The Entrepreneurial School® in Innsbruck is pleased to announce two first-class additions to its extensive network of global partner universities.
Both universities are located in the attractive city of Perth in Western Australia, are among the world's best universities in their respective segments and now open up attractive options for the students of the Entrepreneurial School®.
- Curtin University: Curtin University - named after former Australian Prime Minister John Curtin - was founded in 1987 and is home to around 40,000 students. Its business faculty was the first business school in Australia to receive the coveted EQUIS quality seal. Students from the MCI's Management & Law Department in particular will benefit from the new cooperation.
- Murdoch University: The older, but somewhat smaller Murdoch University is particularly open to students of the English-language MCI Master's programme International Health & Social Management. Like Curtin University, it regularly appears in international rankings among the best universities in the world. Its international success is also reflected in the fact that it was recently able to establish successful "daughter universities" with campuses in Singapore and Dubai.
Internationality forms an essential component of a course of study at the MCI and is reflected not least in the fact that students have the opportunity to spend a semester, year or double degree abroad at one of the MCI's partner universities around the world. The partner network now comprises 250 (!) universities on all continents, making it one of the most comprehensive academic networks in Europe. The partner universities are selected according to strict quality criteria.
Susanne Lichtmannegger, Head of the International Office at MCI, is pleased about the new contracts: "With the two new additions, the number of partners in Australia has risen to nine. This is a particular success, as Australia continues to be one of the most sought-after destinations for students and the universities on the Fifth Continent evaluate their European partners very carefully before entering into an institutional relationship with anyone."