97% Indian students seek career-focused education abroad: Study
Press Trust of India | November 19, 2025 | 03:32 PM IST | 2 mins read
Indian students consider work experience, employability, and real-world skills essential. They expect higher education to provide practical learning, technical skills, and professional behaviours that directly connect to future career opportunities.
NEW DELHI: A new study by a London-based university has suggested that 97 per cent Indian students want education that leads directly to careers and believe that employability, work experience and real-world skills are essential when choosing where to study overseas. The research commissioned by City St George's, University of London and conducted by Arlington Research has found that for Indian prospective students, the value of higher education goes far beyond lectures and textbooks.
According to the new 'Value of Studying Abroad' report, 97 per cent of Indian prospective students say employability, work experience, and real-world skills are essential when choosing where to study overseas. "There is a powerful shift in what Indian students now expect from international higher education and it goes far beyond classroom learning. Indian learners were the most likely across all surveyed countries to value applied learning, technical skills, and professional behaviours as core parts of their educational experience," the report said.
According to Gemma Kenyon, Director of Employability at City St George’s, University of London, Indian students have a sharp focus on what education should deliver -- not just knowledge but the skills, confidence, and networks that lead to real career success. "This research highlights how important it is for universities to design programmes that combine academic excellence with hands-on experience," Kenyon said.
Study Abroad: Indian students prefer job-linked courses
Globally, 56 per cent of students ranked employability among their top three decision-making factors, rising to 87 per cent when looking at the top decision factors . Among Indian respondents, there was a strong belief that course design must link learning directly to employment outcomes.
According to the global survey of 3,000 respondents, including students and parents, Indian students are the most likely of all surveyed to emphasise applied learning and job-readiness. While 60 per cent respondents said applying technology in learning is essential, 56 pc prioritised developing technical skills. Atleast 56 per cent Indian students rated building professional behaviours as crucial.
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.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- NEET was far from fair even before paper-leak controversies
- Same Exam, Old Nightmare: NEET 2026 cancelled, paper-leak probe, NTA reform, re-neet – the story so far
- IIT Jodhpur’s Hindi BTech is breaking the English-only mould, model for others to follow: Director
- ‘Part of culture’? IIT Ropar PhD scholars say fear keeps harassment cases buried, rarely reach ICC
- Number of student suicides rises 80% in 10 years, 8.5% of total: NCRB report
- ANRF PAIR Programme gives Rs 100 crore to just 7 hub-spoke networks, rest get Rs 2 crore grants
- Pharmacy Council of India revamps B Pharma syllabus with AI, hospital training; rollout from 2026-27 session
- Education ministry’s school management committee guidelines 2026 mandate 2 sub panels, 2-year term for member
- No AI product, no MBA degree: BITSoM Mumbai integrates artificial intelligence across all management courses
- Mumbai University ropes in ed-tech firm to make AI-powered ‘job skills test’ must for UG, PG students