, 10:14 am 2 min read

NEW DELHI: A collective call was given by multiple universities across the country on the need to bring in dynamic reforms in the Education Ministry’s National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) that is released annually. The criteria used for ranking remains the same since its inception a decade ago and hence the demand for changes in it, said multiple people who took part.

A meet was held at the IISc Habitat in Delhi on Friday evening in connection with the reforms required in these National Rankings. They are decided by the National Board of Accreditation, constituted by the Ministry.

Education Secretary Vineet Joshi chaired the meet in which Chairman of the Executive Council of the National Assessement and Acrcediation Council Anil Sahasrabudhi and representatives of the IITs of Roorkee, Mumbai, Madras, Delhi and Bhubaneshwar took part along with those from many National Institute of Technologies and universities from across the country including from Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Jammu & Kashmir.

There was a controversy over the National Rankings 2025 due to the ups and downs of some universities. This forced NBA to go in for a third party vetting for the first time by the firm Ernst and Young before they were made public after much delay in September 2025.

A senior educationist told this reporter, on the condition of anonymity, that a key recommendation was the emphasis given to the `Perception’ factor. “Perception is a relative term. By giving ten marks out of 100 in the rankings to this aspect, it was not a fair assessment was the opinion expressed by multiple heads of institutions. Though the ranking committee said they spoke to peers, professors and the general public before assessing the perception factor, representatives of universities expressed their unhappiness over it and recommended that this criterion be dropped,” he said.

Another recommendation was that the 20 marks given to the Graduation Outcome (GO) takes into account the number of graduates who get employed after passing out. “There are hundreds of students who take over their family business or run their own start-ups. This is not given any weightage. Hence, there should be value attached to these aspects too and not just for those who go into traditional forms of employment,” he added.

Many educationists also pointed out that institutes not recognised by the National Medical Commision, the Dental Council of India, the Bar Council of India or the All India Council of Technical Education find place in the rankings. “Such educational institutions need to be dropped,” they felt.

The Head of an institute also pointed out that technical universities in the country, numbering around 20 are left out of the rankings. “They need to be included. Such a competiton will help them improve their professional standings and make them competitive,” he said.

Friday, October 3, 2025

NIRF to begin negative marking for dishonesty



NIRF to begin negative marking for dishonesty

Draft Norms For Univ Ranking Aim To Strengthen Internal Checks

Hemali.Chhapia@timesofindia.com 03.10.2025

Mumbai : Centre is rewriting the rulebook for India’s National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF), in what could be the sharpest overhaul of the country’s higher education rankings since their inception in 2015. For the first time, penalties are being formally stitched into the ranking methodology, signalling a tougher stance on research malpractice and misrepresentation of data.

The negative marking system will soon be declared. This year, the framework docked some marks from an institute’s overall score if published papers were retracted by academic journals. From the coming year, though, the consequences will be deeper and wider. Not only will universities be penalised for retracted work, but even citations of such tainted papers will draw heavy deductions in the research score — effectively broadening the circle of accountability.

The change is aimed at curbing what officials describe as a “weakness” in India’s research ecosystem. Papers withdrawn for plagiarism, duplication or manipulated data often continue to be cited, giving them a false academic afterlife. “Retractions damage the credibility of the system. And when retracted papers are cited, they really hold no meaning. And hence, such  instances need to be doubly punished with harsher negative marks,” said professor Anil Sahasrabudhe, chairman of the ranking committee. By extending penalties to citations, he  explained, govt is signalling zero tolerance towards dishonesty in academic output.

The revised rules will also push institutions to institute stronger internal checks. Universities that persistently accumulate lapses may face the ultimate penalty — being struck off the rankings  altogether. “While the final decision to debar institutes that continue to deliberately misrepresent has not yet been taken, the committee is serious about such cases and is likely to consider harsh  measures,” added Sahasrabudhe.

 “Rankings are signals to students, employers, investors of faith in an institution. To be rubbed off the table would mean more than a bruise to reputation; it may mean a shut door to opportunity,” said an official. NIRF evaluates institutions across five broad parameters: teaching and learning, graduation outcomes, research, outreach and perception. With over 8,700 institutions participating in the 2024 cycle, its results have become a widely referenced barometer for students, recruiters and policymakers.

