Cover Story
"Today, we regret to inform you that you are spoiled," wrote Mohit Chantra, an Indian partner for the multinational corporate, in his article 'An Open Letter to India's Graduating Classes,' published in The New York Times. It was a wake-up call for India's new job market entrants and 70 percent of the readers of The New York Times article agreed to the facts that were put forth by the author. In the concluding lines, he wrote, "don't expect the gravy train to run forever, and don't assume your education will take care of you. Rather, invest in yourself - in language skills, in thirst for knowledge, in true professionalism and, finally, in thinking creatively and non-hierarchically." Looking back to the past, early 80s was a difficult time for Indian graduates due lack of employment opportunities in the country despite good academics and scholastic abilities. The next decade saw gradual improvement as the economic reforms in 1991 helped Indian job markets in regaining its...
Content
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Aditya Group of Institutions: Using a Recipe that Fulfils Industry Demands
Waheeb Ulla, Assistant Editor, The HER Review
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Maharana Pratap College of Technology: Preparing New Onset of Skills for Industry Requirements of the Present Day
Waheeb Ulla, Assistant Editor, The HER Review
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Noteworthy Placements at MSRIT
HER Team
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Prof. B.S. Satyanarayana: Aiming to Make Indian Education Global
John Angami, assistant editor, higher education
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India Needs a Revived Education System to Globalise its Standards
Piyush Agrawal, CEO and Founder, Superprofs.com
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Research is leading the way for the Industry
Shirin Salis, VP, HR., Ingersoll Rand India
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Industry Ready Graduates For Economic Competency
Supria Dhanda , Director HR SanDisk , SanDisk
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India and Russia to sign MoI
HER Team
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Vidyavardhaka College of Engineering (VVCE): Creating a Network of Collaborations
Waheeb Ulla, Assistant Editor, The HER Review