I want to study MBA " master of business Administration" as scholarship for foreigner ?
I'm from Egypt and i want to make my MBA from a well known Universtiy .. I'm seeking for a program or a scholarship that will help to study and work to cover my expenses
You cannot get a scholarship from a well-known school unless you satisfy stringent requirements, and even then it would not be a full scholarship. You would not be allowed to work in the USA as a student. For any financial aid you would have to have a high GPA, high GMAT score and some good work experience.
MBA programs prefer students with 2-4 years work experience after the first degree. Some accept students right out of college if they have good grades and a high GMAT score. Some MBA programs are designed specifically for new college graduates without work experience. But in those programs you don't get the benefit of learning from other students who have work experience. A lot of valuable learning takes place through class interaction. Also when you graduate your job offers will be about the same as a business undergraduate gets because you have no work experience, and you've been two years out of your undergraduate field so it's hard to get work in that area.
Consult the Official MBA Guide. It's a comprehensive free public service with more than 2,000 MBA programs listed worldwide. It publishes only official data provided by university administrators, without modifying or editing the data. The Official MBA Guide allows you to search for programs by location (US, Europe, Far East, etc.), by concentration (finance, marketing, aviation management, health management, accounting, etc.), by type of program (full-time, distance learning, part-time, executive, and accelerated), and by listing your own criteria and preferences to get a list of universities that satisfy your needs. Schools report their accreditation status, tuition cost, number of students, class sizes, program length, and a lot of other data. Schools provide data on entrance requirements, program costs, program characteristics, joint degrees, and much more. You can use the Guide to contact schools of your choice, examine their data, visit their web site, and send them pre applications. You can see lists of top 40 schools ranked by starting salaries of graduates, GMAT scores, and other criteria.
If you want MBA, then you are going to pay for it. NO scholarships, especially not for foreign students. Furthermore, MBA is a glut on world job markets. Admissions to MBA programs are extremely competitive, but the job market is even more competitive. They are not wasting scarce scholarship money on MBA students. In fact, at graduate levels, there are no real scholarships - that's undergrad.
Of course, your own country might still need good MBAs. But since you have to return home & work there, you'd better consider going to school in your own country since you absolutely need local contacts & connections to have any hope of a job when you graduate. Not qualified for employment visas. You will go home & pray you can find work there. So you'd better go to school in your country, learn your country's tax laws, incorporation laws, accounting standards, HR requirements, etc. Get local internships, local references, local recommendations, local contacts, local professional society memberships, etc.
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You cannot get a scholarship from a well-known school unless you satisfy stringent requirements, and even then it would not be a full scholarship. You would not be allowed to work in the USA as a student. For any financial aid you would have to have a high GPA, high GMAT score and some good work experience.
MBA programs prefer students with 2-4 years work experience after the first degree. Some accept students right out of college if they have good grades and a high GMAT score. Some MBA programs are designed specifically for new college graduates without work experience. But in those programs you don't get the benefit of learning from other students who have work experience. A lot of valuable learning takes place through class interaction. Also when you graduate your job offers will be about the same as a business undergraduate gets because you have no work experience, and you've been two years out of your undergraduate field so it's hard to get work in that area.
Consult the Official MBA Guide. It's a comprehensive free public service with more than 2,000 MBA programs listed worldwide. It publishes only official data provided by university administrators, without modifying or editing the data. The Official MBA Guide allows you to search for programs by location (US, Europe, Far East, etc.), by concentration (finance, marketing, aviation management, health management, accounting, etc.), by type of program (full-time, distance learning, part-time, executive, and accelerated), and by listing your own criteria and preferences to get a list of universities that satisfy your needs. Schools report their accreditation status, tuition cost, number of students, class sizes, program length, and a lot of other data. Schools provide data on entrance requirements, program costs, program characteristics, joint degrees, and much more. You can use the Guide to contact schools of your choice, examine their data, visit their web site, and send them pre applications. You can see lists of top 40 schools ranked by starting salaries of graduates, GMAT scores, and other criteria.
If you want MBA, then you are going to pay for it. NO scholarships, especially not for foreign students. Furthermore, MBA is a glut on world job markets. Admissions to MBA programs are extremely competitive, but the job market is even more competitive. They are not wasting scarce scholarship money on MBA students. In fact, at graduate levels, there are no real scholarships - that's undergrad.
Of course, your own country might still need good MBAs. But since you have to return home & work there, you'd better consider going to school in your own country since you absolutely need local contacts & connections to have any hope of a job when you graduate. Not qualified for employment visas. You will go home & pray you can find work there. So you'd better go to school in your country, learn your country's tax laws, incorporation laws, accounting standards, HR requirements, etc. Get local internships, local references, local recommendations, local contacts, local professional society memberships, etc.