Experts point out the higher education sector is at a crossroads: on the one hand, the country seeks a larger global footprint in research and innovation, and on the other, it must work to weed  out malpractice that risks damaging credibility. Sharper rules, they argue, are a warning and an opportunity. Universities need to invest in ethics training, plagiarism detection systems &  transparent review mechanisms, lest a single tainted citation pull down their standing, said

Friday, September 5, 2025

IM-K among top 3 mgmt schools for 3rd straight yr



IIM-K among top 3 mgmt schools for 3rd straight yr

TNN | Sep 5, 2025, 04:04 IST

Kochi: The Indian Institute of Management Kozhikode (IIM-K) was ranked among the top three management institutions in the country by the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) for the third straight year.

Among other institutions, Kerala University and Cusat were ranked fifth and sixth among the top 10 state public universities in the country.

"Institutions in Kerala have made remarkable progress in the NIRF released by the ministry of human resource development, which assesses the academic performance and progress of higher education institutions in the country," said higher education minister R Bindu.

"The hat-trick of being ranked among the top three management institutions in India by NIRF is a testimony to IIM-K's relentless pursuit of academic excellence, diversity, innovation and inclusivity," said IIM-K director Debashis Chatterjee. "Breaking into the top three first in 2023 was a proud milestone, but sustaining this position for the next two years underscores the dedication and commitment of our faculty, students, alumni and staff."

NIRF, introduced by the ministry of education in 2015, is considered the most authoritative ranking in India. It outlines a methodology to rank institutions across the country based on parameters such as teaching, learning and resources (TLR, 30%), research and professional practice (RP, 30%), graduation outcomes (GO, 20%), outreach and inclusivity (OI, 10%) and perception (PR, 10%).

Bindu said the state performed well in the college ranking also. A total of 74 institutions — 18 govt colleges and 56 private colleges — from Kerala made it to the top 300.

Kerala University was ranked 42nd among all institutions and 25th in the universities list. Cusat (50th and 32nd) followed it. MG University maintained a strong presence with the 79th rank overall, 43rd in the university category and 17th among state public universities. Calicut University was placed in the 151-200 band overall and 101-150 in the university category. Kannur University was positioned in the 51-100 band among state public universities.

IIM-K retains top spot in NIRF for third consecutive year

IIM-K retains top spot in NIRF for third consecutive year 

The institution has sustained its forward momentum with an overall score rising from 74.74 in 2022 to 76.48 in 2023, 77.90 in 2024, and now 79.85 in 2025 

Published - September 04, 2025 07:32 pm IST - KOZHIKODE

THE HINDU BUREAU

In a significant milestone, the Indian Institute of Management Kozhikode (IIM-K) has been ranked among the top three management institutions in the country by the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) for the third consecutive year. The 10th edition of the prestigious NIRF rankings 2025 was released by Union Minister for Education Dharmendra Pradhan in New Delhi on Thursday (September 4, 2025).

“This hat-trick of being ranked among the top three management institutions in India by NIRF is a testimony to IIM-K’s relentless pursuit of academic excellence, diversity, innovation, and inclusivity,” said Prof. Debashis Chatterjee, Director, IIM-K.

“Breaking into the top three in 2023 was a proud milestone,” he added, “but sustaining this position for the next two successive years underscores the dedication and commitment of our faculty, students, alumni, and staff. As we step into our third decade, this recognition inspires us to continue shaping future-ready, humanistic leaders and advancing the global footprint of Indian thought.”

The NIRF, introduced by the Ministry of Education in 2015, ranks institutions based on parameters such as Teaching, Learning and Resources (TLR) 30%, Research and Professional Practice (RP) 30%, Graduation Outcomes (GO) 20%, Outreach and Inclusivity (OI) 10%, and Perception (PR) 10%.

A press release said that IIM-K has sustained its forward momentum with an overall score rising from 74.74 in 2022 to 76.48 in 2023, 77.90 in 2024, and now 79.85 in 2025. The nearly two-point improvement over 2024 has enabled IIM-K to significantly close the gap with the older IIMs.

Noteworthy gains were recorded in TLR (86.99 to 87.75) and RP (58.96 to 64.14), underlining the institute’s growing academic depth and expanding research output. GO also improved to 95.35, reflecting strong student placements, entrepreneurial success, and alumni achievements.

This performance strengthens IIM-K’s academic reputation, enhances its visibility in global rankings, and reinforces its appeal to prospective students, recruiters, and international collaborators. The steady upward trajectory validates the institute’s emphasis on inclusivity, innovation, and impact-driven research. The latest ranking further highlights IIM-K’s growing influence in global business education, underscoring its commitment to both academic rigour and social impact.

