Off the wire
China Voice: Cancellation not ultimate answer for safety in large gatherings  • Spy chief's resignation prompts calls for more openness in New Zealand security services  • FLASH: 1 KILLED, 4 INJURED AS EXPLOSION ROCKS AFGHAN CAPITAL -- WITNESS  • 1st LD Writethru: Japan sees 3.63 bln dollars current account surplus in November  • Tokyo stocks down 1.74 pct in morning on oil price fall  • Chinese experts confirm retrieve of CVR from AirAsia flight  • (Sports) News Analysis: How tennis' new Fast4 format fails to deliver a marketing ace  • Maduro calls for new "consensus" to strengthen oil market  • It's terrific award and great honor, says Low  • New Zealand fishers call for African-flagged "poachers" to be driven out of business  
You are here:   Home

High employment for China's leading universities

Xinhua, January 13, 2015 Adjust font size:

More than 90 percent of graduates from 75 universities overseen by the Ministry of Education (MOE) got jobs in 2014, the ministry said recently.

Seventy-four universities of the 75 had an employment rate of above 90 percent last year, with only one's employment rate standing at 88.62 percent, according to the ministry statistics.

Other than the 75 universities, most of which are leading ones in the country, the majority of China's universities are run by provincial governments.

Among the 75, the China Pharmaceutical University had the highest employment rate of 99.59 percent, followed by the Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications and the Northeast Normal University.

Tsinghua University and Peking University were ranked 14 and 40, respectively, with employment rates of 97.9 and 95.96 percent. Endi