While junior college admissions are history for many, colleges are still being approached
by students and parents looking for seats
While junior college admissions are history for many, colleges
are still being approached by students and parents looking for seats. Besides ATKT
students and CBSE students who opted for school-based assessment, students who got
online admissions are still trying their luck in top-rung city colleges.
We had close to 100 seats for offline admissions and over the next two days, applications
poured in. All our seats are taken now and no matter how much we try and explain
this to students, they are still approaching us for vacant seats, said Kirti Narain,
principal of Jai Hind College. Most city colleges are still finding it difficult
to explain the situation to students and parents. Many students took seats, not
bothering about the stream. Almost everybody wanted to make it to a reputed college,
said the viceprincipal of a South Mumbai college. Until last year, Arts seats would
go vacant in even top-rung colleges, but students seem to have changed their minds.
Even though there were last-minute withdrawal of admissions, all our Arts seats
got taken in the end, said Marie Fernandes, principal of St Andrews College, Bandra.
However, colleges aren’t the only ones facing withdrawal of admissions. Our classes
for Class XI commenced two months ago, still, some students withdrew to grab a seat
in a junior college of their choice the moment admissions went offline, especially
those interested in Arts as we don’t offer that course, said Deepshika Srivastava,
principal of Rajhans Vidyalaya, a CBSE school in Andheri (W).
What has surprised principals most is that a handful of students have approached
colleges with their original mark sheets. This shows they cancelled admissions without
first securing a seat elsewhere. This is a very big problem, said T A Shiware, principal
of Hinduja College at Charni Road.
Exam before Diwali
With no intimation from the education board about unit tests for FYJC students,
most colleges have decided to hold at least one examination before they break for
Diwali vacations. We cannot scrap examinations every year for the new batch. And
this year we seem to have enough time to teach and then hold an examination, said
Marie Fernandes, principal of St Andrews College in Bandra.
Courtesy: Times of India