Tag: admissions

  • Ukraine-Returned Students Seek Government Help For Admission In Indian Medical Colleges

    Ukraine-Returned Students Seek Government Help For Admission In Indian Medical Colleges

    The students who were evacuated from war-torn Ukraine and their parents gathered at Jantar Mantar here on Sunday and sought the government’s intervention to ensure they are accommodated in Indian colleges. The students held placards that read: “Help all Indian MBBS students of Ukraine” and “Save the career of Indian students”.

    Thousands of students from India studying in various medical colleges in Ukraine had to abandon their courses and return home after Russian forces launched an offensive against the country.

    Last month, a PIL was filed in the Supreme Court seeking directions on the issue of admission and continuation of studies in the country of Indian medical students who were evacuated from Ukraine.

    The plea also sought directions from the Centre to provide a medical subject equivalency orientation programme for admitting them into the Indian curriculum. The Indian Medical Association has also recommended to Prime Minister Narendra Modi that such students should be accommodated in Indian medical colleges as a one-time measure.

    In a letter to PM Modi on March 4, the IMA had said that such students should be permitted to go to Indian medical colleges for the remainder of their MBBS courses through an “appropriate disbursed distribution”, but it should not be seen as an increase in the annual intake capacity.

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  • DU Admissions 2021: Bypass DU Cut-Offs With These Off-Beat Certificate Courses in DU SOL

    DU Admissions 2021: Bypass DU Cut-Offs With These Off-Beat Certificate Courses in DU SOL

    The Delhi University admissions are in progress now and the first combined DU cut-off list was released on Friday for various courses in the 71 DU colleges. This year, the DU cut-offs have been even higher than average with several colleges recording 100% cut-offs for different courses.

    But despite the over 95% cut-offs in almost every course in the majority of DU colleges, Class 12-passed students can still fulfil their dreams of studying in Delhi University with the list of off-beat certificate courses offered in Delhi University’s School of Open Learning.

    Delhi University laid the foundation of its new Regional Centre (West) of School of Open Learning (SOL) in Keshavpuram on July 19 and the new DU SOL has added a long list of off-beat and unconventional certificate courses for Class 12-passed students which includes film making, graphic design, stenography, ethical hacking, etc.

    The entry in most of these certificate courses is direct and is irrespective of DU’s soaring cut-off

    List of short-term courses in DU SOL
    With more than 24 professional and short-term certificate courses on offer, the Delhi University’s Campus of Open Learning (COL-DU) invites prospective students to join its offline and online courses focused in varied career-oriented fields.

    The Industry Sector Courses on Offer Include:

    • Data Science and Machine Learning
    • Digital Marketing & Social Media Advertising
    • Ethical Hacking & Cyber Security
    • Skill program on Financial Markets
    • Office Automation and E-accounting
    • Stenography & IT Skills
    • Soft Skills & Personality Development
    • Fashion Designing
    • Photography
    • Event Management, Marketing & PR
    • Interior Designing
    • Filmmaking & Direction
    • Mass Communication & Digital Media Productions
    • Fine Arts & Digital Arts
    • Acting for Films, TV & Theatre
    • 3D Animation & Video Editing
    • Radio Jockeying, Anchoring & TV Journalism
    • 2D Animation & Motion Graphics
    • Graphic Designing, DTP & Video Editing
    • Medical Transcription
    • Web Designing
    • Fashion Modeling & Beauty Pageant Grooming

    How to Apply for DU SOL Courses

    DU has already signed agreement with training partner, RK Educational Trust, to conduct the courses through online and offline modes. Admissions are open to all 12th pass candidates on first-come-first-served basis.

    Those already pursuing courses in DU and other universities can also apply.

    More details and a complete list of courses and the application form are also available at official website col.du.ac.in

    Students may contact on helpline numbers 011-27181469, +91-9312237583 or visit the COL Centre between 9:30 am to 5 pm between Monday to Friday for walk-in admissions.

