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DATE:
January 10, 2007
According to a new index of research productivity, the UW
Business School has the nation’s most prolific faculty
in the area of business administration. The Faculty Scholarly
Productivity Index, released this week, also rated the School’s
marketing faculty eighth most productive nationally.
The new annual index was created by Academic
Analytics, a
company owned partially by the State University of New York
at Stony Brook. For the 2005 Faculty Scholarly Productivity
Index, Academic Analytics measured the output of faculty
at 7,294 doctoral programs in 104 disciplines at 354 institutions
over the period from 2001 to 2005.
Academic Analytics took into account the number of book and
journal articles published by each faculty, as well as journal
citations, awards, honors and grants received. It then rated
universities overall and by individual academic disciplines
based on per-faculty-member scholarly output.
The resulting index, the company claims, is the only faculty
ranking that relies solely on objective data rather than
reputation.
By the numbers, the UW Business School scored very well.
In the business administration ranking, the UW Business School
tied for the top spot nationally with the University of Illinois
at Chicago. The remaining top ten, in descending order, are
Washington University, the University of Chicago, the University
of Michigan, the University of Minnesota, Indiana University,
the University of Pittsburgh, Saint Louis University and
the University of Rochester.
The marketing ranking was topped by the University of Pennsylvania,
followed by Northwestern University, Duke University, Michigan
State University, Florida State University, New York University,
Ohio State University, the University of Washington, Arizona
State University and Emory University.
The methodology of this new index has created some controversy,
especially pertaining to the inclusion of some generally
lesser-known schools alongside – and sometimes ahead
of – the nation’s elite. But Academic Analytics
officials contend that their data-driven index may allow
high-performing programs to be recognized before their reputations
have caught up.
"It is gratifying to see our faculty recognized for
its excellent and important research production," said
James Jiambalvo, dean of the UW Business School. "This
new index demonstrates what we have always known: our Business
School faculty is
among the finest in the nation at both creating knowledge
and imparting it to our students, who will be tomorrow’s
leaders."
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