Continuing Higher Education News Information

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Continuing Higher Education News Information & Advice - Eurograduate

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Job Search Education Database Working Abroad Lifestyle Links Archive
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< Back to Archive ‘Forgotten’ Holocaust remembered £2.9M high performance computer Academic activity Addicted to e-mail? Addressing the skills issue Alcohol issues Are teachers getting enough training? Aspiring fashion entrepreneurs Astronomical survey completes mission Attitudes towards young people

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Bangor Business School Bocconi launches new PhD Bonding businesses and universities Bone research centre opened Bonn’s buzzing campus city Breakfast benefits B-School faculty training Business degrees Business schools in Britain Business Schools in France Can the web save books? Careers in Will Writing Celebrity culture undermining schools Central European University Centre for Sustainable Practice Clash on head scarves Combatting culture shock Courses for translators Creating computer games Creative courses Creative Expression course Dare to be Digital Degrees being ''sacrificed'' Diversity Scholarship

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Doctors graduate in Somalia Dog-fighting on the rise Don't risk the future by cutting back on training EBS open days Edinburgh College of Art Open Day Education blunts effects of Alzheimer's Education helps Alzheimer''s Educational reform Effective studying tips Elite French school gets low marks EMBA Water Specialisation Engineering in the UK Erasmus Mundus project ESMT MBA program EU Design competition EU Studies Fair EuroBiO Career Fair EUROMOD project European Creativity & Innovation Challenge European Digital Library European Electronics Industry Awards European higher education Executive MBA Exercise is good for the brain

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''F word'' accepted in exam Facility for future media First 3D images of the Sun Foreign students crackdown Free university courses French students murdered Genes linked to violence German academic jailed Global Executive MBA Global MBA programme Graduate Guide Graduate schemes Help for graduates Hemingway archives open to scholars Hookah popular with college crowd How to handle stress How to predict decisions How to stop procrastination HTEC Student Exchange Increase in national tests India''s MBA graduates face bleak job prospects Interested in Irish Studies? International business research International Space University

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International study Internet Survey iPhones for students Leadership training Learning business skills Linking universities & businesses literary fingerprints Looking at language Lugano''s cross-border links MA in Visual Effects Production Malaysian student conference Mannheim Business School Many schools breaking rules Master in Management Master in Sustainable Peace through Sport Masters in Forensic Science Mathematical anxiety MBA Scholarships Meat Hook Media & Communication Executive MBA More ''brain-boosting'' drugs MSc in Strategic Marketing Muslim scarves in Europe New Business Law course

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New CIM centre in High Wycombe New Hult business school New iPhone app for tech-savvy applicants New Motor Neurone Disease Insitute One Young World 2011 Peace and Conflict Studies Photography competition Plagiarism: What is it? Police ''stop-searches'' soar Postgraduate English courses Postgraduate Information Evening Postgraduate Open Day Postgraduate Open Evening Postgraduate psychology Postgraduate Virtual Open Day Pressured to sleep Process Control Academy Training Protests about tuition fees Publishing success Put a tiger in your tank Record $100 million gift Research in nursing education Respond to drug analysis Responsible Leadership

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Retail Management courses Risk management Scholarship winners announced Schools'' Business Partnership Schools to tackle extremism Science careers SDA Bocconi & Bulgari launch MBA Sex education to become compulsory Short courses Short courses at Queen’s Sir David Attenborough to visit Salford University SKEMA Business School Skills shortage in Germany Soy sauce vs tomato ketcup Spring Graduate Fair Student defends Tibet protest Student makes toaster! Students demand headscarves Students eliminate noise Student''s Guinness Record Students protest censorship Students stitch lips in protest Students walk on hot embers for charity Study at Bangor University

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Study at Bocconi Study at University of Essex Study in China Study in Copenhagen Studying at K.U. Leuven Studying Neurobiology Studying Spanish Studying volcanology Studying working memory Subtitles improve speech perception Success for graduates Success for Heriot-Watt University Summer Universities Support for Saudi females Teaching benefits Technology management Technology skills Teen drug education The 5 star department The Autumn Graduate Fair The effect of accents The Language Show The London Graduate Fair The Oil & Gas Academy

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The Open Doors event Tips for a better career Transcendental Meditation Troubled U.S. higher education Tuck School of Business UK Graduate of the Year UK shock knife campaign UK to study extra sciences UK University Fair 2010 Undergraduate Scholarships Underwater robot competition University job fair University lab is buzzing University of Copenhagen University of Kent Open Day University of Lincoln open evening Virtual Jobs Fair 2010 Virtual Open Day Volunteer to read between the lines Weather, waves, wireless WHU ranks top again Why is Arabic unique? World MBA tour Worried about maths?