    The COL, parent organization of School of Open Learning (SOL), and with its Centre Professional & Technical Training situated Keshav Puram (West Delhi) is set to start new classes after October 18, 2021.

    The Last date to Register Offline Shall be October 31, 2021.

    With introduction online classes, students from other cities and states are also showing keen interest in joining these DU certified courses, informed Director of RK Educational Group Deepak Bansal.

    Some of these certificate courses were already on offer since 2009.

    Since the admission process in these certificate courses is offline, the prospective students can also send their applications via post.

    As per officials, considering the multiple requests received, the classes for some courses may also be on evening and weekends for the benefit of the students’ already pursuing degree courses.

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  • DU Mulls mix of Boards, Entrance for Admissions

    DU Mulls mix of Boards, Entrance for Admissions

    With a common entrance test for admissions to central universities on the cards, Delhi University is considering an admission process based 50% on the Central Universities Common Entrance Test (CUCET) and 50% on board exam results.

    DU acting vice-chancellor P C Joshi said the university will try to move away from looking at board exam percentages to looking at percentile instead.

    Joshi is part of the committee set up by the central government “to consider the issue (of) holding common entrance test at the undergraduate level only from the next academic year in central universities to provide a single platform for admission”.

    The center is coming out with the CUCET, for which several committee meetings have been held and it will be finalized shortly. Once that is done, we will be having weightage for both CUCET and board examinations with 50% for each

    He said.

    Delhi University admissions are characterised by sky-high cut-offs every year. Last year, Lady Shri Ram College for Women had 100% cut-offs for three programmes, and 30 courses across colleges had cut-offs over 99%. DU officials had said that the record-high soaring cut-offs had been because around 5,500 of the registered candidates had a ‘best-of-four-subjects’ percentage of 100%.

    Joshi said the proposal to consider percentile instead of percentage is part of the drive towards a more standardised way to calculate “merit”.

    We get applicants from education boards across India, of which some are conservative, some are liberal, In the ‘X’ board, students of a certain competence are given 100%, while inY’ board students of the same competence are given 97%. We will try to put them on an even ground to give everyone the best chance. We are trying to evolve a mechanism to determine percentiles keeping in mind these variations, and the NTA will help us with this,

    He said.

    In 2020, the first cut-off list for DU admissions had been released in the month of October.

    Shobha Bagai, who was Dean Admissions for 2020-21, said class 12 marks should not be considered if entrances are being held. “Students choose their subjects after class 10, but sometimes after studying in Class 11 and 12, they may feel that some subjects were not to their liking or they want to focus on just one or two subjects. With the entrance test, they have the option to narrow down, but if class 12 marks are also considered they will have to perform well in all subjects.Why have two ways of testing students and put more pressure on them?” she said.

    However, Bagai said that if the Committee decides to consider both class 12 marks and entrance exams, considering percentile over percentage would be a better system.

    Former Deputy Dean of Students’ Welfare Gurpreet Tuteja said such a move would bring all Boards at par and class 12 board marks cannot be eliminated. “It is the basic qualification, so that is vital. But entrance will make DU admissions a level-playing field since some Boards always give more scores. When the whole country gives the same paper, we will know where everyone stands,” he said. Tuteja said percentile is a better marker than percentage since it “normalizes different standards”. However, he said it would also be a “very difficult task” for the university to calculate the percentile of each student. “The Boards should give the percentile,” he said.

    Hindu College principal Anju Srivastava said it would be a good system but only if the weightage of the entrance test was higher.

    Considering the class 12 marks is not a bad idea because it keeps alive the seriousness and importance of the Board exam. But there is no uniformity of standards in the Board marking, so the entrance exam is necessary. It should have more weightage,

    She said.

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  • UGC May Reissue Revised Guidelines For Academic Year 2020-21

    UGC May Reissue Revised Guidelines For Academic Year 2020-21

    The University Grants Commission may soon issue revised guidelines for the academic year 2020-21 which are expected to provide the institutions more time to start the new session.

