Delhi University
The University of Delhi has commenced the registration process for admission to its postgraduate and BTech programmes for the academic session 2025–26. As per the official notification, applications for postgraduate courses opened on Friday, while BTech registrations began on Saturday. The online application window for both categories will remain active until 11:59 pm on June 6, 2025.
Postgraduate admissions will be based exclusively on candidates’ performance in the CUET (PG)-2025, subject to the eligibility requirements detailed in the PG Bulletin of Information for 2025–26. For BTech programmes, admission will be granted based on candidates’ positions in the Common Rank List (CRL) of JEE (Main)-2025 (Paper-I).
The BTech programmes on offer include Computer Science and Engineering, Electronics and Communication Engineering, and Electrical Engineering, as outlined in the information brochure.
The University has urged aspirants to refer carefully to the respective Bulletins of Information and the Common Seat Allocation System (CSAS PG 2025–26) to understand the minimum and programme-specific eligibility criteria, the seat allocation process, and other key admission procedures. These documents are available at: admission.uod.ac.in.
Applicants have also been advised to visit the official portals — pgadmission.uod.ac.in for postgraduate programmes and engineering.uod.ac.in for BTech courses — to stay updated on important announcements.
In other academic developments, Ramjas College will offer a one-year Advanced Diploma (JP-3) in Japanese. Meanwhile, the Department of Distance and Continuing Education has received approval to launch certificate courses in French, German, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese at the Open Learning Development Center, CISBC, beginning from the 2024–25 session.
The Academic Council also endorsed updated syllabi for various faculties under the Undergraduate Curriculum Framework (UGCF) 2022. Several new Skill Enhancement Courses (SECs) were approved, including Robotics and Automation, Introduction to IoT using Arduino in the Electronics stream, Low-Code/No-Code Development in Computer Science, and a suite of Biomedical Science courses such as Forensic Analysis of Biological Evidence, Forensic Toxicology, Questioned Document Examination, and Injury and Death.
The council further sanctioned the translation of Persian, Arabic, and Urdu texts within the syllabus into English to enhance accessibility for a broader range of students. During the Zero Hour of the meeting, the Vice Chancellor also stressed the urgency of timely recruitment.