Sindh Govt Announces Good News For Students Failing To Gain Admission In Intermediate Part-I

Sindh Govt Will Not Require Domicile And PRC For Intermediate Admissions

Sindh Govt Will Not Require Domicile And PRC For Intermediate Admissions 2022

The Sindh Government has decided to eliminate the requirement to provide a Domicile and PRC for Intermediate admissions.

According to an official statement from the Sindh Directorate General of Colleges, students are no longer required to provide their Domicile and PRC when applying for an intermediate admission.

All universities have been tasked with ensuring compliance with the latest guidelines and facilitating the admission of junior high school students, the notice added.

It should be noted that Sindh State Universities previously required applicants to provide various documents at the time of admission, including residential address and PRC, among others.

Public sector universities in Sindh always require applicants to provide their address and CPR along with other documents when submitting admission applications.

This strange requirement caused many problems for students who wanted to apply to state universities but were not residents or permanent residents in Sindh.

If you want to apply to public universities in the state, you still have to fight your way through this gibberish until the state government abolishes this requirement at the university level as well.

Also Read: Sindh Govt Announces Good News For Students Failing To Gain Admission In Intermediate Part-I

In a separate development, the University of Sindh Department of Education (CED) launched an online student support system last week.

According to the information, teachers can now mark the attendance of students through the online system. The system also shares student attendance with their parents.

With the introduction of the online attendance system, CED Sindh hopes that the anomalies in the manual attendance system will be eliminated once and for all.

Also Read: Sindh’s New Inter Admissions Policy Puts 1.5 Million Students In Dire Straits

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