University
TQA
RAE
A Lev
Score
1
Cambridge
23
5*
A
29.9
99.9
2
Oxford
23
5*
A
29.5
99.6
3
Strathclyde
5
A
30.0
92.5
4
London, Imperial
23
5
B
92.3
5
Durham
22
5
B
27.4
87.6
6
Warwick
21
4
A
21.7
77.9
7
Leicester
20
4
A
24.0
74.9
8
Lancaster
22
4
C
17.0
73.9
9
Brunel
22
3a
B
13.4
71.6
10
Ulster
20
3a
A
16.8
66.3
11
Liverpool John Moores
5
A
8.4
63.8
12
Southampton
23
14.2
63.7
13
Exeter
20
3a
C
18.3
63.1
14
Bradford
20
3a
B
12.5
61.9
15
Sussex
4
B
14.0
59.7
16
Cranfield
20
4
E
57.3
17
Aberdeen
3a
B
16.0
55.7
18
Wolverhampton
20
2
E
53.1
19
Sheffield Hallam
21
9.3
51.3
20
Hertfordshire
20
13.9
49.8
Bournemouth
18
2
E
12.0
Central England
19
2
B
8.4
Central Lancashire
20
5.8
Coventry
18
6.9
De Montfort
19
3b
C
6.3
Greenwich
17
3b
E
Leeds Metropolitan
17
3b
E
7.3
Lincolnshire & Humberside
18
5.2
Liverpool
20
13.2
London, Queen Mary
19
12.1
Luton
1
E
8.7
Oxford Brookes
3b
D
9.9
Staffordshire
2
D
9.0
Sunderland
19
3b
F
5.0
Employment: 77.2% Further study: 11.1% Unemployment: 7.1% CAMBRIDGE and Oxford are hard to separate with equally impressive records for teaching and research. Cambridge squeaks ahead on the slightly higher A-level score of its undergraduates. Imperial and Southampton had the same high grading for teaching as the top two universities with 23 out of 24 and the highest A-level points score (30, equivalent to the straight As) came at Strathclyde. Grades of 22 for teaching went to Durham, Lancaster and Brunel. The highest-placed new university, Liverpool John Moores, only just misses the top ten, its grade five rating for research placing it on a par with Strathclyde, Imperial and Durham. Cambridge and Oxford recorded five-star ratings.
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