The Delhi University released its fifth cut-off list on Monday, with some colleges reopening admissions in a few courses for general category students.
Saveetha University (166th) sees biggest climb after featuring in the 501+ band previously
The admissions for undergraduate courses under the Delhi University's third cut-off list will commence from Monday. The aspirants will have time till October 21 to apply for the course of their choice. The last day to pay the fees will be October 25. Over 51,000 candidates have already secured admissions under the two lists with colleges also over-admitting students to certain popular courses. The Delhi University released the third cut-off on Saturday with the required marks for admission to courses seeing a decline of 0.25 per cent to 1.5 per cent and popular courses still available in colleges. Even though the cut-offs continue to remain on the higher side, there is a glimmer of hope for students as seats are still available. After the third cut-off, a special cut-off will be declared on October 25 for candidates who were eligible but could not or did not take admission in the earlier three cut-offs for whatsoever reasons. According to the guidelines, the declaration of speci
Jawaharlal Nehru University retained its position as the country's second best university while Jamia Millia Islamia rose to the sixth spot from 10th rank last year
Over 4.38 lakh students have registered on Delhi University's admission portal for undergraduate courses till 6 pm on Tuesday, the last day of applications.
Over 110,000 students have so far registered for undergraduate courses on the Delhi University's admission portal which went live on August 2, according to official data.
Nearly 55 percent of the sanctioned OBC posts in central universities across the country are lying vacant while the vacancies for the category at IISc, Bangalore, are above 89 percent
The Delhi University will commence the registration process of nearly 70,000 seats for undergraduate courses from Monday.
Over 32,000 applicants have registered on the Delhi University's admission portal for postgraduate courses, while over 4,400 aspirants registered for MPhil and PhD courses. The registration process commenced on July 26 and will end on August 21. According to the data on the university portal, 32,700 applicants had registered till 5 pm on Wednesday, while 4,462 had registered for MPhil and PhD courses. The varsity held its second virtual open day on Wednesday where the Delhi University (DU) officials asked the aspirants to fill the registration forms properly as there are many things in the forms that cannot be edited after submission. Meanwhile, students sought to know whether they would be eligible for merit-based or entrance-based admissions. "Some of the courses have both the options--50 per cent entrance-based seats and remaining merit-based seats. If you are a graduate from DU in an Honours course, you are eligible for those merit-based seats. If you are not from DU, you can
Modi congratulated those figuring in the top-200 positions in QS World University Rankings 2022.
IIT Bombay, Delhi and IISc stay in the lead among Indian institutions
Prime Minister Narendra Modi will address the Association of Indian Universities' 95th annual meet and a national seminar of vice-chancellors on Wednesday through video conferencing.
This will be at 11 am through video conferencing
A pioneer in liberal education takes a hard knock
New student exchange scheme replaces the European Union (EU) specific student exchange programme called Erasmus
Indian and foreign higher education institutions may soon be able to offer joint or dual degrees
Besides IISc, a record 63 Indian institutions also made it to the list, with 14 more universities registering their presence this year
With most universities moving courses online, students are weighing their options between foregoing the campus experience or taking a gap year and pursuing a short-term course or an internship
The remarks come after India begins a comprehensive review of local chapters of Confucius Institutes and agreements with Indian universities
Besides the closure of 179 institutes, at least 134 institutes did not seek approval this year in view of large number of seats lying vacant over the last 5 years