Sunday, August 29, 2021

Deemed univs cut intake by 10% this yr, close some core courses Drop In No. Of Takers & Pandemic Reasons


Deemed univs cut intake by 10% this yr, close some core courses
Drop In No. Of Takers & Pandemic Reasons

Ragu.Raman@timesgroup.com

Chennai:29.08.2021

Deemed universities in Tamil Nadu have cut intake by 10% for 2021-22, compared to the previous year, due to the still raging Covid-19 pandemic, fewer admissions to core engineering branches and postgraduate courses. Sanctioned strength in 33 deemed universities in 2021-22 have come down to 49,197, from 54,573 seats in 2020-21, with 4,398 undergraduate (UG) seats and 978 postgraduate (PG) seats cut.

Deemed universities closed courses such as civil engineering, electrical and electronics engineering, electronics and instrumentation and architecture in the UG stream and shut down courses such as power electronics, automobile engineering, nano science and technology and VLSI design in the PG stream due to no takers.

Professors said the number of students joining from outside Tamil Nadu in these institutions had also reduced significantly which could have forced the managements to cut the intake.

“There is a decline in admissions to some programmes for all engineering institutions. For ranking and accreditation, the agencies consider only the intake for calculating faculty ratio and not the enrolled students. So, the deemed universities started to trim their intake to have better ranking and rating points,” said R W Alexander Jesudasan, pro-vice-chancellor of Hindustan Institute of Technology and Science in Chennai.

“Due to the uncertainty in view of Covid-19 pandemic, some students from outside the states prefer to join institutions closer to their residence. However, students from certain states are still showing interest and we expect the admission to be normal from next year,” he added.

S Vaidyasubramaniam, vice-chancellor of Thanjavurbased Sastra University, said institutions were reducing intake in core branches such as civil and mechanical engineering. “A majority of institutions also closed postgraduate branches which do not attract many students. However, the closure of core branches is not a good move,” he said.

He further urged the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) to fix a cap on the maximum number of students who can be admitted in a course for all institutions to prevent the influx of computer science graduates after four or five years.

Career consultant Jayaprakash Gandhi said the institutes have reduced intake in core branches and integrated programmes due to fewer takers for these courses. “The Covid-19 pandemic is also one of the reasons for the cutting down of seats as the intake of hostel students has been coming down during the past two years,” he said.



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