Posted by: RBaral February 5, 2011
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I strongly second Ashu's statement outlined in #5.
Over the last ten years, I have observed SEVERAL graduates of Nepali Universities (who has never stepped to ANY US academic institution) face an interview, excel, land a very good job and do their job extraordinarily well in the US. As you know, getting a job in the US is, 99% of the times, selling yourself, your qualifications, and personality. Nepali colleges and universities should be credited for preparing a dynamic workforce and the state-of-the-art education that can face these challenges of a US job market.
At the same time, I am cautiously optimistic about a US University preparing a workforce of comparable strength and aptitude. Has your US education prepared you enough to face the challenges of Nepali job market? I think, this remains a question.
Over the last ten years, I have observed SEVERAL graduates of Nepali Universities (who has never stepped to ANY US academic institution) face an interview, excel, land a very good job and do their job extraordinarily well in the US. As you know, getting a job in the US is, 99% of the times, selling yourself, your qualifications, and personality. Nepali colleges and universities should be credited for preparing a dynamic workforce and the state-of-the-art education that can face these challenges of a US job market.
At the same time, I am cautiously optimistic about a US University preparing a workforce of comparable strength and aptitude. Has your US education prepared you enough to face the challenges of Nepali job market? I think, this remains a question.