First, the ranking of Swiss universities
Although Switzerland has a small population, it has a dense network of higher education. There are 12 universities recognized by the state, of which two universities, Federal Institute of Technology Zurich and Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne, are under federal control, and the other 10 are state universities.
According to the language of the university, there are six German-speaking areas: university of basel, Berne University, Zurich University, Zurich Federal Institute of Technology, St. Gallen University and Lucerne University; There are five French-speaking areas: Geneva University, Lausanne University, Lausanne Federal Institute of Technology, New chartres University and Fribourg University; There is only one university in Lugano in the Italian-speaking area.
Federal Institute of Technology Zurich ranks the highest, ranking sixth in the world, followed by Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (global 14), University of Zurich (global 69), University of Geneva (106), University of Bern (1 14) and university of basel (row
Ranked 149), while the University of Lausanne ranked 169, the University of Lugano (Ticino University) ranked 273, and the University of Saint Gallen ranked 428.
Second, the ranking of Dutch universities
As a powerful European education country, there are 12 universities in the Netherlands that rank among the top 300 in the world, with the specific rankings as follows:
World ranking 100: Delft University of Technology ranks 57th, and Amstadt University ranks 6 1.
The world rankings are between 10 1-200: Vakhnin GenUniversity 1 15, Eindhoven University of Technology 120, Utrecht University 12 1, university of groningen.
The world ranking is between 20 1-300: Nijmegen University ranks 2 14, Maastricht University ranks 234, and Free University of Amsterdam ranks 236. In addition, Tilburg University ranked 368th.
Link to the world rankings of European universities.