BANGALORE:
The Karnataka government and college managements have arrived at a
consensus to conduct a single entrance exam for their seats. Earlier
there were two tests: CMAT and KMAT.
The government seats will be filled through centralized counselling conducted by the Visvesvaraya Technological University. The other half will be filled by the management using PGCET scores. The exam which will be open to non-Karnataka students is expected to be conducted on June 2 or 8.
Vacant government seats will fall into the management quota after August 30. To fill these, the managements will conduct KMAT. The test is likely to be held on September 1 and is mainly for non-Karnataka students. The decision has been taken following the poor turnout for these courses last year. The All-India Council for Technical Education had earlier made CMAT mandatory to pursue these masters. But not many applied for the exam and around 60% of seats had fallen vacant.
There are around 200 colleges of which 22 are government run offering these courses. Around 25,000 seats are up for grabs. Half of them fall under government quota. There are around 12,000 MCA seats in the country. Around 18,000 students appear for PGCET every year. Posted By: Best Education Hub
The government seats will be filled through centralized counselling conducted by the Visvesvaraya Technological University. The other half will be filled by the management using PGCET scores. The exam which will be open to non-Karnataka students is expected to be conducted on June 2 or 8.
Vacant government seats will fall into the management quota after August 30. To fill these, the managements will conduct KMAT. The test is likely to be held on September 1 and is mainly for non-Karnataka students. The decision has been taken following the poor turnout for these courses last year. The All-India Council for Technical Education had earlier made CMAT mandatory to pursue these masters. But not many applied for the exam and around 60% of seats had fallen vacant.
There are around 200 colleges of which 22 are government run offering these courses. Around 25,000 seats are up for grabs. Half of them fall under government quota. There are around 12,000 MCA seats in the country. Around 18,000 students appear for PGCET every year. Posted By: Best Education Hub
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