Published - September 04, 2025 07:32 pm IST

IIT Madras tops NIRF for 7th year; IISc best university



IIT Madras tops NIRF for 7th year; IISc best university 

Manash Gohain & Meghna Dhulia TNN 05.09.2025

New Delhi : IIT Madras has topped the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) 2025 in the “overall” category for the seventh straight year while IISc Bengaluru has been ranked India’s best university for the tenth year in a row. IIT-Madras also led the engineering, innovation, and sustainable development goals (SDG) lists. 

“Being a topper consistently is the result of a collective, cohesive and focused team effort,” IIT Madras director V Kamakoti said. For the first time, a private university — Manipal Academy of Higher Education (MAHE), Karnataka — entered the top three in the “university” category. 

In the colleges list, Delhi University institutions continued to dominate, with Hindu College at No. 1 and 31 in the top 100. A record 7,692 institutions submitted 14,163 applications this year across 17 categories. Announcing the tenth edition of the NIRF on Thursday, education minister Dharmendra Pradhan said, “The cornerstone of the India rankings has been its success in cultivating a culture of data governance within higher education institutions ... enabling internal benchmarking and long-term strategic planning.” “At the macro level, this data serves as a valuable resource for national policy formulation and sectoral analysis. A multi-layered data validation is undertaken ... scrutinised for inconsistencies, anomalies and potential inflation,” he said. In the “overall” category, IISc-Bengaluru retained second place, followed by IIT Bombay and IIT Delhi, both holding their positions.

Saveetha drops to second place in dental, CMC remains 3rd in medical Among universities, IISc-Bengaluru stayed at No. 1 and JNU, New Delhi, at No. 2. MAHE, which first entered the top 10 in 2019, continued its steady rise to be ranked third this year. Delhi-based Jamia Millia Islamia slipped one slot to fourth. 

After the inaugural 2016 rankings, BITS-Pilani returned to the top 10 at seventh position, followed by Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Coimbatore, as the third private university in the top 10. In colleges, DU’s Miranda House retained second spot, with Hansraj College and Kirori Mal College next. St Stephen’s College, third last year, slipped to fifth. In engineering, nine IITs figured in the top 10. IIT-Madras led the category for the tenth consecutive year, with IIT-Delhi and IIT-Bombay again at second and third. NIT-Tiruchirappalli was the only non-IIT in the top 10. 

The framework evaluates institutions on five groups of parameters — Teaching, Learning & Resources (TLR); Research & Professional Practice (RP); Graduation Outcome (GO); Outreach & Inclusivity (OI); and Perception (PR) — with ranks assigned on total scores across these. 

In management, IIM-Ahmedabad stayed at No. 1, followed by IIM-Bangalore and IIM-Kozhikode. Seven IIMs made it to the top 10, with IITDelhi the only technology institute on the list. MDI-Gurgaon and XLRI-Jamshedpur were ninth and tenth. In medical, AIIMS-Delhi was first, followed by PGIMER-Chandigarh and CMCVellore — all three retaining their positions. 


In dental, AIIMS-Delhi topped the list, while Saveetha Institute of Medical and Technical Sciences, Chennai, slipped to second. In pharmacy, Jamia Hamdard retained the top spot, while BITS-Pilani rose to second from third last year. In law, NLSIU-Bengaluru, NLU-Delhi, and Nalsar-Hyderabad were first, second and third, respectively. For research institutions, IIScBengaluru ranked first, followed by IIT-Madras. Among open universities, IGNOU led, with Karnataka State Open University (Mysuru) in second place.

TN univs, colleges slip down India Rankings ’25

TN univs, colleges slip down India Rankings ’25 



The India Rankings (formerly NIRF rankings) of colleges and universities released on Thursday reflect the plight of state universities, which have been functioning without vice-chancellors (V-Cs) and with high number of vacancies in faculty positions. While the premier Anna University slipped seven ranks to 20th in the university category, Bharathiar University in Coimbatore and Madurai Kamaraj University slipped 20 places and 22 places to 46th rank and 85th rank, respectively. Algappa University offered the sole consolation, moving up by three places to 44th rank, while Bharthidasan University retained its previous year rank of 36. The biggest slide was reserved for Periyar University in Salem, which fell from 56th rank last year to 94th rank. Anna University also lost its top position to Jadavpur University in the state universities category. 

