advertisement
Video Editor: Mohd Irshad & Akanksha Kumar
As students and parents queued outside the admission counter at Daulat Ram College, Sanjoli and her father appeared deep in conversation. A sense of quiet despair was writ large on their faces as they walked away from the counter, having just finished the application process.
Sanjoli has scored 95.5 percent in the ‘best of four’ subjects. Clearly, that’s not enough according to the first cut-off list published by the University of Delhi (DU) on 18 June. Disheartened with high cut-offs in the first list, Sanjoli has now pinned her hopes on the second and third cut-off lists.
At Miranda House, Maulshree was quite relaxed after making it to the college of her choice. She was, however, upset about the fate of her friends who couldn’t make the list.
Interestingly, the highest cut-off this year is 98.75 percent for the BA programme at Lady Shri Ram College (LSR). Usually it’s the Honours courses that take the lead since they are the most sought-after programmes at DU.
Muskan, who made the cut for the B.Sc (Honours) Maths at LSR, didn’t seem surprised by the high cut-offs:
A professor at one of the DU colleges, who didn’t want to be named told The Quint that cut-offs usually spike when the number of applicants for a course is really high.
Several students The Quint spoke to complained of the server being slow, which meant it took them hours to fill the application form. Simran, from Chandigarh, who was accompanying her sister at the Shri Ram College of Commerce, was of the view that the application process needs to be more ‘effective’.
For Valli, who has come all the way from Telangana, the delay due to technical glitches may prove costly as her family had return tickets for the same evening.
Around 3,38,000 students had applied for 55,000 seats available across colleges affiliated to the University of Delhi. On a day when hordes of prospective DU students were caught up in the application process, the arts faculty witnessed protests. Student organisations backed by the left parties demanded that the number of seats should be increased both at the graduate as well as post-graduate level.
Delhi University has not opened a new college in the last 20 years. In 2016, BJP MP Pravesh Varma, son of former Delhi chief minister, Sahib Singh Varma, had suggested opening new colleges in Delhi. Varma had proposed that land in the villages adjoining Dwarka and Najafgarh be given to the University of Delhi. Nothing really happened after his Zero Hour speech and dreams of a West Campus were reduced to just wishful thinking.
The AAP government led by Kejriwal had passed a resolution in 2017, seeking 85 percent quota in 28 colleges that receive funds from the state government. Domicile quota would have further reduced the chances of applicants from other states. While the political class continues to be in snooze mode, it’s the students who are hit hard due to DU’s limited seats.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)