Telangana government to review engineering college fees for better quality
Press Trust of India | June 28, 2025 | 02:24 PM IST | 1 min read
Congress government is planning to create better facilities, teaching standards, labs, in line with AICTE guidelines.
HYDERABAD : The Telangana government will carefully review the engineering college fees, taking into account the teaching standards, laboratory facilities and other aspects of technical education. In view of a surge in demand for courses like artificial intelligence (AI), which also have a strong impact on the technology sector, Chief Minister A Revanth Reddy wants engineering colleges in the southern state to compete with world-class institutions, according to an official release on Friday.
For this, the Congress government in the state is planning to create a new system so that colleges can be equipped to meet the changing market needs. In the process, engineering colleges across the state are expected to have better facilities, teaching staff, laboratories and others, in line with the All India Council for Technical Education ( AICTE ) guidelines. The government would consider these parameters for determining the fee structure.
Also read All Maharashtra professional colleges can now charge 3x fees for management, 5x for NRI seats
The Supreme Court has held that facilities, laboratories, salaries paid to lecturers, teaching and non-teaching staff and measures taken to improve the academic standards of a college should be taken into consideration while finalising the fees, it said. The state government has decided to take the apex court's observations into account while determining the fees, it added.
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
]AI Engineering Courses: Will ‘new-age’ programmes help BTech graduates in testing times?
BTech Courses: While govt policy has led to a rash of new tech , especially in AI, ML and data science, opinion is divided on their long-term value and the employment prospects of their graduates
Musab Qazi | 1 min readFeatured News
]- UGC allows state colleges to seek deemed-university status, become off-campus centres of other institutions
- Student Protests: Odisha’s ‘model code of conduct’ for colleges, universities drawing flak from all quarters
- Another IIT, 5 DU colleges to launch ITEP courses in 2026 even as seats go vacant in top institutes
- Tamil Nadu Election 2026: Jobs, quality education,scholarships on the minds of voters, young and old
- Facing protest, Lady Hardinge blames Rs 30 lakh mess dues for bad food, says AC hostel proposal with govt
- Education ministry plans Rs 14 crore grants for Prime Minister Research Chairs, Rs 4-6.5 crore fellowships
- AMU detains most of BA LLB batch for low attendance; no records or time given, allege students
- NIT Kurukshetra students demand elected council, quick re-exams, counselling for teachers
- IIM Fees vs Placements: Soaring cost, stagnant salaries, students in debt
- Delhi University plans study-abroad programme for UG students, scholarships for some