DU second cut-off 2021: Some colleges put out cut-off list, marks down by 0.25 to 1.5%
Aryabhatta College also released its second cut-off list with the decline ranging between 0.25 to one per cent. Nearly half of the seats have been filled after admission under the first list.
Download list of Colleges/ Universities Accpeting CUET/CUCET Score with Cut-OFFs
Download NowPress Trust of India | October 9, 2021 | 04:59 PM IST
New Delhi: Delhi University's Deen Dayal Upadhyaya College on Saturday released its second cut-off list with the marks required for BSc(Honours) Computer Science going down by 1.5 per cent. The cut-off for the course in the first list was pegged at 100 per cent but there were no applications received for the course in the first list.
Click here for DU Second Cut-off 2021 Live Updates
The cut-off for the course is pegged at 98.5 per cent in the second list but it is closed for admissions in SC, ST, PwD and EWS categories. The other colleges that had pegged the cut-off at 100 per cent for the course were Shaheed Sukhdev College of Business Studies and Hansraj College with the former also drawing a blank for the course.
The admissions to BSc (Honours) Mathematics, BSc (Honours) Zoology, BSc (Life Science) have been closed while BA programme combinations of Economics and Political Science and History and Political Science are also closed. Some courses like BSc (Honours) Chemistry, BA (Honours) English, BSc Physical Science with Chemistry are closed for admissions in the reserved categories.
Female students will get a one per cent relaxation in the asking marks for all courses.
Aryabhatta College also released its second cut-off list with the decline ranging between 0.25 to one per cent. The college had kept the highest cut-off for BA (Honours) Psychology among all the courses at 98.5 per cent in the first list which came down to 98.25 per cent in the second list.
Also read | DU 2nd cut-off 2021: JMC releases second cutoff list for only 3 courses
The cut-offs for BA (Honours) Economics, BA (Honours) Hindi, BSc (Honours) Mathematics saw a one per cent decline to 97, 85 and 96 per cent, respectively. The cut-off for BA (Honours) English and BA (Honours) History, BCom (Honours) have come down to 95.5 per cent, 94.5 per cent and 97.5 per cent, a decline of 0.5 per cent from the list.
The courses that are closed are BA (Honours) Political Science, BCom Programme and BA Programme combination of History and Political Science. Apart from BA (Honours) Political Science, BA (Honours) English, BA (Honours) Psychology and BCom (Honours), all other courses have a one per cent relaxation for female students.
Apart from Hindi (Honours), the cut-off for which has been pegged at 68 per cent, BVoc Retail Management and IT and BVoc Healthcare Management, Jesus and Mary College has said there won't be any second list for other courses, which means their seats have been filled.
The college had pegged the cut-off for BA (Honours) Psychology at 100 per cent for those who do not include the subject while calculating their best of four percentage. The cut-off for students who were to include the subject in their best of four subjects (BFS) marks was 99 per cent. Delhi University will release the second list later in the day. Nearly half of the seats have been filled after admission under the first list.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- Close to 40 lakh students are enrolled in 1 lakh single-teacher schools: UDISE Plus 2023-24
- How did 1.88 crore children, over 17,000 schools vanish from UDISE Plus? The ministry must explain: Expert
- Why teachers are worried about semester system in West Bengal primary schools
- Universities need new AI, evaluation policies: Jindal Global Law School student who sued over results
- UDISE Plus 2023-24 shows school enrolment drop of 37 lakh spread across categories, levels
- Study Abroad 2025: UK, Australia, Italy drive student visa policy shifts; new study destinations emerge
- ‘MNLU Mumbai has a local-to-global approach; new campus in 2 years’: VC
- CBSE wants international boards reined in; letter to education ministry seeks directions for AIU
- Centre notifies new Right to Education rules allowing schools to fail children in Classes 5, 8
- ‘I cried every day’: Study-abroad student considered leaving the UK but staying changed his life