Hi Barbie! All the Russell Group unis ranked by just how many girlies study there
Imperial College London is just the equivalent of Barbie land apparently
One of the best parts about moving to uni is the mates that you make there. Forget meeting the love of your life, (it’s definitely not going to be that rugby boy) it’s all about meeting your girlies.
Ever since the Barbie movie came out, everyone has been absolutely obsessed with the idea of girlhood. But if you’ve ever lived in an all-girls house at uni, you’ll know it really is just girlhood reincarnated. Sharing clothes, holding each other’s hands in the club and getting ready for a night out together, it’s all just immaculate vibes. But which Russell Group is the uni equivalent of Barbie land?
The Times Higher Education World University Ranking 2024 has just come out which ranks 1,904 universities across 108 countries and regions. The rankings are based on teaching, international outlook, industry, research environment and research quality. But what it also tells us is the percentage of female compared to male students at each uni. But in the UK, which of the Russell Group unis have the most female students?
Imperial College London has the fewest at 42 per cent, closely followed by Cambridge with 48 per cent and Oxford at 49 per cent, the only three Russell Groups with more guys than girls.
King’s College London on the other hand is full of the gals. With 63 per cent of all students being female, it’s the girliest Russell Group uni. It’s closely followed by Edinburgh with 62 per cent and Leeds at 59 per cent.
Here are all the Russell Group unis, ranked on just how girly they all are:
Imperial College London – 42 per cent
University of Cambridge – 48 per cent
University of Oxford – 49 per cent
University of Warwick – 50 per cent
University of Southampton – 51 per cent
University of Exeter – 53 per cent
University of Sheffield – 53 per cent
Durham University – 54 per cent
University of Liverpool – 54 per cent
University of Nottingham – 54 per cent
Queen Mary University of London – 54 per cent
University of Manchester – 55 per cent
London School of Economics – 55 per cent
University of York – 56 per cent
University of Bristol – 56 per cent
Queen’s University Belfast – 57 per cent
University of Birmingham – 58 per cent
Cardiff University – 58 per cent
University of Leeds – 59 per cent
University of Glasgow – 59 per cent
University College London – 59 per cent
University of Edinburgh – 62 per cent
King’s College London – 63 per cent
You can read the Times Higher Education World Rankings in full here.
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