Nagpur: Members of the Nagpur University Senate on Thursday continued their veiled attack on the government accused him intentionally to help private colleges in filling in their graduate seats.
The house was then postponed until the Diwali vacation, because the entire agenda could not be completed in the first two days.
For most meetings, problems are not related to students discussed on both days.
Some of them were related to members of “personal agenda” and even administrations complained about it, NU officials told toi.
The lecturer in NU Physics Department of Compachash Chimankar previously showed that the government had conducted a centralized registration procedure (stamp) for only 40 departments while leaving affiliated colleges.
He said, last year, the University has included an affiliated college in a hat, which significantly helps students.
Other members who informed that NU had also started the lid late and, at the time, the reception in a private college was full, despite the fact that their costs were on the higher side compared to the university and the majority of them did not have facilities such as laboratories and Library.
They further showed that because of delays, seats in many NU departments were still empty even after the deadline for receipt was extended until October 31.
Senior member of Rajesh Bhoyar shows that if private universities benefit from NU expenditures, administration must be introspection why students prefer reception there despite exorbitant costs and exploitation incidents.
“Unacciliated colleges cannot be considered responsible for the remaining seats at the University.
I used to come from Wardha to attend college in Nagpur.
The head of the department needs to think about why students turn to NU,” he said.
Replying to the discussion, Deputy Chancellor Subhash Chaudhari defended NU’s decision to exclude college affiliated from the lid for postgraduate courses, stating that there were no rules to include it.
He said the stamp for the NU Department was the management board decision.
Several members told Tii after the meeting that the top private universities had demanded Lakh in donations from students because Nu’s hat was delayed.
They said, the students were made to run from one college to another school for prospectus and receipts, without centralized acceptance.