
Didn't Get Required CUET UG Score? This Provision Opens Doors To Delhi Colleges
To secure admission to top colleges across the country for undergraduate courses, students must clear the Common University Entrance Test (Undergraduate). This year, over 13 lakh students appeared for the exam for admission to the 2025-26 academic session. The exam was conducted in computer-based mode between May 13 and June 3 across 300 cities worldwide.
While securing the cut-off marks is mandatory for admission to top colleges, including those under Delhi University, the university also offers a special provision for single girl children under the Single Girl Child (SGC) quota, introduced in 2023. A few students who narrowly missed the qualifying marks or couldn't complete the exam due to technical glitches were able to secure admission to top colleges under this quota.
Speaking to The Indian Express, a senior official explained the rationale behind the provision: "Our country believes in Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao. If we educate a girl, we educate an entire family. The aim is to provide an opportunity to single girl children from all backgrounds."
To apply under the quota, applicants must submit an affidavit confirming they are a single girl child.
Seats under the quota are reserved across programmes based on merit. According to data from DU's admissions office, 849 students secured admission under the SGC quota in the 2024-25 academic session - a significant increase from the 764 admissions in the previous year. The report also stated that the provision will be extended to postgraduate admissions this year.
Delhi University is set to begin the first phase of its undergraduate admission process this week under the Common Seat Allocation System (CSAS).
Admissions will be based solely on CUET-UG 2025 scores. In the initial phase, applicants must provide basic personal and academic details, upload required documents such as category, EWS, or PwD certificates, and verify their CUET scores, which are already linked to their profiles.
Candidates must first log in using their CUET roll number, fill in the required details, and upload the necessary documents. CUET scores will auto-populate on the portal.
To assist applicants, DU has set up a helpline. Aspirants can reach out via email at ug@admission.du.ac.in or call 011-27666073 for support.
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India Today
an hour ago
- India Today
DU UG 2025: How to map subjects and select courses after CUET results
With CUET UG 2025 results expected soon, the University of Delhi is all set to launch Phase II of CSAS (UG) 2025, where candidates must fill in their program and college preferences via the CSAS portal. This phase follows the initial application stage and is crucial in determining final seat begin, students must log into their CSAS dashboard using their credentials. The system will automatically calculate program-specific merit scores based on CUET UG performance, which will be visible on the MAPPING Students must map their Class XII subjects to the test papers they appeared for in CUET UG 2025 The subjects must be the same or closely related, with at least 50% syllabus overlapIf the exact subject isn't available in CUET, a similar domain/language subject is acceptableDU's decision on subject similarity is final and FILLING PROCESSDelhi University offers 79 UG programmes and 186 BA combinations across 69 can select as many "Program + College" combinations as they're eligible 'Available Preferences' tab will list all possible can be applied to sort colleges or programmes based on preferences is allowed using 'Top', 'Bottom', or number is essential to save preferences regularly during the selection the combinations saved before the deadline will be considered for allocation and upgrades. The 'Selected Preferences' tab will reflect the final saved OF PREFERENCESadvertisementOnce the Phase II deadline passes, the last saved preference list is auto-lockedPost-deadline, no edits, additions, or deletions will be permittedAll future seat allocations will be based on this locked RANKS FEATUREBefore the first CSAS round, DU will publish simulated ranks on the CSAS ranks are based on current preferences and scores to give a rough are not final and don't guarantee admission to any specific college or simulated ranks are released, candidates get one final chance to revise the saved changes during this final edit window will be considered for are advised to keep a check here or on the official website for more updates and information.


