Delhi University admits 520 foreign students this year
A total of 520 foreign students have been admitted by Delhi University across undergraduate, postgraduate and PhD courses this academic season, a decline of over 27.5 per cent from the previous year.
The maximum number of students this year is from Nepal (110), followed by Tibet (100) and Bangladesh (85).
A university official attributed the decline in the number of admissions by foreign students to the delay in the start of the academic session.
In 2022 year, 520 foreign students have been admitted to the university compared to 663 students in 2021.
The number of applications from foreign nationals has also dipped this year by over 28 per cent.
“The university received application forms from over 7,000 applicants this year. Last year, the varsity received over 9,000 applications,” Professor Amarjiva Lochan, Jt Dean, International Relations, told PTI.
This year, the maximum number of applications are from Nepal. Last year, it was from Afghan nationals.
The admission process started in March and it was over in the middle of July.
“As many as 1,500 students were selected for admission. Out of them, only 520 have confirmed their admission and are coming to Delhi. In UG courses, 320 students have taken admission, and in PG and PhD courses, 100 students and 50 students respectively have got admission in DU colleges,” Lochan said.
The official said that the maximum number of applications were for B.Com (Hons), English (Hons), BA Psychology and BA Computer science.
Foreign nationals are admitted to various programmes of study at the University of Delhi under two categories — self-financing students and students with the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR), government of India under its various scholarship schemes.
Foreign nationals seeking admission in any course — certificate, diploma, undergraduate, postgraduate, MPhil and PhD — are exempted from the entrance test. The admission process is done based on a merit list.
The process from ‘Application to Admission’ comprises four broad steps: application, evaluation by the varsity, online admission formalities and formalities after reaching Delhi.
“We have followed the same traditional method. The admission has been conducted solely based on their marks. A merit list has been prepared,” Lochan said.
This year, the university allowed all aspirants to list their college preferences.
“Earlier, only the top 30 students were allowed to list out colleges. This year we have allowed all the students to tell us their college preferences,” he said, adding colleges in North Campus are the most sought-after by the foreign nationals.
“Most of the colleges in North Campus have hostels and the majority of the classes in these colleges are done in English, that is why students prefer North Campus colleges,” Lochan noted.
When asked about the reason for the decline in application numbers from foreign nationals, Lochan said, “There has been a delay in academic session this year due to several reasons. That is why we have received fewer applications.
Source: The Indian Express/PTI