ISB (Indian School of Business)
may have found an answer to a dilemma that many top colleges and
institutes in the country are struggling to solve - companies across
the country are now narrowing the focus of their placements, not only to
the brand of an institute, but to a specific campus. In response to
this problem, ISB has started the “one school, two campuses” process.
ISB, ranked 20th in the FT London Global MBA ranking 2012, has started
admitting students to both its campuses – in Hyderabad and Mohali,
without basing it on ranking. Students, who are admitted to both the
campuses, were as per a source, equal in terms of education, work
experience and accomplishments, allowing placements to be ‘bias-free’.
Furthermore, ISB has started flying its students to both campuses in
an effort to keep placements neutral and offer all students similar
opportunities. Students from Hyderabad are flown to Mohali during its
campus placement and soon after, students from Mohali are flown down
when the ISB placement season goes south to Hyderabad.
This problem seems to be hitting the country’s best institutes like IIM (Indian Institute of Management), IIT (Indian Institute of Technology), NIT (National Institute of Technology)
and many others. The problem seems to be a lack of homogeneity in
students, across campuses. Recruiters are aware that a student from IIM –
A would be very different from that of any of its other campuses. It is
a similar problem in IIT’s and other institutes with multiple campuses.
Traditionally, the home campus is considered to be superior to all of
its other branches. This is due to the fact that students with lower
ranks opt for some of the newer branches. An example of this would be
the BITS (Birla Institute of Technology and Science) campuses. The original BITS Pilani
campus is based in Rajasthan’s Jhunjhunu region and is acknowleged to
be superior to its other branches. Most reputed companies would rather
its recruiters endure a long bumpy five hour ride to Pilani than visit
the newer, easily accessible campuses in Dubai, Goa or Hyderabad.
Prospective recruiters are invited to visit the college campuses for
their annual placements and are given the choice to visit the campus
they prefer. Most of them flock to the reputed ones.
Some colleges choose to conduct independent placements in their campuses. The Mumbai based Narsee Monjee institute offers management courses in Bangalore and Hyderabad, but openly acknowledges that its Mumbai campus garners the best response.
Most IIT’s and IIM’s have rejected the integrated placement model
suggested by review committees. These institutes, which educate the
brightest minds in India, continue to grapple with the rampant
recruitment bias.
Source: The Times of India
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