Tompkins Table

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. It was created in 1981 by Peter Tompkins, then a third-year undergraduate mathematics student at Trinity College, who compiles it every year exclusively for the newspaper The Independent[1], and is not an official University of Cambridge table.

Contents

The 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. Over the twenty-eight years that this table has been running, Christ's College has averaged to be the top College for academic excellence, however, in recent years Emmanuel College lays claim to consistently having the best results (with Trinity College the wealthiest College, second): Emmanuel topped the table in 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007 and 2010, as well as being second in 2001, 2002, 2008, 2009 and 2011. 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 these colleges.

Below is the table for 2011:[2][3]

Position College Tompkins Score (%) Firsts (%)
1 Trinity College 70.94 37.2
2 Emmanuel College 69.79 31.8
3 Trinity Hall 68.40 29.3
4 Clare College 67.51 26.9
5 Pembroke College 67.49 28.9
6 Christ's College 67.41 27.7
7 Selwyn College 67.11 26.3
8 Jesus College 66.51 27.2
9 Magdalene College 66.22 23.6
10 Churchill College 66.16 25.1
11 St. Catharine's College 65.94 26.7
12 Corpus Christi College 65.88 24.5
13 Gonville & Caius College 65.36 23.5
14 Queens' College 65.14 23.7
15 St. John's College 64.30 22.1
16 Sidney Sussex College 64.21 21.0
17 Downing College 64.02 19.4
18 Peterhouse 63.51 22.1
19 Robinson College 63.18 18.6
20 King's College 63.08 20.9
21 Fitzwilliam College 62.62 20.4
22 Murray Edwards College 61.51 15.5
23 Girton College 61.38 16.3
24 Newnham College 60.96 13.8
25 Wolfson College 60.69 17.1
26 Homerton College 59.39 14.3
27 Hughes Hall 59.27 12.7
28 St Edmund's College 56.32 10.8
29 Lucy Cavendish College 55.38 9.5

Past rankings

College 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Mean
Christ's College 3 2 1 1 1 4 2 2 4 6 2 8 13 12 4.4
Churchill College 15 13 20 15 9 10 9 19 18 13 15 6 7 3 12.3
Clare College 11 6 15 9 6 3 6 4 9 12 17 13 18 8 9.8
Corpus Christi College 23 18 8 10 20 18 7 10 16 8 8 9 10 13 12.7
Downing College 12 11 16 8 10 8 12 17 15 11 3 12 15 15 11.8
Emmanuel College 7 5 5 3 2 2 1 1 5 1 1 2 2 1 2.7
Fitzwilliam College 13 12 19 21 13 20 20 15 13 19 14 21 21 22 17.4
Girton College 22 21 21 18 17 16 17 25 24 22 21 22 20 21 20.5
Gonville & Caius College 8 4 6 12 8 7 4 5 2 2 10 4 4 11 6.2
Homerton College 25 24 26 25 26 25 25 26 25.3
Hughes Hall 27 27 29 29 29 26 26 27 27.5
Jesus College 20 16 11 13 11 9 10 9 7 10 9 7 11 16 11.4
King's College 14 10 13 20 21 14 16 20 10 17 18 19 17 14 15.9
Lucy Cavendish College 26 26 27 26 24 28 29 29 26.9
Magdalene College 17 22 23 22 22 15 18 22 20 20 13 5 8 5 16.6
Murray Edwards College (formerly New Hall) 24 24 22 16 23 24 24 23 25 24 23 23 23 23 22.9
Newnham College 18 20 24 24 24 22 21 13 21 23 22 24 24 25 21.8
Pembroke College 5 9 14 6 7 1 3 6 6 4 7 10 6 10 6.7
Peterhouse 19 23 17 14 19 23 22 21 22 21 25 18 16 7 19.1
Queens' College 3 2 3 5 5 5 5 8 8 14 11 16 12 17 8.1
Robinson College 21 19 9 19 14 21 23 16 11 18 20 17 19 19 17.6
St. Catharine's College 9 14 10 11 18 12 11 7 1 3 5 11 5 9 9.0
St. Edmund's College 29 29 28 28 28 29 28 28 28.4
St. John's College 10 8 12 4 4 11 13 14 12 15 19 20 14 20 12.6
Selwyn College 16 15 7 7 12 13 14 11 19 7 4 1 3 6 9.6
Sidney Sussex College 4 17 4 23 16 19 15 18 14 9 12 14 22 18 14.6
Trinity College 1 1 2 2 3 6 8 3 3 5 6 3 1 2 3.3
Trinity Hall 6 7 18 17 15 17 19 12 17 16 16 15 9 4 13.4
Wolfson College 28 28 23 27 27 27 27 24 26.4

Consecutive yearly rankings 2000-2009:

Baxter Tables

The University of Cambridge compiles similar tables called Baxter Tables, which rank colleges' undergraduate students by their year and subject separately and are published in September.[1] 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. They are meant for internal use, being distributed to the Senior Tutors of the Colleges [2], with the full tables not being published publicly or outside of the Colleges or departments of the university, and some students being unaware of their existence. However, the rankings of Colleges in the Baxter Tables are sometimes referred to by the Colleges and the University in publicly available literature,[3] [4] 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.[5] However, with such small sample sizes, the amount of meaningful information which can be extracted from these tables is questionable.[6]

Norrington Table

The corresponding ranking for the Colleges of the University of 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.

References

External links