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Educational News Today
Saturday, June 28, 2008
Muslim students gain in engg admissions

Chennai: Muslim students will have a huge advantage in the single window counselling process for admission to government quota BE/BTech seats this year as 3.5% of the seats have been earmarked for them by the state government for the first time in the history of Tamil Nadu.

An analysis of the Tamil Nadu Engineering Admissions (TNEA 2008) merit list reveals that Muslim candidates will move up the ladder several fold during counselling. A key factor that will propel their prospects of getting admission in a preferred course and a good college is that the number of Muslim students is fewer compared to that of backward class students from the Hindu and Christian communities.


"The analysis reveals that a Hindu backward community student with a cut-off aggregate of 196.5 is placed 3004th in the overall rank list, with a BC rank of 1725. But in the case of a Muslim student who has scored the same mark and overall rank, the community ranking is 91. Going by this, a Muslim BC candidate will have an advantage of 1 to 2 marks compared to his counterparts from Hindu and Christian backward communities," says education consultant Jayaprakash Gandhi. The number of Muslim candidates who are in the fray is also less compared to other backward class students.

Christian students will not get a similar advantage, but compared to the Hindus they will stand to gain in the admission process.

Acknowledging that members of the Islamic community will stand to benefit from the reservations, Tamil Nadu Muslim Munnetra Kazhagam leader professor M H Jawahirullah said, "This reservation will help students of our community to attain excellence in higher education. This will also inspire many students in the coming years to take up professional education." He cautioned that during counselling, authorities must ensure that Muslim students who have a high cut-off score must be given admission under the open competition category. "Only students who have a lesser score should be admitted under the Muslim quota," he demanded

Meanwhile, the analysis has also thrown up startling information on the high level of competition among aspirants this year. "Last year, a candidate with a cut-off score off 195 was ranked in the 27095th slot in the merit list. This year, a student with the same score has fallen to 4831place. It indicates that for every one mark lost by a candidate, he/she slip in the merit list by 1400 slots. This would apply particularly for students in the cut-off range of 183 to 191," Gandhi explained.
Courtesy: Times of India
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