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Think studying abroad always requires IELTS, GRE, or GMAT? Not anymore! This masterclass reveals countries, universities, and alternative admission pathways where students can study abroad without standardized tests. Learn eligibility criteria, profile-based admissions, and smart strategies to secure international offers stress-free.
Day
5th February
Time
08:00 pm
Duration
60 Mins
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Amit Gorain
Global Education Strategist
Global Education Strategist
Amit Gorain is a globally recognized leader with 20+ years of expertise in international education, global leadership development, and career advancement. He has successfully guided 2,000+ executives, professionals, and students through complex transitions—from academics to prestigious universities to high-impact career opportunities worldwide. With credentials including an Executive MBA from the Swiss School of Business and Management and deep experience across USA, UK, Europe, and Asia, Amit Gorain combines practical business acumen with empathetic mentoring to make the study abroad process clear, achievable, and transformative.

Top University Aspirants
Recent graduates
Study-abroad aspirants' parents
Reapplying to Top University
Universities accepting without IELTS/GRE/GMAT
Alternative English proficiency routes
Countries offering test-waiver admissions
Profile-based admission strategies
Anyone planning to study abroad — whether you're still exploring countries or finalizing your decision. Ideal for students, working professionals, and parents alike.
Yes, absolutely. Many universities across countries like Germany, Italy, France, Spain, Canada, and the UK offer admissions without these exams. Instead, they may accept alternative English proficiency proof (like previous education in English), internal university assessments, or waive tests based on your academic background and profile.
Not at all. Your degree holds the same value regardless of test waivers. The university, accreditation, and your academic performance matter — not whether you submitted IELTS, GRE, or GMAT. Employers focus on skills, university reputation, and experience, not entrance test scores.