    The University Grants Commission may soon issue revised guidelines for the academic year 2020-21. The guidelines are expected to provide higher education institutions more time to start the next session.

    Rajnish Jain, the UGC Secretary in a letter mentioned the revised guidelines issued by UGC on 6th July 2020. The guidelines instructed the Higher Education Institutions to conduct the final year exams of the students by the end of September.

    The Supreme Court in its final verdict on the petitions filed against the conduct of final year exams in September made it clear that the exams are mandatory for granting degrees to the students. The final year exams should be conducted as per the revised guidelines of UGC.

    However, it said that the states have the right to postpone the final year exams beyond the set deadline considering the pandemic situation in their state. If any state wishes to postpone the final year exams they will have to take permission from the University Grants Commission for the fresh issues of dates.

    Revised Guidelines For New Session

    Rajnish Jain conferred “The higher education regulator has mentioned that the universities can grant provisional admission to the candidates for undergraduate and postgraduate courses till September 30 till the revised guidelines on the academic calendar are issued by the UGC”.

    An expert committee headed by the RC Kuhad, Vice-chancellor of the Central University of Haryana, has written to UGC stating that the admissions to the UG courses should be completed by the end of October and the new session should begin by November.
    The panel has recommended that the admission for PG courses should be completed by November and the session should begin by December.

    The Education Ministry and the University Grants Commission (UGC) together appointed the Kuhad committee. The committee was formed to give recommendations to the Centre on the academic year 2020-21, as the academic year has been hit by COVID-19. The committee earlier recommended that the new session should begin from September-October.

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  • Admissions In All Degree Courses In Goa Will Be Online

    Admissions In All Degree Courses In Goa Will Be Online

    Admissions to Degree Courses In Goa and higher education academic year in Goa will be directed online given the supported increment in Covid-19 cases in the state, Chief Minister Pramod Sawant said on Tuesday.

    “Admissions will be held online through the basic entrance,” Sawant told journalists at the state Secretariat.

    Admissions will be encouraged through the state Directorate of Higher Education’s authentic entrance, which will likewise empower hopeful students to pay expenses and complete other affirmation related conventions.

    Degree Courses In Goa, for which admissions will be encouraged online incorporate the Bachelor of Arts, Commerce, Science, Computer Applications, Business Administration, and Home Science.

    Inquired as to whether the state government will see eliminating the higher education prospectus given the postponement in reviving educational organizations because of the Covid-19 pandemic, Sawant, who likewise holds the Education Ministry portfolio stated:

    “The University and Board will settle on this”.

    The state has seen a flood in Covid-19 cases over the most recent couple of weeks, with dynamic cases in the state arriving at a count of more than 1,000.

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  • Tiruvalluvar University Starts Post-Graduation Admission Process

    Tiruvalluvar University Starts Post-Graduation Admission Process

    Tiruvalluvar University has given an ad on its site calling for admission to postgraduate projects in the foundation. The Vellore-based college has called with respect to students to apply for PG programs in 10 departments including Tamil, English, Economics, Zoology, Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics, Biotechnology, Computer Science, and Commerce.

    As indicated by the warning, students can apply with marks acquired in five-semester. The last date to submit applications online is June 30. Due to the COVID-19 lockdown, the State colleges have not led the 6th-semester tests.

    The college faculty has called attention to this is against standards. Consistently, the Directorate of College Education (DCE) will discharge a roundabout on the date of the issue of applications for school admission.

    This applies to schools and colleges. For admission to undergraduate programs the notice is given after Class 12 outcomes are distributed. Likewise, for PG programs, the warning is discharged after the consequences of undergraduate programs are discharged.

    A DCE official on states of obscurity said the college’s warning was disregarding the standard.

    “In the present circumstance, we don’t know when we would have the option to revive the universities. We have no clue about how the tests are in any event, going to be held. Everything depends on the bearing from the government. It isn’t right to give notice now of time,” he said.

