Fresh DU admissions for three-year undergraduate courses to start on Tuesday
First cut-off list by the colleges will be notified at 9am on 1 July
New Delhi: Fresh admissions to Delhi university for the 2014-15 academic session under the three-year course will commence from Tuesday, a week behind schedule following the row over the controversial four-year undergraduate programme (FYUP).
The university announced the new schedule on its website late Saturday evening. As per the schedule, the first cut-off list by the colleges will be notified at 9am on 1 July and based on it students can take admission in the colleges of their choice till 3 July. The next cut-off list will be announced on 4 July followed by six more such admission lists.
The admissions were to begin from 24 June but were delayed due to the row over FYUP between DU and UGC. More than 270,000 students had applied for admission under the now scrapped FYUP to more than 54,000 seats in 64 colleges of the university.
The admission schedule came on a day when a 12-member committee of principals deliberated on how to go forward with the admission process and submitted their report to vice-chancellor Dinesh Singh even as uncertainty continued to plague B.Tech students.
A day after vice-chancellor Dinesh Singh announced the roll back of FYUP, the academic and executive councils of the university passed a resolution to implement the three-year structure from the new academic session.
In the academic council meeting, 65 members voted in favour of the three-year course while six dissented. In the executive council meeting, 16 supported the changeover while two opposed, EC member Abha Dev Habib said.
Even though the admission schedule was out, there was no clarity on how the four-year B.Tech and Bachelor in Management Sciences courses will be dealt with. There are more than 2,500 students who have already completed one year in these streams.
The panel of principals came up with three proposals which include the suggestion of not holding new admissions to B.Tech and BMS programmes. “The committee has prepared three proposals which have been submitted to the VC. We will discuss the reports with him after which a final decision will be taken," J.M. Khurana, dean of students’ welfare, said.
Another committee member S.N. Lakshmi said, “New admissions for B.Tech and BMS courses will not take place as they were not in existence in 2012-13," she said.
When asked about the fate of those already enrolled into these courses, Lakshmi said it was not for the committee to decide but their interests too will be taken care of. Hundreds of students of Delhi university staged a protest outside the ministry of human resource development and submitted a representation demanding that the six B.Tech courses introduced last academic session should not be scrapped. PTI
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