logo
DU releases cut-off scores for all course-college combinations for first time since 2021

DU releases cut-off scores for all course-college combinations for first time since 2021

Indian Express5 days ago
In a step toward restoring transparency in undergraduate admissions, Delhi University (DU) on Sunday publicly released detailed cut-off scores for all of its 1,528 course-college combinations — the first such disclosure since 2021. The 89-page document has been published on the varsity's website.
The data, based on scores from the Common University Entrance Test (CUET) 2025, spans a vast range: from a peak of 950 out of 1,000 for coveted courses at top-tier colleges to a low of 65 for lesser-demanded programmes.
The highest cut-offs were seen at DU's most sought-after colleges. Hindu College set the bar with a score of 950 for its BA (Honours) in Political Science, followed by 936 for its BA programme in History and Political Science. St Stephen's College, Miranda House, Lady Shri Ram College for Women, and Shri Ram College of Commerce also featured among those with the top cut-offs.
At the other end of the spectrum were language programmes, where demand has historically been lower. The BA (Honours) Hindi course at Mata Sundari College for Women recorded a cut-off of just 65, while Zakir Hussain Delhi College's Urdu Honours course closed at 111.
For the past three years, applicants could only view cut-offs relevant to their chosen preferences via the university's Common Seat Allocation System (CSAS) dashboard. The broader picture — crucial for gauging competitiveness across courses and institutions – remained unclear.
This year, DU received 2.39 lakh completed applications in the second phase of its admissions cycle, competing for 71,642 seats across 79 undergraduate programmes in 69 colleges and departments. On Saturday, the university announced that it had made 93,166 seat allocations.
Delhi continued to dominate the applicant pool with 77,900 candidates, followed by Uttar Pradesh (54,278), Haryana (24,206), and Bihar (17,173). These four states together accounted for nearly 72 per cent of all applications. By contrast, interest from the country's peripheral regions remained limited — with just 48 applicants from Goa, 61 from the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and 65 from Mizoram.
Students have until July 21 to accept their allotted seats, after which colleges will have a day to approve applications. The deadline for fee payment is July 23.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bengali must on shop signboards & hoardings, says mayor
Bengali must on shop signboards & hoardings, says mayor

Time of India

time2 hours ago

  • Time of India

Bengali must on shop signboards & hoardings, says mayor

1 2 Kolkata: City mayor Firhad Hakim on Friday said signboards and hoardings of all commercial establishments, including shops and restaurants, must be written in Bengali, along with other languages. After a "Talk to the Mayor" session, Hakim was asked about some commercial establishments that were continuing with their hoardings in English, Hindi and even Assamese, but not in Bengali. Hakim instructed civic officials to look into the matter and ensure that everyone followed the norm. Last year, Kolkata Municipal Corporation (KMC) mandated the use of Bengali language on all commercial signboards, including hoardings, alongside other languages. A deadline of Feb 21, 2025, was set for implementation of the rule. You Can Also Check: Kolkata AQI | Weather in Kolkata | Bank Holidays in Kolkata | Public Holidays in Kolkata Meanwhile, the entire proceedings of the corporation were conducted in Bengali on Friday as CM Mamata Banerjee called for another 'Bhasha Andolan' on the Bengali language row. However, KMC ward 49 councillor Monalisa Banerjee placed her questions in English on water supply glitch. Chairperson Mala Roy, who was presiding over the day's proceedings, asked Hakim to reply in Bengali. Monalisa raised civic issues like water pipeline leakage, water supply disruptions and shortage of labourers. Later, the mayor said: "Though the councillor raised her questions in English, I answered in Bengali, my mother tongue."Status: Not Approved