    Some previous faculty have kept in touch with both the DCE and the higher education division.

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  • UK Universities Expectations Of Getting Multi-Billion Pound Gets Crashed

    UK Universities Expectations Of Getting Multi-Billion Pound Gets Crashed

    Universities’ expectations of a drawn-out government bailout in the UK have been run, however, £2.6bn in tuition fees will be paid early and ministers swore to permit full fees to be charged regardless of whether students couldn’t come back to address theaters.

    Michelle Donelan, the universities minister, said institutions could keep on charging the full £9,250 yearly tuition expense for undergraduates while campuses stayed shut and up close and personal classes were suspended because of the coronavirus episode, as long exclusive expectations of web-based instructing were kept up.

    “We have just observed, in the course of the most recent couple of months, courses being conveyed on the web and basically to an astounding level of value, and I realize the endeavors made over the part to encourage that,” Donelan stated, declaring a bundle of help.

    “We’ve generally said that we don’t accept students would be qualified for repayment for tuition fees if the quality is there.”

    The government’s measures additionally force a top on the number of British and EU students that every university can select the following scholastic year. It was first announced by the Guardian in March.

    University leaders had approached the government for a bailout running into billions of pounds to compensate for lost worldwide student and research income. Be that as it may, the supplication for the benefit of the division was said to have “landed seriously” with the Treasury.

    The bundle will rather present £2.6bn in tuition fees that universities would have gotten toward the beginning of the following scholarly year, just as £100m in research subsidizing.

    With the loss of global student fees possibly costing billions of pounds, Donelan said the Department for Education (DfE) was attempting to show that Britain stayed just getting started, and with the Home Office to facilitate student visas.

    Donelan recognized that more guides might be required: “This is quick moving … should suppliers need further help, the government will keep on inspecting their budgetary conditions and survey the requirement for organized change and any joined conditions.”

    The University and College Union (UCU), which speaks to numerous campus staff, said the government’s help added up to minimal more than IOUs:

    “This bundle doesn’t convey the insurance or security that students, staff and the networks they serve so urgently need,” said Jo Grady, the union’s general secretary.

    “Rather than kicking the can not far off, the government must guarantee financing lost from a fall in residential and global student numbers and evacuate motivating forces for universities to go up against one another when we should arrange.”

    Chis Skidmore, the Conservative MP and previous university minister cautioned that while the £2.6bn advance was welcome, it “at last doesn’t represent a potential gigantic loss of income because of the decrease in global students. This dark opening should be filled as this is making the far-reaching influence over the division.”

    Tim Bradshaw, chief executive of the Russell Group of research universities, gave a mindful greeting to the bundle while cautioning: “Our universities are assuming a huge job in the fightback against Covid-19 however they are as of now under strain on numerous fronts and there is no escaping from the way that monetary weights will heighten in the coming scholarly year.”

    Under the student numbers top, every organization would be constrained to the number of local undergrad places it had estimated to the Office for Students, in addition to an extra 5%. The Department for Education would likewise have a further 10,000 spots to circulate, of which 5,000 will be held for nursing and social insurance courses.

    “A top on places is a reason for worry to university candidates. On the off chance that and when they are presented, they should be painstakingly executed to limit the effect on impeded students,” said Sir Peter Lampl, author of the Sutton Trust.

    Donelan said the top – set up for at any rate one year – was intended to settle the affirmations framework, and stop a wild fight among universities urgent to fill the holes left by global students reluctant to concentrate in the UK.

    There was a notice of further awful news in an overview by the Sutton Trust proposing that some British students need to postpone beginning a college degree given the present vulnerabilities.

    Some 19% of UK candidates said they were changing their arrangements to go on to advanced education in fall, of which 4% said they had unquestionably chosen not to go.

    On the off chance that the study’s outcomes were rehashed broadly, that would mean around 10,000 fewer undergraduates in 2020-21 and about £90m lost in tuition charge income.

