The first cutoffs for admissions to Delhi University colleges, released late Wednesday night, held few surprises except for a slight a drop in marks for BCom and BCom (H) at some places. Cutoffpercentages in many subjects, including popular ones such as economics, remained largely unchanged.
However, there were notable exceptions, such as Ramjas College releasing a BCom (H) cutoff of 99.25%, the highest in the university this year. Also, minimum scores for Hindi and BA programme saw a sharp rise in some colleges.
Across DU colleges, authorities struggles to upload the cutoffs onto the online system despite a training session at South Campus of the technical staff on Wednesday.
For two of the varsity's most popular undergraduate programmes - commerce and economics - the cutoff seem to have plateaued. These remained the same in many colleges including Lady Shri Ram, Zakir Husain Delhi College and Kirori Mal College. At others, these cutoffs may have increased marginally. At Janki Devi Memorial and Ramanujan, commerce cutoffs have even dropped.
More surprisingly there was steep rise in Hindi cutoffs at many colleges, including JDMC (eight percentage points), Ramanujan (five) and SGND Khalsa (eight), with the highest of 15 percentage points at Gargi. "The demand has increased due to expansion in Hindi media, both print, television and online," Shashi Tyagi, principal, Gargi College.
Even with the plateauing in some subjects, cutoffs remained high as ever. Colleges such as Miranda House have five courses with over 97% cutoff, while at Hindu College, eight of its subjects have cutoffs over 97%. In science courses, the increase is more conspicuous in biology and related subjects. For the physical sciences, cutoffs remained the same at many colleges and even dropped at some.
Admissions for the first cutoff list would commence from Thursday and will continue till Saturday. Candidates will be allowed to pay fees till the noon of July 3. The second cutoff will be announced on July 5 at 9 am.
But colleges struggled till late evening to get their cutoffs to the university. First, colleges had to wait for the application data to arrive before culling the relevant parts from the huge mass of information. "They gave us data for all subjects, even ones we don't teach. We had to filter all that for our subjects. Parallelly, we had to also work on payment gateways for our sites," says Anju Srivastava, principal, Hindu College.
Source- http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/
However, there were notable exceptions, such as Ramjas College releasing a BCom (H) cutoff of 99.25%, the highest in the university this year. Also, minimum scores for Hindi and BA programme saw a sharp rise in some colleges.
Across DU colleges, authorities struggles to upload the cutoffs onto the online system despite a training session at South Campus of the technical staff on Wednesday.
For two of the varsity's most popular undergraduate programmes - commerce and economics - the cutoff seem to have plateaued. These remained the same in many colleges including Lady Shri Ram, Zakir Husain Delhi College and Kirori Mal College. At others, these cutoffs may have increased marginally. At Janki Devi Memorial and Ramanujan, commerce cutoffs have even dropped.
More surprisingly there was steep rise in Hindi cutoffs at many colleges, including JDMC (eight percentage points), Ramanujan (five) and SGND Khalsa (eight), with the highest of 15 percentage points at Gargi. "The demand has increased due to expansion in Hindi media, both print, television and online," Shashi Tyagi, principal, Gargi College.
Even with the plateauing in some subjects, cutoffs remained high as ever. Colleges such as Miranda House have five courses with over 97% cutoff, while at Hindu College, eight of its subjects have cutoffs over 97%. In science courses, the increase is more conspicuous in biology and related subjects. For the physical sciences, cutoffs remained the same at many colleges and even dropped at some.
Admissions for the first cutoff list would commence from Thursday and will continue till Saturday. Candidates will be allowed to pay fees till the noon of July 3. The second cutoff will be announced on July 5 at 9 am.
But colleges struggled till late evening to get their cutoffs to the university. First, colleges had to wait for the application data to arrive before culling the relevant parts from the huge mass of information. "They gave us data for all subjects, even ones we don't teach. We had to filter all that for our subjects. Parallelly, we had to also work on payment gateways for our sites," says Anju Srivastava, principal, Hindu College.
Source- http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/

There is going to publishes out Delhi University Cut Off 2017 today very soon. You all students are advise to check out Delhi University Cut Off 2017 from here.
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