admission seekers
BCL expels RU leader Tonmoy for hiring proxy candidates for admission seekers
Bangladesh Chhatra League (BCL) Central Executive Committee expelled Mushfiq Tahmid Tonmoy, organising secretary of its Rajshahi University (RU) unit, for hiring proxy examinees for admission seekers.
Tonmoy was expelled from the Awami League's student wing for violating party discipline with his involvement in admission test irregularities, BCL Central Committee President Al Nahian Khan Joy and General Secretary Lekhak Bhattacharjee said Thursday.
On July 26, four people were arrested for tampering with the admission test of the "A" unit of the RU through impersonation. Later, a mobile court sentenced them to one-year imprisonment.
Read: RU aspirants' protest: Padma Express leaves Rajshahi after 2.5 hours
One of the arrestees, Bayezid Khan, told the police that Tonmoy had arranged for him to appear as a proxy.
RU Wednesday cancelled the entry test result of an admission seeker who hired a proxy examinee to take the exam for him.
Proxy examinee Bayezid secured the first position on behalf of Tanveer Ahmed in Group-2 of the A unit entry test for the academic year 2021-2022.
2 years ago
Admission seekers block CU shuttle trains
The shuttle train service on the Chittagong University (CU) route was hit on Thursday morning, as 50-60 admission seekers blocked the track in Sholosohor demanding they be allowed to appear for the entrance test again.
The protesters shouted slogans as they sat on the track, delaying the shuttle trains that ferry students from Chattogram railway station to CU by over half an hour.
Also read: BCL blockade halts classes, exams at CU
Their repeated requests to the university authorities, the UGC and even the Education Ministry over the past six months for letting them take the entry test have only fallen on deaf ears, the protesters told UNB.
Saikat Majumdar, one of the protesters, said, "We completed our 12th standard exams in 2020 and took the admission test for the academic year 2020-2021 of the university. The CU authorities changed the exam schedule thrice during the pandemic."
When contacted, CU Proctor Prof Rabiul Hasan Bhuiya said, “There is no scope for taking the admission test again and the protest movement of the admission seekers is illogical."
2 years ago
Counter-protest: DU admission seekers block Dhaka-Aricha highway
Vehicular traffic on the busy Dhaka-Aricha highway came to a halt for nearly an hour on Friday, as candidates seeking admission to seven colleges under Dhaka University blocked the high-speed corridor in protest against the indefinite nation-wide bus and truck strike.
The admission seekers gathered on the Dhaka-Aricha highway around 8am and blocked both its carriageways, halting traffic. This was after they faced trouble reaching the entrance examination centers owing to the public transport strike.
They were soon joined by a number of government bank job aspirants who faced a difficult time finding alternative modes of transport to reach their exam centres.
Also read:Commuters suffer as buses stay off roads
3 years ago
Admission delayed, admission denied?
The ferocious second wave of the pandemic has further disrupted the higher education landscape across the world. And Bangladesh is no exception.
Here too, Covid-19 has exacerbated uncertainty for over a million-plus students preparing for admission tests to get into colleges and universities, with most of them deferred to curb the spread of the virus.
The uncertainty has left these admission seekers scrambling to figure out what else they might consider in case they fail to bag a seat in the university of their choice.
Read:DU to hold UG admission test from Oct 1, affiliated college test from Oct 29
The most sought-after Dhaka University, for instance, has deferred the admission test for all its undergraduate courses for the third time this academic year, citing the worsening Covid-19 situation in the country.
The other leading academic institutions -- Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (BUET), Chittagong University, Jahangirnagar University, Rajshahi University, and the three public technical universities (CUET-RUET-KUET) -- have all put on hold the admission tests.
Forget the admission tests, a number of the 49 public universities in Bangladesh has not been able to conduct internal examinations since the pandemic broke out, resulting in sessions jam.
Read JU admission seekers can pay application fees through bKash
In fact, in the year 2020, a total of 13,67,377 students successfully completed the Higher Secondary School Certificate (HSC) or equivalent examinations, and by now they were supposed to complete six months of university education.
This uncertainty over university admissions and the consequent anxiety have taken a toll on the mental health of many students and made some of them more vulnerable to drug use, UNB has learnt.
Female students in the rural areas of Bangladesh are the worst hit, with many of their parents losing their life savings during the pandemic. Many such parents have been forced to marry off their daughters at an early age in the past one year -- dashing their dreams of a higher education.
Read HC turns down writ seeking cancellation of MBBS admission test results
“I had a dream, a dream to complete my graduation. But the academic sessions jam and the pandemic changed my life forever," Saifa Nasrin, one such sufferer, told UNB over the phone from rural Bangladesh.
Last month, Saifa's parents married her off to reduce the financial burden on the family. "My husband has made it clear to me that he's not in favour of my higher studies."
Of the 49 public universities, 30 are supposed to conduct admission tests for undergraduate programmes.
Read: HC questions exclusion of SSC-2016 passed students from admission test
Some 20 of these universities -- barring the top five -- have decided to implement a cluster admission test system. Seven agriculture and three technical universities will also follow the same cluster system.
Bangladesh also has 107 private varsities and about 2,254 colleges affiliated to National University.
Moreover, these 20 public universities -- excluding Dhaka University, BUET, Rajshahi University, Jahangirnagar University and Chittagong University -- are said to have received a total of 3,81,406 applications for 2020-21 UG admission tests.
Read DU admission tests rescheduled amid pandemic
3 years ago