Admission to DU School of Open Learning now just a click away!
While Delhi University is still trying to streamline its admission process, the School of Open Learning (SOL) of the university will switch to an automated mode and take a leap towards paperless admission procedure.
Going completely automated the students passing Class XII from CBSE Board or the National Institute of Open School, aspiring to take admission in the SOL will have the facility of taking online admission in undergraduate courses, without filling any manual form or submitting any documents. From photograph to signature, everything will be uploaded on the SOL website. The SOL is also streamlining the process to provide customized study material, on the SOL email addresses of the online applicants.
Over 1.25 lakh students are expected to take admission in SOL this academic session. The SOL to its students provides online application form which can be downloaded from the website to be filled and submitted. From this year, the students will be able to register themselves on the SOL page and fill the form online. “We will link our data with the CBSE. The students who pass out from the CBSE board or the NIOS will just need to feed their roll numbers. All the other details which are linked on the CBSE result will automatically get uploaded in the online form,” said the Dean of SOL HC Pokhriyal.
Pokhriyal also said that there will be no need for the students to send any forms to the university after it has been successfully filled online. “We are also trying to link all the course material. The student after choosing the paper will get the e study material of the various papers, on the mailbox,” added Pokhriyal.
To start with the SOL has started this facility with the CBSE and the NOIS students. “The CBSE and the NOIS data reach us soon after the results. We can link it with our admission systems,” added Pokhriyal. About 90 percent of the students who take admission in the SOL are from the CBSE Board.
The students who are in the second and third year of the graduation course will also be allowed to fill the examination form by the system. “A lot of our students come from far flung areas and this system will help them to stay in touch with us from where ever they are,” feels the dean. The SOL is also hoping that opening this new gateway will help in reducing the rush at the SOL counters in north campus.
While Delhi University is still trying to streamline its admission process, the School of Open Learning (SOL) of the university will switch to an automated mode and take a leap towards paperless admission procedure.
Going completely automated the students passing Class XII from CBSE Board or the National Institute of Open School, aspiring to take admission in the SOL will have the facility of taking online admission in undergraduate courses, without filling any manual form or submitting any documents. From photograph to signature, everything will be uploaded on the SOL website. The SOL is also streamlining the process to provide customized study material, on the SOL email addresses of the online applicants.
Over 1.25 lakh students are expected to take admission in SOL this academic session. The SOL to its students provides online application form which can be downloaded from the website to be filled and submitted. From this year, the students will be able to register themselves on the SOL page and fill the form online. “We will link our data with the CBSE. The students who pass out from the CBSE board or the NIOS will just need to feed their roll numbers. All the other details which are linked on the CBSE result will automatically get uploaded in the online form,” said the Dean of SOL HC Pokhriyal.
Pokhriyal also said that there will be no need for the students to send any forms to the university after it has been successfully filled online. “We are also trying to link all the course material. The student after choosing the paper will get the e study material of the various papers, on the mailbox,” added Pokhriyal.
To start with the SOL has started this facility with the CBSE and the NOIS students. “The CBSE and the NOIS data reach us soon after the results. We can link it with our admission systems,” added Pokhriyal. About 90 percent of the students who take admission in the SOL are from the CBSE Board.
The students who are in the second and third year of the graduation course will also be allowed to fill the examination form by the system. “A lot of our students come from far flung areas and this system will help them to stay in touch with us from where ever they are,” feels the dean. The SOL is also hoping that opening this new gateway will help in reducing the rush at the SOL counters in north campus.




