DU UG Admission 2023: 87% seats filled in round 1; most in Hansraj, Ramjas, Dyal Singh colleges
Press Trust of India | August 8, 2023 | 11:17 AM IST | 2 mins read
DU Admission 2023: BCom (Hons), BCom, BA (Hons) Political Science, BA (Hons) Economics and BA (Hons) English are the top 5 courses.
Download list of Colleges/ Universities Accpeting CUET/CUCET Score with Cut-OFFs
Download NowNEW DELHI : Over 87 per cent of undergraduate seats in Delhi University colleges have got filled in the first round of admission, with maximum enrolments in Hansraj College, Ramjas College and Dyal Singh College. According to the data released by the university, BCom (Hons), BCom, BA (Hons) Political Science, BA (Hons) Economics and BA (Hons) English are the top five courses opted by most students this year.
Latest: Check DU PG Seat Allotment 2025 | Vacant Seats for Spot Round 4
DU PG Spot Round 2025: First Cutoff | Second Cutoff | Third Cutoff
DU PG 2025: Third Cutoff | Second Cutoff | First Cutoff
Don't Miss: NIRF DU Colleges Ranking
A total of 85,853 candidates were allotted seats in undergraduate courses in Delhi University (DU) colleges in the first round of admission, data recorded till 6 pm on Monday showed. DU has a total of 71,000 UG seats across all its colleges. Last year, 61,500 were filled only at the end of the second round of UG admission.
After the first round of admission this year, 62,008 candidates so far, of which 53 per cent are females, have paid fees and confirmed their admission to DU colleges. 12,733 students have opted to freeze their admission and 40,701 have selected an upgrade. The seats for the undergraduate programmes are being allotted under the Common Seat Allocation System (CSAS)-UG-2023.
Also Read | DU UG Admission 2023: College-wise vacant seats PDF out at ugadmission.uod.ac.in
The university said that only a few seats are now vacant in the colleges on North Campus. In Kirorimal College, all commerce and arts programmes have one or two seats vacant, while seats are full across other categories. Several seats are vacant in BSc (Hons) Mathematics and BSc (Hons) Botany. Similarly, in Miranda House, most of the seats were filled in the first round alone. However, some science courses still have some seats available for grabs.
The top five colleges in which maximum admissions took place are Dyal Singh College, Hansraj College, Gargi College, Ramjas College and Kirorimal College, the data showed. The majority of the vacancies are available off-campus and in some colleges of the South Campus in Sanskrit and science courses, including Chemistry, Physics, and Electronics. At Deen Dayal Upadhyaya College, 14 seats are open for Botany BSc (Hons), 31 for Computer Science, 32 for Electronics, 27 for Mathematics, and 33 for Physics. Additionally, there are 17 and 12 open seats in BSc (Hons) Zoology and Life Sciences, respectively.
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
]- MBBS Abroad: Indian students in Bangladesh medical colleges safe, but fresh violence keeps them on edge
- Post-Al Falah, Haryana expands control, can shut private universities over national security concerns
- Study in India falls short on visa issues, curricula; NITI Aayog sets 5 lakh foreign students target for 2047
- JEE Advanced reports show IITs cut hundreds of BTech seats in core engineering; here’s what happened
- Exam déjà vu? AMU law faculty reuses last year’s BA LLB Hons question paper; students oppose retest
- Pre, Post-Matric Scholarships for minorities disbursed to thousands of ineligible or fake beneficiaries: CAG
- PMKVY: CAG flags missing names from Skill India scheme, 34 lakh losing payout due to poor NSDC oversight
- ‘IIM Ahmedabad Dubai is the brand ambassador of Indian education system in UAE’: Dean of new campus
- TISS Mumbai: More students seek help for relationship woes than studies; women prefer text, show helpline data
- Education budget utilisation has improved since Covid pandemic: Government data