Monday, May 14, 2012

Top engineering schools can rise rate | Pricing in Top colleges to be increased from engineering

Top engineering schools can rise rate | Pricing in Top colleges to be increased from engineering :


1. the Supreme Court on Wednesday allowed 13 schools of engineering in the State to increase the fee for the academic year 2012-13. The amount of the fee shall be decided by the admission and quota regulation Committee AFRC based on rising rate requested by the schools and the documents submitted in support of its argument. Schools proposed rate rising include CBIT SRKR MGIT, GMR, G Pulla Reddy College, CVR College of engineering, Gokaraju Rangaraju, Vasavi, Kamala Institute of Technology, MVSR, Siddhardha VR, KSRM College and PVP Siddhartha College, CMR College of engineering and technology.


2. These schools would submit proposals to the Government which in turn will erase. The rise in pricing in these schools will be from 7 percent to 42 percent, for their proposals. An increase in the quota will be 3000 Rs. 15000 depending on current rate structure and the proposal of the school. The APSCHE has clarified that the hhike of the quota for the year 2012-13. The following are the proposals of various schools of step higher than the increase in the fee for courses of Engineering:


(1) MGIT (Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Technology): 25%
(2) Institute of technology of GMR: 27%
(3) G. Pullareddy Engineering College: 15 percent
(4) CBIT (Chaitanya Bharathi Institute of Technology): 42 percent
(5) Faculty of TRC engineering: 19 percent
(6) Gokaraju Rangaraju College of Engineering: 7%
(7) SRKR Engineering Faculty: 21%
(8) Vasavi College of Engineering: 22%
(9) Institute of technology of kamala: 14%
(10) MVSR Engineering College: 14%
(11) VR Siddhartha Engineering Faculty: 13 per cent
(12) College of engineering of KSRM: 13 per cent
(13) PVP Siddhardha College of Engineering: 10 percent.


3 Management of other universities in engineering also requested the Court upwards similar permit the rate and they are arguing that the AFRC has not sought in their proposals and not presented before the Court. The SC has clarified that the University has to submit a company before the Supreme Court in a week as a later submission of new proposals for the AFRC.

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