Indian Express
8 hours ago
- Indian Express
Ahmedabad plane crash: When an island loses its people
A fleck of land in the Gulf of Khambhat off Gujarat's coast, Diu stretches about 4.6 km from north to south. That is only slightly longer than the runway at the Sardar Vallabhbhai International Airport in Ahmedabad, from where the ill-fated Boeing 787 took off and crashed under a minute on June 12. The two factoids are meshed in the miraculous story of Vishwas Kumar, the only survivor of India's worst air disaster in three decades, out of the 242 on board. Vishwas, 32, is a British citizen but spends almost as much time in the Union Territory of Diu, running a fishing business here – like many others who live such dual, intertwined lives in this former Portuguese colony. Among those who died in the Ahmedabad-Gatwick flight crash were 14 with roots in Diu – four of them British (including Vishwas's brother Ajay, 30) and seven Portuguese. On this tiny island of about 51,000 people, that means many have lost someone they knew – the white caps and dark saris, a mark of mourning, now dot Diu. Having lost one son and seen another survive, Ramesh Kumar Bhalaiya, 52, is swinging between grief and relief. 'My sons were the four parts of my body,' he tells a visitor at their spacious, two-storey home in Patelwadi village. Bhalaiya flew down from Leicester, with wife Jayaben and their sons Nayan, 26, and Sunny, 29, after the crash – stopping first at Ahmedabad to identify and collect Ajay's body. Bhalaiya talks about his shock when Vishwas called to tell them of the crash. It was seconds after he informed them that they were taking off. 'Vishwas was breathing heavily and told me that Ajay was nowhere to be seen, that there was smoke everywhere. The phone then got disconnected,' Bhalaiya told The Indian Express earlier. Ajay's wife collapsed on hearing the news and had to be hospitalised; the couple lost two young daughters to an illness earlier. On Wednesday the family performed Ajay's last rites. Vishwas is too 'shaken' to talk to anybody, says a relative. The canopy in the house's courtyard where the mourners collected has not been taken down yet. The plastic chairs underneath are vacant, while the sheet spread on the ground for the mourners was blown away by the strong winds that swept Diu Thursday. On a tree, hangs a fishing net. It was the fishing season that had brought Vishwas and Ajay to Diu. The family flew down in September last year at the start of the season, and when the rest left in January, the brothers stayed back. It was an annual trip, with the Leicester-based family's primary source of income still the fish brought in by the boats it owns and operates here. Back in Leicester, the Bhalaiya sons work at a garment store. The story is the same across homes in Diu, where fishing remains the few viable sources of income besides the liquor business. The liquor draws tourists from dry Gujarat, leading to the mushrooming of bars and resorts, with fewer numbers coming for Diu's beaches, a fort, its Portuguese-style buildings, and a 17th-century church. Chhaganbhai Bhikhubhai Bhalaiya (65), of Bucharwada village close to Patelwadi, holds a Portuguese passport but lives mostly in Diu with wife Ratnaben. His sons Mahesh, 42, and Rohit, 40, are British citizens, who work at a garment factory in London. Chhaganbhai used to be in fishing too, before he got a job as a contractual driver with the Forest Department. He is now retired. Just back from attending the funeral of a relative who died in the Ahmedabad crash, Chhaganbhai says he borrowed money to send his sons, who had studied only till Class 10, in Gujarati medium, to England 15 years ago. They held Portuguese passports, allowing them to stay and work in the UK at the time, as it was part of the European Union then. Over time, they acquired British citizenship. 'First, they faced problems conversing in English, but they managed and are now proficient. They got married here, to locals, and their wives later joined them. They are happy there, and I am happy here. The two of them send 100 pounds (about Rs 11,700) each every month, and it is sufficient for my wife and me.' He has no regrets, Chhaganbhai says. 'We lived in a mud house earlier, but now have a concrete home, with all the facilities… If my sons had stayed here, we would be leading the same life… they would be fishing, putting their lives at risk, or doing some labour work.' The sons and their families visit every December, during the winter vacations, while Chhaganbhai and his wife have been to London at least 10 times in the last five years. 'My sons urge us to stay there,' he says, 'but the weather does not suit us.' The risks involved in fishing, both due to the fickle weather as well as the chances of ending up in Pakistani waters, are another reason families here don't want their children getting into it. An official of the Diu UT administration says that migration has been on the rise, particularly from fishermen communities such as the Kolis and Kharwas, with London the preferred destination. While the main reason is money, the official puts his finger on another factor. 'These communities are used to taking risks, adapting to circumstances and surviving.' The Portuguese link helps. 'After Daman, Diu and Goa were liberated in 1961 from its rule, the Portuguese government offered residents of its former colonies citizenship, if they could prove they lived there at the time. Even successors could get citizenship if they could prove ties to forefathers listed in the Portuguese civil registry. Now, they submit applications to a mamlatdar, and these are forwarded for verification to Portuguese Embassy officials, who visit Diu once every three months.' The official estimates that over 30,000 people from Diu are staying in London currently, many of them with British citizenship. 