Tompkins Table

Chart of Tompkins rankings for the years 1997 to 2016

The Tompkins Table is an annual ranking that lists the Colleges of the University of Cambridge in order of their undergraduate students' performances in that year's examinations. Two colleges - Darwin and Clare Hall - do not have undergraduate students and therefore do not feature in the list. It was created in 1981 by Peter Tompkins, then a third-year undergraduate mathematics student at Trinity College, who until 2015 compiled it every year exclusively for the newspaper The Independent.[1] Since 2016, it has been published by Varsity, a student newspaper of the University of Cambridge.[2] It is not an official University of Cambridge table. It does not take account of students who are not candidates for Honours degrees, or those who have failed to gain a degree.

Rankings

Current rankings

Initially, it only included final year exams but since 1997 has covered all exams for which grades are allocated. The table allocates 5 points for a First Class degree, 3 points for an Upper Second (known also as a 2.i), 2 points for a Lower Second (a 2.ii), 1 point for a Third and no points for someone only granted an allowance towards an Ordinary Degree. The scores in each subject are then weighted to a common average, to avoid the bias towards colleges with higher proportions of students entered for subjects which receive higher average grades. The result is expressed as a percentage of the total number of points available. The differences between the highest places on the table are usually very slight. Christ's College was the top college in 2018 following seven years in which Trinity College came top. The rankings are not officially endorsed by the University. Since Darwin College and Clare Hall admit only graduate students, they do not feature in this undergraduate ranking. Some of the mature colleges, including St. Edmund's College, Hughes Hall, Lucy Cavendish College, and Wolfson College, tend to perform relatively more poorly in the Tompkins Table, but have significantly more graduate students than undergraduate students, so the results here are not representative of the majority of the student population of each of these colleges.

Most of the colleges fall within a 10% range of one another therefore the table should be taken lightly with regards to determining the academic standing of the colleges.

Below is the table for 2018:[3]

Position College Score Firsts (%)
1 Christ's 73 37.1
2 Pembroke 72.7 37.2
3 Trinity 72.3 37.1
4 Peterhouse 70.9 30.4
5 King's 70.4 31
6 Jesus 70.4 33.4
7 Churchill 70.1 34.7
8 St John's 70.1 30.2
9 Emmanuel 69.8 33.7
10 St Catharine's 69.2 30.1
11 Selwyn 68.9 29.4
12 Trinity Hall 68.9 30.6
13 Queens’ 68.8 29.6
14 Gonville & Caius 68.6 27.3
15 Corpus Christi 68.3 29.8
16 Clare 68.1 28.4
17 Sidney Sussex 67.9 27.4
18 Magdalene 66.8 24
19 Fitzwilliam 66.5 25.2
20 Downing 66.3 25.3
21 St Edmund's 66 28.6
22 Newnham 65.5 22.8
23 Girton 64.3 20.2
24 Robinson 64.2 20.9
25 Hughes Hall 63.3 20
26 Murray Edwards 63.1 18.4
27 Homerton 63.1 19.3
28 Lucy Cavendish 62.9 13.7
29 Wolfson 59 11

Past rankings

College199719981999200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017 2018Mean
Christ's College321114224628131269891432 15.1
Churchill College15132015910919181315673105563115 710.2
Clare College11615963649121713188411118151813 1610.6
Corpus Christi College231881020187101688910131231618221012 1513.0
Downing College12111681081217151131215151720121191220 2013.0
Emmanuel College755322115112212245446 93.4
Fitzwilliam College131219211320201513191421212221192019202321 1918.4
Girton College222121181716172524222122202123222123242724 2321.5
Gonville & Caius College8461287452210441113161715191911 149.6
Homerton College252426252625252626272624272428 2725.7
Hughes Hall272729292926262727262727252926 2527.0
Jesus College20161113119109710971116876411714 610.1
King's College14101320211416201017181917142013141418148 515.0
Lucy Cavendish College262627262428292929292829292618 2826.9
Magdalene College172223222215182220201358591515102916 1814.8
Murray Edwards College (formerly New Hall)242422162324242325242323232322242426232529 2623.6
Newnham College182024242422211321232224242524232322212123 2222.0
Pembroke College591467136647106105422524 25.5
Peterhouse192317141923222122212518167181810126810 416.0
Queens' College3235555881411161217141277767 138.5
Robinson College21199191421231611182017191919212220162225 2418.9
Selwyn College16157712131411197413676181312159 1110.3
Sidney Sussex College417423161915181491214221816171917171617 1715.5
St. Catharine's College9141011181211713511591110921131719 1010.7
St. Edmund's College292928282829282828282928282822 2127.4
St. John's College1081244111314121519201420151413161053 811.8
Trinity College112231233563121111111 32.0
Trinity Hall671817151719121716161594383381315 1211.5
Wolfson College282823272727272425252525262027 2925.8

Similar league tables

Baxter tables

Certain Colleges of the University of Cambridge commission similar tables called Baxter Tables from Martin Baxter who is a financial analyst specialising in mathematical modelling and who developed the Electoral Calculus web site. Baxter tables rank colleges' undergraduate students by their year and subject separately and are delivered in July or August. They are compiled using published Class Lists, which do not include students who are not candidates for Honours degrees, or those who have failed to gain a degree, or those whose names the Council have determined should be withheld from public display. They are meant for internal use of Colleges but not the University, being distributed to the Senior Tutors of the Colleges , with the full tables not being published publicly or outside of the Colleges, and some students being unaware of their existence. However, the rankings of Colleges in the Baxter Tables are sometimes referred to by Colleges in publicly available literature, and the methodology used to compile the Baxter Tables is also available. There is also a 'value-added' table, which shows how students' results improve over the course of their years at Cambridge, and is intended to give a measure or indication of the quality of teaching at the different Colleges. However, with such small sample sizes, the amount of meaningful information which can be extracted from these tables is questionable.

Norrington table

The corresponding ranking for Oxford colleges is the Norrington Table. Since 1986, when the University of Oxford adopted split second-class degrees, the Norrington Table has adopted the same method of scoring as the Tompkins Table, but without the weighting attached to individual subject scores.

See also

References

  1. Garner, Richard (18 July 2011). "First-class arts and humanities students help Trinity to top place in Cambridge league table". The Independent. Retrieved 19 July 2011.
  2. "The Tompkins Table 2016: Christ's has risen". Retrieved 24 July 2016.
  3. "Exclusive: Christ's and Pembroke victorious over Trinity in Tompkins Table". Retrieved 30 July 2018.
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