As Seats Outnumber Students, All Engineering Aspirants Could Find Dreams Fulfilled
Students across the state have fared poorly in the Common
Entrance Test for engineering and medicine. In the medical stream, Vivek
Tiwari and Parasmita Bhattacharya, both repeaters from Thane, topped the list with
their score of 195. Overall student tally which has been chronically sliding, dipped
further to 12.01% compared to 15.23% in 2010.
While college cut-offs are slated to fall, tough times lie ahead. Our internal analysis
shows that a student who could have secured 176 last year, would have got about
163 this year. The performance has been rather lacklustre, said an officer from
the Directorate of Technical Education.
Health Sciences:
At a time when the country needs more doctors, the state is not just witnessing
a dip in the aspirants, but also a drop in the number of those qualifying the entrance
exam. In the Rest of Maharashtra, which includes Mumbai, 13,030 out of 1.18 lakh
candidates (11.07%) got 50% marks the minimum required for an open category seat.
In 2010, this region recorded a success rate of 15.42%. In Vidarbha, 12.56% students
cleared the tests, though last year, the figure was 15.21%, and Marathwada had students
qualifying rate of 14.66% compared to 14.64% in 2010.
Clearly, most of our students have been preparing for all-India competitive entrance
examinations. They have always felt that training for the states CET is merely a
subset of the overall preparation, but this year has been different. The states
question paper was tougher than the previous editions, said a principal of a junior
college.
Top city public medical colleges like KEM, JJ, Lokmanya Tilak (Sion) and Nair that
closed admissions at 170, may lower the cut-offs a tad bit this year.
In all, 1.93 lakh students took the medical test, comprising physics, chemistry
and biology sections; 50.07% (1.04 lakh) students were boys and 45.93% (88,507)
were girls. In June, when lakhs of city youngsters drew up their career graph, stiff
competition forced them whether likely toppers or those at the bottom of the pyramid
to have a back-up plan. So, 1,49,410 students appeared for both the engineering
and medical entrance exams.
Engineering:
While medical aspirants scramble for seats,candidates wanting to take up engineering
have a smooth admission ride, if they arent very choosy about the colleges. Maharashtras
tech institutes have more seats than students wanting to secure them.
So, even the last 10 candidates, who have scored a mere 10 out of 200, can also
study engineering. In all, 1.24 lakh general category students and 1.31 lakh from
the reserved slot took the engineering test, comprising physics, chemistry and math
sections.
This year, the number of girls went up than last year: the figure increased from
87,486 in 2010 to 89,539. However, that had no bearing on their performance as boys
mostly bagged the top ranks. Merely 35 girls figured in to top 100 ranks.
Dates to Remember
Engineering:
|
Verification of documents and online submission of applications for all candidates
|
June 21 to 29
|
|
Provisional merit list
|
June 30
|
Health Sciences:
Students can pay Rs. 500 and get a photocopy of their answer script and a copy of
the model answersheet. The selection process for admission will be conducted by
filling preference forms at four centres: Grant Medical College, Mumbai, B J Medical
College, Pune, Government Medical College, Nagpur and Government Medical College,
Aurangabad.
Up for Grabs
Health Sciences:
|
MBBS
|
18 colleges, 2,060 seats
|
|
BDS (dental)
|
4 colleges, 240 seats
|
|
BAMS (Ayurveda)
|
20 colleges, 1,020 seats
|
|
BPTh (Physiotherapy)
|
4 colleges, 90 seats
|
|
BOTh (Occupational Therapy)
|
4 colleges, 90 seats
|
|
B.Sc nursing
|
4 colleges, 200 seats
|
Private medical colleges: K J Somaiya Medical
College, Mumbai, 50 seats Maharashtra Institute of Medical Education & Research,
Pune, 100 seats Maharashtra Institute of Medical Sciences & Research, Latur, 100
seats Kashibai Navle Medical College, Pune, 100 seats (Will admit students based
on MHT-CET scores).
Engineering:
309 colleges, 1,14,268 seats
Autonomous Institutes: College of Engineering,
Pune, Veermata Jijabai Technological Institute, Mumbai, Shri Guru Gobind Sinhji
Institute of Engineering and Technology, Nanded and Walchand College of Engineering,
Sangli (Will conduct online admissions this year).
Pharmacy:
147 colleges, 9,170 seats
Courtesy: Times of India