Friday, December 30, 2011
A new bill in town
Sunday, December 25, 2011
Mumbai campus for Italian b-school
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Positive trends for b-school grads in 2011
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Global stamp of recognition
Four business schools in India have received the Association of MBAs (AMBA) accreditation. The UK-based AMBA is an international impartial authority on postgraduate business education. The AMBA accredits MBA provision at 187 schools in over 70 countries. IIM Lucknow’s MBA programme is the most recent to receive the Association of MBAs accreditation in November 2011.
The first to receive global accreditation from the Association was MDI Gurgaon in 2005 followed by SP Jain and IIM Kozhikode. More business school accreditations are also in the pipeline. “Granting Association of MBAs accreditation is a mark of the quality of a business school’s programmes and ultimately is a great profile-raising tool for schools, as our programmes are recognised internationally, thereby giving the business school a global status and network,” said Sharon Bamford, Chief Executive of the Association of MBAs. “The Association of MBAs accreditation is unique as it focuses on individual programmes, rather than the whole institution. This in-depth and detailed approach means that the highest standards of teaching, faculty and student interaction are guaranteed by our accreditation. We also believe that programmes should be of the highest standard and reflect changing trends and innovation in postgraduate management education,” she added.
As well as accreditation of top business schools, the Association of MBAs is committed to the growth and high standards of post-graduate management education by creating enhanced membership opportunities for Indian MBA students and alumni. The first of the Association’s membership initiatives launched in November 2011 with a networking and learning event called Global Connections. “India is the cornerstone of the Association of MBAs innovation strategy. Our focus is to work with Indian business schools to build and improve on their management education giving them international recognition, and to support MBA students and alumni with membership opportunities that assist in their professional development,” said Sharon Bamford.
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Friday, December 2, 2011
Indian business schools: Best practices
Leading schools such as the Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) and the Indian School of Business are identifying best practices to help them benchmark with foreign schools and attract the best students and faculty.
Accreditation, evaluation and grading of programmes, as is the norm with business schools in the West, are a few of the things being considered.
International accreditation help students get their degrees recognised globally, while the business school is successful in securing more foreign partnerships and linkages.
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Ajit Rangnekar, Dean,
Other top Indian b-schools such as the IIM Ahmedabad and IIM Bangalore have received approval from European agency EQUIS. IIM Kozhikode has applied for accreditation from AMBA (Association of MBAs), a UK-based organisation.
According to media reports, even newer business schools such as the Chandigarh-based