In the increasingly globalised world of work, multinational companies are looking to hire business high-flyers who can communicate in several different languages.
Europe’s top business schools are responding to this need; courses at Insead, IESE, HEC, and London Business School incorporate a language requirement as well as the opportunity to learn and practise another language. Insead teaches Mandarin at Fontainbleu and in Singapore.
For some schools, a language component is a compulsory part of the MBA. The Insead MBA is taught exclusively in English, so fluency in the language is a pre-requisite, but in addition to that, another language at a practical level is also required for entry – and students are expected to add a third language by the time they finish their MBA. “At Insead we believe strongly in the importance of an international outlook and the ability to work effectively in multiple cultures,” says admissions director Pejay Belland. More.
See: The Guardian
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other European countries. One or more foreign languages were required even to graduate from high school. Perhaps not in England.
In the US, you need to take language as a mandatory course for a few semesters even at the undergraduate level, unless you are bilingual and can prove it. (high school level fluency required in both languages, then)
[Edited at 2014-09-06 09:02 GMT]
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