    The Sutton Trust additionally found that 48% of candidates think the coronavirus emergency will negatively affect their odds of getting into their first-decision university.

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  • Academic Session To Be Pushed To September Instead Of July: Govt.

    Academic Session To Be Pushed To September Instead Of July: Govt.

    The COVID-19 lockdown has authoritatively deferred the 2020-21 academic session, with a government delegated committee suggesting that the customary mid-July start for higher education ought to be pushed to September.

    Universities and schools the nation over have been shut since March 16 when the Union government reported a countrywide classroom shutdown as one of the measures to contain the episode.

    The seven-part committee, which was set up by the University Grants Commission (UGC) to consider issues identified with the examination and the academic schedule in the wake of the classroom shutdown, presented its report Friday.

    Other than the two-month postponed start to the new academic session, the board has additionally suggested that the year-end or semester-end examinations that couldn’t be hung on the timetable ought to be held in July.

    Haryana Central University vice-chancellor R C Kuhad headed the board. A-C Pandey, director of Inter-University Accelerator Center; Aditya Shastri, vice-chancellor of Banasthali Vidyapeeth; and Raj Kumar, head of Panjab University, are among its different individuals.

    The UGC will frame guidelines on university examinations, and the academic schedule dependent on the committee’s report.

    “The guidelines won’t be official on advanced education foundations, however, they will set out the external time limit by which the legislature anticipates that they should begin their new academic year,” said a source, who talked on state of secrecy.

    This current committee’s proposal, if and when acknowledged by the UGC, would imply that the Union government would need to move toward the Supreme Court to look for an expansion of the last date for finishing admissions to clinical projects (August 31) and specialized applications (August 15, for example, engineering. These cutoff times are ordered by the top court and henceforth the requirement for its authorization before being tinkered with.

    Another committee set up by the UGC to make proposals on online instruction has prompted against requesting that universities direct online examination compulsorily, given the “decent variety, neighborhood condition, piece of understudies and readiness of the students, current framework and innovation support”.

    Nageshwar Rao, Vice-Chancellor of the Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU), is going the committee on web-based learning.

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  • Admission Process of Delhi University Might Go Online

    Admission Process of Delhi University Might Go Online

    Delhi University (DU) is thinking about making its whole admission process online to limit the students’ visit to the varsity taking into account the circumstance emerging out of the coronavirus pandemic, as per officials.

    Despite the fact that the university has required the enlistment procedure to be postponed due to COVID-19, its admission branch is progressing in the direction of reinforcing the procedure.

    As indicated by the officials, the varsity has started the way toward gathering data from colleges in the midst of a probability that there will be a brief period left for arrangements after the lockdown closes.

    In a letter to principals of all DU colleges on April 9, Professor Shobha Bagai, Dean (Admissions) stated, “There has been a cognizant exertion to limit visits of the students for physical confirmation of the obligatory archives during the admission procedure”.

    “In the present situation, it has been prescribed that it turns out to be progressively basic to have the total admission process online, which likewise incorporates the online check of the endorsements,” the letter said.

    Teacher Bagai additionally requested that the colleges transfer important data on their sites and send the connection to the admission branch.

    In the letter, she likewise guided the colleges to establish a “solid” admission group for the procedure.

    “A group of a sensible number of student chips in alongside a Faculty Mentor is shaped. The student volunteers must stay accessible during the hour of admission to answer any related inquiry relating to the admissions in the school,” the letter said.

    DU had executed the first period of 10 percent development in EWS (Economically Weaker Section) seats in 2019-20 and the staying 15 percent upgrade will be finished in the 2020-21 scholarly meeting, as indicated by the letter. The colleges have been mentioned to announce the seats in each course, class astute on their sites.

    “Concerning certain course-wise mix of subjects, if there were any extra qualification criteria, the equivalent must be imparted to the admission branch by April 13,” the letter said.

    The colleges have been given a cutoff time of April 30 for outfitting the rest of the data.

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