Amrita Vishwa Vidhyapeetham in Coimbatore, which is the only institution from Tamil Nadu to feature among top 10 in universities category, also slipped by a rank to 8th position this year. University of Madras improved one rank from 39th last year to 38th this year in the university category 

“All the state universities have been functioning with significant number of vacancies in faculty positions. It will affect the research output and teacher-student ratio,” said P Duraisamy, former V-C, University of Madras. As many as 14 out of 22 state universities have been functioning without V-Cs due to the tussle between the governor and state govt. For example, the scores for research publications and quality of publications for Anna University has come down by three points this year which has affected its overall score. The overall score has come down from 63.85 points to 61.22 this year compared to last year. Anna University has more than 400 vacancies on its four campuses. “State govt has granted permission to fill 288 of them. It would help improve the —ranking next year,” said Anna University registrar J Prakash. He pointed out that the university improved its ranking in the innovation category from 10th rank last year to 9th rank. For the first time, no college from Chennai city featured among the top 10 in colleges’ category. 

Loyola College dropped from 8th rank to 14th rank. Two colleges from Coimbatore, PSGR Krishnammal College for Women and PSG Arts and Science College, were ranked 9th and 10th in the same category. College principals said the colleges did not get high ranks despite having better scores compared to last year. PSGR Krishnammal College secured a place in the top 10 rankings for the sixth consecutive year. Principal, P B Harathi said, “There are two parameters that we need to strengthen, one is research and the other is perception. If we improve on these two areas, we will certainly crack the top 5 positions in the coming years.” “Our overall score improved from 67.4 to 70.6. However, our college has slipped two places to 16th rank due to tough competition,” Madras Christian College principal Paul Wilson said. 

The number of colleges taking part in the colleges’ category has increased from 3,371 last year to 4,030 this year. In the engineering category, top colleges such as SRM Institute of Technology (SRMIST) and Vellore Institute of Technology also slipped this year. SRMIST slipped a place to 14th rank, while VIT slipped five places to 16th rank in this category. 


Among the medical colleges, Christian Medical College retained its third position, while Madras Medical College slipped six places to 16th rank this year. JSS College of Pharmacy in Ooty retained its fourth position, while Saveetha Institute of Medical and Technical Sciences slipped a place to number two among dental colleges. NIT Trichy has slipped a place to ninth in the architecture and planning category. In the newly introduced sustainable development goals institutions category, SRM Institute of Science and Technology bagged the fourth rank, while IIT Madras received first rank.

Saturday, March 22, 2025

Madras High Court restrains authorities from publishing NIRF ranking for 2025


Madras High Court restrains authorities from publishing NIRF ranking for 2025

A PIL petition has claimed the ranking is without any basis and is misleading students

Published - March 21, 2025 08:47 pm IST - MADURAI


The Hindu

The Madurai Bench of the Madras High Court on Thursday restrained the Ministry of Education and the National Board of Accreditation (NBA) from publishing the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) ranking for 2025.

The court was hearing a public interest litigation petition filed by C. Chellamuthu of Oddanchatram in Dindigul district. The petitioner claimed the NIRF ranking was totally without any basis and it was misleading students.

NIRF was launched by the NBA on the direction of the Ministry of Education for evaluating higher education institutions in the country. The NBA publishes the NIRF rankings of colleges every year. The NIRF ranking framework evaluates institutions in five broad categories: Teaching, Learning and Resources; Research and Professional Practice; Graduation Outcomes; Outreach and Inclusivity; and Perception, the petition said.

The NBA directs the institutions to upload the data such as student and staff strength, staff salaries, graduation index, placement details and funds received for research and development on its web portal. Based on the data entered by the institutions, rankings were awarded without any further verification or auditing, the petitioner said.

Comparing it with the National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC) Annual Quality Assurance Report (AQAR), the petitioner said the NAAC AQAR documents were audited and checked by expert committees sent by the NAAC to the institutions.
‘Data manipulated’

According to him, in all the ranking parameters, the data provided by the institutions that got NIRF ranking was manipulated and completely false. There was no transparency or accountability of the data submitted by the institutions. Instead of collecting data from the available official government records, institutions were invited to submit the data online. Without verifying the information entered, top rankings were awarded, he said.

It could negatively impact the quality of education in India. Reputed academicians and educationalists had criticised the system followed by the NIRF, the petitioner said, and sought the grant of an order of interim stay restraining the authorities from publishing the NIRF ranking for 2025.

The petitioner sought a direction to the NBA to publish the NIRF ranking after comparing and verifying the data submitted by the institutions with the data in the government records and disclose the calculation method.

A Division Bench of Justices J. Nisha Banu and S. Srimathy restrained the authorities from publishing the ranking for 2025. The court sought a counter affidavit and posted the matter to April 24.

Published - March 21, 2025 08:47 pm IST

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