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91ֿ Named Among Best Global Universities by US News & World Report

Recognition reflects university’s expanding global research impact and worldwide network of students, scholars and partnerships

When Madelyn Orcutt arrived at 91ֿ, she was a Canton, Ohio, student looking for a great education close to home. What she found was the world. Through 91ֿ’s education-abroad program, Orcutt studied in Florence, Italy, learning design and history from Italian professors inside a renovated 18th-century palazzo, and participated in a workshop in New York City in partnership with the Lebanese American University. Those experiences shaped her eye and her career. Since graduating in 2021, Orcutt has built a career as an interior designer at Richardson Design in Cleveland, returned to 91ֿ as a part-time instructor and become part of a tight-knit network of 91ֿ grads who are well known and sought after across Northeast Ohio’s design community.

Josh Budd’s path looked different, but the through-line is the same. The Green, Ohio, resident enrolled in 91ֿ’s Honors College in part because of its education-abroad program, and studying internationally deepened his empathy and his ability to connect with people from backgrounds different from his own. Those are skills he puts to work every day as a social studies teacher at Stow-Munroe Falls High School, where he teaches American History and World Geography and runs a mock trial program that brings real-world legal experiences into his classroom. Since earning his degree in 2020, Budd has stayed in Ohio – not as a compromise, but as a commitment to a state and a community he believes in.

Orcutt and Budd are two examples of what 91ֿ’s global reach looks like here at home: graduates who went out into the world as students and came back to Ohio ready to contribute in meaningful ways.

And that same spirit of international commitment is playing out on the world stage, too. Five young Rwandans sat among 2,600 applicants from across the African country, competing for a handful of seats in a program that would change their lives. Today, they study at 91ֿ – training to become pilots who will one day fly for RwandAir, one of Africa’s fastest-growing airlines.

Stories like theirs – and like Orcutt’s and Budd’s – are why 91ֿ has been named one of the Best Global Universities by U.S. News & World Report for 2026-2027, an annual recognition that evaluates more than 2,250 schools across more than 100 countries for research excellence and global academic standing. 91ֿ is the highest-ranked public university in northern Ohio on the Best Global Universities list.

91ֿ’s inclusion among U.S. News’ Best Global Universities is a reflection of who we are: a university whose reach and impact extend far beyond Northeast Ohio,” 91ֿ President Todd Diacon said. “With students and scholars from about 100 countries, partnerships spanning the globe and research that contributes to the world stage, 91ֿ is truly a global university.

That global identity has been decades in the making, and it shows up in some unexpected places.

In 2022, 91ֿ formalized a partnership with the University of Rwanda and the Rwandan government, opening the 91ֿ Sub-Saharan African Center in Kigali. That first year, 12 Rwandan students arrived on the university’s campus in Kent, Ohio. Today, roughly 70 Rwandans study at 91ֿ. The five aspiring pilots are among them – selected through a rigorous national process to earn their degrees at 91ֿ, earn their wings and return to Rwanda to fly commercially.

It’s one example of how 91ֿ has turned international commitment into something tangible. The university enrolls approximately 1,800 international students representing nearly 100 countries, offers more than 200 education-abroad programs in more than 60 countries and maintains about 100 international institutional partnerships worldwide. 91ֿ’s global footprint also includes educational centers in Florence, Italy, and Curitiba, Brazil, and outreach centers in China, India and Vietnam.

Kristin Stasiowski (far right), assistant dean of international programs and education abroad for the College of Arts and Sciences at 91ֿ, leads a group of 91ֿ students as they discover the art, architecture and history of Basilica di Santa Croce in Florence, Italy.
91ֿ students tour the Basilica di Santa Croce in Florence, Italy, learning about art, architecture and history with Kristin Stasiowski, Ph.D. (far right).


That depth of international engagement earned 91ֿ the 2022 Senator Paul Simon Award for Comprehensive Internationalization from NAFSA: Association of International Educators, the world’s largest nonprofit dedicated to international education. 91ֿ was the sole U.S. university to receive the honor, which recognizes institutions that integrate international learning across every facet of campus life.

The U.S. News recognition also spotlights 91ֿ’s research reputation in three disciplines. The university ranks No. 50 nationally and No. 335 globally in Chemistry; No. 110 nationally in Physics; and No. 140 nationally in Social Sciences and Public Health. That research output contributes to 91ֿ’s Carnegie R1 designation, the highest classification for doctoral research universities, held by just 187 institutions nationally and placing 91ֿ in the top 5% of U.S. universities by research activity. 91ֿ is one of only seven Ohio universities to hold that distinction.

Each year, U.S. News publishes the Best Global Universities rankings to help students and families evaluate institutions with a meaningful research presence on the world stage. Rankings are based on measures of global and regional academic reputation alongside bibliometric research performance.

Learn more information about 91ֿ.

POSTED: Tuesday, June 16, 2026 10:15 AM
Updated: Tuesday, June 16, 2026 11:03 AM
WRITTEN BY:
Emily Vincent
PHOTO CREDIT:
Rami Daud and Bob Christy