'While youths settle there, older people come back,' the official says, adding that similar migration patterns can be seen in Daman. In 2020, Diu was merged with the Union Territory of Daman, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, and it is now one consolidated UT. Amarjit Singh, a retired IAS officer, talks about the other routes for migration from Gujarat, with the first of them headed for Africa, particularly Mozambique. 'After Mozambique's independence in 1975, the Vanzas and Darjis and the other Gujarati communities, including from Diu, started to migrate again, this time towards Portugal… The Quinta da Holandesa and Quinta da Vitoria neighbourhoods in the heart of Lisbon came to hold big Gujarati settlements.' Later, Singh says, especially due to the failure of a resettlement process, many chose to migrate to Britain. K C Sethi, the author of the coffee table book Daman, Diu, Goa, Dadra, Nagar-Haveli & Portuguese Regime (1510-1961), says many homes in Diu carry hints of the old world in their 'stained glass windows, sacred relics, and black-and-white photographs of weddings with mandolin players'. Patelwadi village sarpanch Deepak Devji says that in their village of about 4,000, at least 40 families have members settled in London. There is not much by way of prospects here, says Devji. In Patelwadi, most students go to private schools or the sole Gujarati-medium government school for primary classes, before moving to the village's Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya that has English-medium instruction for Classes 6 to 12. A government college, offering Arts and Commerce streams, came up in 2013 in Diu. Besides, there is a government polytechnic and an Industrial Training Institute. Says Devji: 'Starting from an early age, children are urged by their parents to learn English so that they can settle in London. Earlier, those who went got jobs at construction sites, factories, shops… But the younger generation is more educated.' Haji Abdul Karim Bidiwala was 14 when Diu was liberated from Portugal. He recalls that till Class 3, he studied in the Portuguese medium. He remembers other things: 'Guzra hua zamana yaad bahut aata hai (We fondly remember the days gone by). The life of the people of Diu was very good… A governor looked after the administration, law and order. We got free medicines, milk, rations, some of it brought by air from Portugal.' The grandson of one of the Portuguese Governors of Diu, Joao Folque, has been visiting Diu every year since 2012, and spends at least three months here. Settled in Lisbon, the 64-year-old says over the phone: 'Diu is our first home, our ancestors' roots are entrenched here. My grandfather died in 1951 in Goa. My father was born in Silvassa in Dadra and Nagar Haveli.' Umesh Patel is the MP of the UT of Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu. The first Independent to win the Daman and Diu Lok Sabha seat in nearly 40 years, Patel credits his victory to the 'neglect' of the constituency by the BJP and the 'indifference' of the Congress. 'People were fed up with the working style of the Administrator, who had carried out mass demolitions, laid off government servants like teachers and nurses, and privatised power. Businesses suffered due to his farmaan (orders).' On the rising number of young people leaving Daman and Diu, Patel says he is not surprised. 'Jobs are scarce here, people have to endure hardships… So they avail Portuguese citizenship, start earning good money and see a rise in their living standards,' he says. When that money is sent home, he adds, that affluence draws in others.


News18
9 hours ago
- News18
CUET UG Answer Keys 2025: NTA To Close Objection Window Today At cuet.nta.nic.in
Last Updated: CUET UG Answer Keys 2025: Candidates must submit their objections on by 11 PM tonight, along with a non-refundable fee of Rs 200 per challenged question. CUET UG Answer Key 2025: The National Testing Agency (NTA) will close the answer key objection window today, June 20 at 11 pm. Candidates can raise their objections through the window available on the official website at The Common University Entrance Test (Undergraduate) 2025 was held between May 13 and June 4. As per the latest notification issued by NTA, Candidates who find discrepancies or incorrect answers in the provisional key can raise objections by submitting their claims and paying a non-refundable fee of Rs 200 per challenged question. The CUET UG 2025 was conducted in computer-based mode (CBT) for 37 subjects, including 13 languages, 23 domain-specific subjects, and a general test. How To Download CUET UG 2025 Answer Key? To download the CUET 2025 answer key and response sheet, candidates can follow these steps: Visit the official website: Click on the link that says 'Answer Key Challenge for CUET (UG) 2025'. Log in using your CUET Application Number and Password. Click on 'Click to View/Challenge Answer Key". Choose your test subject from the dropdown list. The CUET 2025 answer key for the selected subject will appear on the screen. If you find any discrepancies in the CUET UG 2025 provisional answer key, you can raise objections by following these steps: Visit the official website at Click on the link 'Answer Key Challenge for CUET (UG) 2025'. Log in using your CUET Application Number and Password. Click on 'Click to View/Challenge Answer Key". Select your test subject from the dropdown menu to view the answer key. For each question you wish to challenge, select the correct option you believe is right and provide supporting documents or explanations if needed. Pay a non-refundable fee of Rs 200 per question challenged using the available online payment modes (Debit/Credit Card, Net Banking, UPI, etc.). Direct Link After successful payment, your objection will be submitted. Ensure you complete the process before 11 PM on June 20, 2025.