The Tenth Employment Forum, Faculty of Science, Mansoura University

Today, Tuesday, October 25, 2022, the activities of the Tenth Employment Forum opened in the Conference Hall of the College of Science, which is organized by the Community Service and Environmental Development Sector in cooperation with the Alumni Follow-up Office at the College of Science.

In the presence of Prof. Mahmoud Mohamed El-Meligy - Acting President of the University, Prof. Osama Ibrahim Al-Ayyan - Dean of the Faculty of Science, and Prof. Mohamed Fathy Abu El-Nour - Vice Dean for Community Service and Environmental Development, and under the supervision of Prof. Hossam Salah El-Din - Director of the Alumni Follow-up Office at the Faculty of Science, and organized by the Al-Mahrousa team.

Prof. Mahmoud El-Meligy stressed during his speech the keenness of Mansoura University to organize employment forums periodically in order to provide suitable training opportunities for university students to qualify them for the labor market, and that the state supports this trend through a clear strategy that is being implemented to qualify students and graduates to create new job opportunities.

Prof. Osama Al-Ayyan indicated the college's keenness to organize the Employment Forum every year to find distinguished opportunities for training and qualifying graduates by inviting major industrial companies and bodies to provide excellent job opportunities as well as qualifying graduates through training in major companies.

Prof. Mohamed Fathi Abu El Nour stressed that the forum aims to provide training opportunities in all areas of the local and international labor market and to continue building bridges of interdependence between the college and its students. Prof. Hossam Salah El-Din added that the forum aims to provide a number of Training and employment opportunities in many fields.

On the sidelines of the forum, a number of training, self-development and skills development for the labor market workshops were held, to qualify and prepare graduates for the labor market. More than 20 public and private sector entities participated in the forum.