Youth crime drive ''not working''

Eurograduate 2011 Digital Issue

Universities : India''s MBA graduates face bleak job prospects
NEW DELHI, Jan 13 (Reuters) - When the MBA students at India''s top business schools began their studies their future was full of promise as companies tripped over each other to lure graduates. But 24 months of study and a financial meltdown later, prospects are glum for the estimated 120,000 business school graduates who will enter the job market in March after their final exams. "Everyone is scared," said Neha Verma, who is one of a crop of 20-something management graduates at a New Delhi college. In past years, firms riding the wave of India''s economic surge would fight over the newly minted talent produced by India''s prestigious business colleges as they scrambled for an advantage in a country with a lack of middle-management talent. Nowadays, jobs for graduates are drying up as India''s economy feels the pinch of the global recession. "The fact is there is a hiring slowdown," said Sudip Bandyopadhyay, chief executive officer of financial services firm Reliance Money, a unit of Reliance Capital. "Anybody denying it is just trying to bury his head in the sand." While Reliance Money is recruiting for recently launched wealth management services, Bandyopadhyay said his company is an exception in a bleak job market and slowing economy. A survey by global staffing-services firm Manpower Inc says Indian firms are likely to slow their hiring to a 3-½ year low in the first three months of 2009, further evidence the global economic slowdown was taking its toll. After growing at 9 percent or above for the past three years, India''s trillion-dollar economy, Asia''s third-biggest, is showing consistent signs of slowing.

Squeezed by plummeting demand overseas and expensive credit at home, factory output contracted in October, the first year-on-year drop in more than 13 years, while exports and sales of cars and buses have fallen heavily. Economists and government advisers expect growth for the fiscal year to the end of March to brake sharply to around 7 percent, and the governor of the central bank recently said 2009 would prove more challenging than a "difficult" 2008. EMPTY CORRIDORS In India, management and information technology campuses are usually a buzz of activity from November as employers recruit students preparing for their finals. While students at premier academies such as the Indian Institutes of Management (IIM) -- the Ivy League of the nation''s MBA schools -- may escape the worst of the downturn, job fairs at second-tier colleges are attracting few takers. "The ones who were expected to come have either deferred their visit or are not coming at all," said 25-year-old Abhishek Chaudhary, who studies at the Institute of Marketing Management in New Delhi. Less than a dozen companies were recruiting at Chaudhary''s institute in 2008, down from 50 last year, he said. "Only 25 students from my batch of 120 have got offers," said Pawan Nahata, another management student in India''s capital. In a normal year, everyone would have been snapped up by January, said Nahata. "Fearing a volatile environment and fast changing business scenario, many companies have not decided on their numbers to recruit," said Munish Bhargava, placement adviser at the Indian Institute of Foreign Trade, a government-run business school in the capital. Fearing the usual route to a comfortable career may not deliver, students are uploading resumes on online job portals or are approaching employment agencies, while others scale back their salary expectations. DREAMS SHATTERED London-based Mohit Mathur saved for three years to pay his way through a good B-school. His dream came true when he was selected for an executive MBA at the Indian Institute of Management in the western city of Ahmedabad, a prestigious business school that is sometimes called the "Harvard of India".

But the 30-year-old is worried the job market may not have recovered by the time he graduates in early 2010. "We might pass out either at the peak (of the financial crisis) or when it is close to ending," said Mathur. Some 290,000 candidates took the admission test to the top business schools in India in November, compared to 230,000 in 2007, Indian media reports said. They were competing for just 1,700 places at the seven IIMs, the country''s top management institutes. Until recently, international investment banks were the flavour of the month and were hiring the best talent, said Bandyopadhyay of Reliance Money. "Students also were running after the large names -- the Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns of the world. This year, those institutions don''t exist." Like all good gurus, teachers and academic staff are advising students not to panic and to knuckle down to some serious work with the hope the economy will change for the better by the time they get their degrees. "It''s the best time to study," said Arvind Narasimhan, placement secretary at Delhi''s Faculty of Management Studies.
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