6 days ago
DAVV's new academic session is two months late
Indore: The academic session at Devi Ahilya Vishwavidyalaya's University Teaching Departments (UTD) is set to begin over two months behind schedule, with undergraduate classes commencing from September 8.
The university released its academic calendar, outlining a delayed yet structured timeline for teaching, examinations, and results.
As per the calendar, teaching for the first semester will continue till December 23, followed by examinations scheduled from January 6 to 25. Results of these exams will be declared by February 1. Classes for postgraduate courses under CUET-PG are expected to begin by mid-July, while undergraduate classes, particularly those under CUET-UG, will only start in September due to delayed counselling processes.
The university is facing challenges in synchronising its academic calendar across 33 departments running multiple UG, PG, and integrated programmes. While non-CUET course admissions were already completed and classes are set to begin soon, the staggered admission schedules are making it difficult to implement a uniform academic plan across all departments.
DAVV also released the complete schedule for its PhD programmes.
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PhD coursework classes will begin from August 1 and run till October 31. Coursework exams will be conducted from November 14 to 22, with results to be announced by November 29. Interviews for admission through the Research Advisory Committee (RAC) will be held by July 31, following which seats will be allotted.
For ongoing UG and PG courses, semester exams for the first and third semesters will be conducted between November 20 and December 12, with results to be announced by December 31.
The annual UG exams will be held from April 1 to May 30, and final results for UG final year and other courses are to be declared by June 10 and June 30, respectively.
The academic calendar mandates 180 teaching days, and departments will be required to conduct extra classes if needed to meet this requirement. University officials have emphasised that coordination with colleges will be key to ensuring timely execution of exams and results.