GEURS 2020: IIT-Delhi ranks best in employability, India among top 15
Team Careers360 | November 19, 2020 | 10:24 AM IST | 2 mins read
NEW DELHI : The Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi has been identified as the institution producing the most employable graduates in India, according to the Global Employability Ranking and Survey, or GEURS 2020.
The institute which entered the ranking in 2014, has shown remarkable improvement, rising from the 149th rank then to the 27th this year.
Globally, India is among the top 15 best-performing countries in employability today, up from rank 23 in 2010. The first GEURS ranking was released in 2010.
The ranking, released by the Times Higher Education and French HR Consultancy group ‘Emerging’, is exclusively based on a poll of around 8,000 recruiters and international managers in 22 countries.
“The survey and worldwide ranking provide unique data and insights on the decisive factors - the drivers - behind the recruiters’ choice of best universities in the context of the new disruptive workplace,” the official statement said.
IITs and IIMs
Other than IIT-Delhi, the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) which made it to the global list has slipped from rank 43 in 2019 to rank 71 in 2020.
The most prestigious management institute in the country, Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Ahmedabad has also slipped 14 points this year. However, the employability rank of IIT-Bombay has improved up by 25 points from 153rd rank last year.
This year, IIT Kharagpur with 195th rank and Amity University with 236th rank are the new entrants in the global top 250 ranks.
Global institutions
As per GEURS 2020, the higher educational institutes in the US have retained their top positions. California Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University bagged the first three positions, respectively.
Followed by the US, the University of Cambridge and the University of Oxford in the UK ranked fourth and fifth in the global rankings.
The analysis of the global rankings indicates that Asian institutions are the strongest challenge to the “traditional dominance” of US and UK universities. Higher educational institutes in South Korea, Germany, India, and China have shown the best employability performance progression in the past decade according to the GUERS 2020 survey.
Also read:
- Over 300 offers made in IIT Delhi’s virtual internship hiring season
- #Age17: Tutoring and guarding malls, Twitter users talk first jobs
If you want to share your experience at work, write to us at theworkplace@careers360.com . To know more about The Workplace itself, here's a handy note: Let’s talk work…
If you want to share your experience at work, talk about hiring trends or discuss internships, write to us at theworkplace@careers360.com. To know more about The Workplace itself, here's a handy note: Let’s talk work…
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Quick Watch
]Featured News
]- Anna University students piece together BTech courses as faculty gaps lead to fragmented teaching
- NTA must publish ‘implementation roadmap’ for reforms recommended by HLCE: Parliament panel
- ‘Major financial project’: Tamil Nadu parents say private school fee disclosure rule will help plan education
- From farm work at 10 to Padma Shri at 70: Mahendra Nath Roy’s journey to become world’s top 2% scientist
- Across universities, 4th year of NEP’s FYUP more about confusion than research or practical training
- IITs will test new JEE Advanced format on first-year BTech students this year: IIT Kanpur director
- Delhi Govt school alumnus builds learning, skill development platform; reaches 5,000 underserved students
- ‘BTech Not Enough’: Outdated engineering curriculum leaves students paying to bridge classroom-to-career gap
- Student Suicides: NTF interim report flags impact of NEET, JEE-type exams on mental health
- ‘Police gundagardi’: MLNMC resident doctor picked up, held for 2 days; ‘No info,’ say UP cops after protests