Mumbai: After the 16-year old Pushpa Suryavanshi killed herself
for not getting a seat in her preferred college in spite of spending money, the
Maharashtra state education ministry on Monday ‘has warned’ principals to stop
offline admissions in colleges. The direction also urged the students to not
accept admissions made through offline procedures.
The order also said that colleges still running an offline
admission procedure, will be held questionable and principals will be held
responsible for the entire process. Also, students who were not admitted
through online admission process, will later be ‘barred’ from all the board
examinations, said the notice, issued by the office of the deputy director of
education (DYDE), Mumbai division.
In case of the already conducted offline admissions,
according to DYDE, the colleges now have to return original documents, fees and
photographs already collected from the students.
Reports are that Suryavanshi had secured 84 percent marks
in the board examinations. “She hanged herself last Thursday for being denied
admission into a college of her preference despite paying the ‘fees’,” said an investigating
officer. Pushpa was a student of Sudhagad Education Society (SES) and wanted to
continue higher studies from there. Following her death, Principal Iqbal
Inamdar, who had promised Pushpa a seat in SES and has taken money from her, was
arrested.
“The DYDE has now opened the admission process again for
those who had not reported for admission after seat allocation. Thereafter,
three special rounds will be conducted for students who had not applied, had
filled in forms incorrectly and those who want to change their college or
stream,” as a DYDE official has noted.
Following the direction, students continued to lodge their
complaints in the DYDE office. While many complained about misleading
information about preferences of colleges and admission procedure, the
officials said that the students missed to fill their form properly, filling
the criterions. “I had filled in the first five preferences properly as advised
by the officials. But because we couldn’t submit an incomplete list, I filled
in the rest of my preferences at random,” said a student.
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