Dear Friends:

It is not just Warwick but the world over universities are looking for students 
particularly from Asia. Here in UK one newspaper published a
supplement to advise UK students to study in European Universities where the 
fees are lower than those of UK. As I understand there are several universities 
where students can study in the English medium (Sweden, for example). 
Unfortunately I threw away the supplement. There are many specialised Science & 
Technology courses besides those in Management etc
 
Having failed to secure a place in British universities, a friend of mine sent 
his two sons to an east  European university to study medicine. They had to 
learn a new language there like Indian students studying medicine in Russia.


-bhuban






UK’s Warwick Business School eyes Delhi Campus






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The headquarters in the UK may be in sparsely populated Coventry but the 
management institute is looking at bustling Delhi for its new campus.




MUMBAI: The Warwick Business School, standing 130km from London, will have its 
second address in India. The headquarters in the UK may be in sparsely 
populated Coventry but the management institute is looking at bustling Delhi 
for its new campus. 

Ever since India spoke of opening its doors to foreign universities, several 
top institutions have considered coming to its shores, but few have actually 
taken a step. The Schulich School of Business of Canada's York University is 
building its campus in Hyderabad. 

Most others have set up India offices that assist and attract prospective 
students, tap into the colleges' alumni, build relations with large Indian 
conglomerates, run some short programmes for executives or act as research 
centres that collect raw material on an emerging economy and a maturing market 
called India. 

None of that is what Warwick wants to do in India. Like the Schulich School, it 
is looking at advancing what it has already built in the UK. It is working with 
the Batra Group, headed by a family that sent many of its children to Warwick 
for an education. 

"We have ordered a feasibility study for the project from a consultancy firm 
which is looking at several issues like the location to set up the school and 
other things that the project entails, including the areas that are important 
for the growth and development for this part of the world, for our Asia campus 
that will be located in India," said WBS dean Mark Taylor. 

The school's core will be research, around which teaching will be designed. 
"What we will produce here will be the same as what we produce on the main 
campus," added Taylor, an Oxonerian. "The school will not be a data collection 
centre that will procure data and transport a bag to the main campus," said 
WBS' associate dean Qing Wang. 

Over a decade ago, Warwick was undoubtedly one of the finest schools in the UK 
to study business, but it has slipped not just in ranking, but also in 
students' preferences. In 2009 came its low point when funding was cut based on 
a UK government Research Assessment Exercise, in which Warwick was trumped by 
both Cardiff and Manchester business schools. 

Soon after, Taylor took the reins of the school and it swung back to a better 
place in global rankings. "It is important to keep the academic rigour high, 
bring in first-grade practitioners to teach and ensure that there is 
application of research," said Taylor, who has been working to bring back the 
glorious days of Warwick. 





 


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