Death of the dictionary
Death of the dictionary

New Indian Express

time3 hours ago

  • New Indian Express

Death of the dictionary

Samuel Johnson, the dictionarist Creative Commons Opinions Death of the dictionary The written word is no longer the most efficient way to store knowledge. Thanks to a glut of enabling software and hardware mankind is turning back to its earliest mode of encoding culture: audiovisual media. Dictionarist Dr Johnson would've tutted at how we treat language today Pratik Kanjilal The Gutenberg revolution appears to be waning as the written word, the defining mark of civilisation—whether on Babylonian stelae or in racy detective novels—recedes in the face of the ever-compelling power of images and voice. The written word is shaking off the grip of regimentation, which had tightened over the centuries since printing caught on in Europe and later, dictionaries formalised language. Young people no longer read editorials to learn hieratic language. Instead, they are at ease with creoles, pidgins, slang and memes. But ironically, high feelings persist about language as a political and cultural marker of identity, purity and authenticity. Notable exception: at the press conference after signing the India-UK free trade agreement, a struggling Hindi translator was told to feel free to use English words. Meanwhile, Maharashtra is upset about the three-language formula. Governor C P Radhakrishnan has weighed in on the problem of 'linguistic hatred', and recalled seeing a north Indian man in his home state of Tamil Nadu being beaten up for not knowing Tamil. Language politics in Tamil Nadu, an element of the Self-Respect Movement, was a bulwark against the Union government's promotion of Hindi, which sought to flatten cultural diversity and make the states politically accessible to Delhi. Many states in the east, west and south didn't enjoy being pushed around, and Tamil Nadu made it an enduring political issue. But it is rare for someone from the state to admit that linguistic assertion has an unpleasant side. An extreme example: the Second World War was triggered by Hitler's determination to connect German-speaking populations in East Prussia and Austria with the German nation—'Ein volk, ein Reich, ein sprache', to rip off a Nazi slogan concerning the Führer. That was over 80 years ago. In the mean time, the world has globalised at a speed not seen since classical times. This could have been an era of bridge languages like Urdu. Instead, machines, the internet and their users are beating down the formalisms of language, and what was unthinkable is now doable. When Kemal Ataturk switched Turkish from the Arabic-based Ottoman script to the Roman alphabet in 1928, it was a radical act. The measure, intended to bring Turkey closer to the West, was denounced by critics as a 'cultural rupture', as older texts became inaccessible to younger people. Perhaps it worked only because 6 percent of Muslims were literate at the time. But ever since Usenet launched group communications over the internet, before most languages had digital fonts, phonetic communications in the Roman alphabet have been commonplace. And now, AI-powered translation is the norm. When Tony Blair's Britain asserted multiculturalism in the late 1990s, the road sign of Bangladeshi-intense Brick Lane in London was rewritten in two languages, English and Bangla. When Monica Ali's novel Brick Lane became a bestseller, it felt like borders were dissolving. Decades later, in the US, which has become multicultural without quite preparing for it, machine translation is creating weirdness. Public institutions like hospitals and transport have signs in multiple languages including Hindi and Bangla, but what they say sounds inhuman. Naturally, because this language is machine-made. Across borders, there is concern that young people do not read these days; but let's focus on what they do read. YouTube loyalists read closed captions generated by a machine. These are frequently incorrect, but it doesn't bother anyone because the world's language purists have either given up the ghost or the struggle. The dictionary is just another book and books are archival legacy media. If Samuel Johnson were around, the dictionarist who said that language is the dress of thought would have dismissed us as ragtags, with bobtails barely concealing our modesty in scanty hashtags. Why is this happening? Information storage and retrieval began with visual and auditory media—cave paintings, dance performances, oral epics and songs. But why are they regaining salience? Because the written word was the most efficient storage medium for about five millenniums, from the clay tablet libraries of Babylon to Dewey Decimal via the Gutenberg press. But over the last three decades, magnetic and optical data storage has scaled up so rapidly that the contents of a refrigerator-sized magnetic tape bank of the 1970s now fit on a microSD card. With AI, it is normal for data processing to use as much power as small towns. The written word is no longer essential for storage, and the human race is again embracing the audiovisual media with which it had begun to encode culture millenniums ago. Ironically, it's a step back—there is now room enough for all the misbegotten utterances that the race can dream up. In a strange case in bilingual Belgium, an attendant in a train running through Dutch-speaking territory greeted a passenger in French and faced proceedings right away. The proceedings have just ended, and the harassed attendant has turned language activist—he is selling coffee mugs bearing greetings in both languages to promote linguistic amity. The resurgence of audiovisual media at the expense of text is starkly visible in politics. From West Bengal to Washington, visual media personalities are prominent in legislatures, and few of their most important associates can be accused of learning, or even literacy. Win some, lose some, say the Americans, who are postmodern—in the sense that they have never respected linguistic formalisms very much. Pratik Kanjilal | SPEAKEASY | Senior Fellow, Henry J Leir Institute of Migration and Human Security, The Fletcher School, Tufts University (Views are personal) (Tweets @pratik_k)

Student Takes Raj Thackeray's Name, Asks Others To Speak In Marathi, Thrashed
Student Takes Raj Thackeray's Name, Asks Others To Speak In Marathi, Thrashed

NDTV

time3 hours ago

  • NDTV

Student Takes Raj Thackeray's Name, Asks Others To Speak In Marathi, Thrashed

Mumbai: A student was allegedly beaten up outside a college in Navi Mumbai for - in a semi-threatening tone - asking others to speak in Marathi in a WhatsApp group. Police sources said the students were all part of a college WhatsApp group and some of them were writing messages in Hindi on Monday. Another student then replied in Marathi, "Speak in Marathi, otherwise Raj Thackeray will come." Raj Thackeray is the chief of the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS), whose workers have assaulted several people in the state for what they termed "insults" to Marathi. The attacks include one on a shopkeeper in Thane and, more recently, on a man working in a public toilet in Nanded. The student's comment sparked an argument on the WhatsApp group, which kept escalating. Around 10.30 am the next day, four students, including one Faizan Naik, attacked the student who asked them to speak in Marathi outside their college in Vashi. Naik also hit the 20-year-old on the head with a hockey stick, leaving him severely injured. Assistant Commissioner of Police (Vashi) Adinath Budhwant said a case has been registered. "A First Information Report has been registered at the Vashi police station in connection with a dispute that arose between two groups. The dispute was a result of an argument between two individuals over comments on the group," Mr Budhwant said. "The complainant was also reportedly beaten with a stick. An investigation is on and action will be taken against the accused," he added. MNS Spokesperson Gajanan Kale and other MNS workers also met police officials and asked for strict action against the attacking students at the earliest. "We have met the student and his family as well," Mr Kale said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store