Guys, if any seniors available could help us on the pre-requisites like the formal uniforms required by us...Coz itseeems some colleges have certain colour codes which they agree for the formals. Is there any such policies at MANAGE ??
Hi... My GD/PI was on 06th April. It started with the presentation given by a senior about college and course. Next was Essay Writing. The topic was.. "Problem of Black money in India"
Next was GD round.. topic was... "Politics on Universities should be banned"
After that there was extempore round... Topics were very general and funny like..My reading habits, my favourite food, I am the best friend one can have, My hobbies.....
And finally PI.. There were 5 prof... they all were very supportive.. asked very simple questions like your CAT percentile, college you applied for, where do you stay, your education, family background....
So my suggestion is just relax and answer with confidence.
At Lovely Professional University, there are generally no special reserved seats for students who already have an agriculture background in graduation when compared with other eligible students. Admission is mainly based on eligibility criteria and merit in the qualifying degree or entrance test such as LPUNEST. However, for most postgraduate agriculture programs like M.Sc Agriculture, the university requires that students must have completed a relevant bachelor’s degree such as B.Sc Agriculture or B.Sc Agriculture (Hons.) with the required marks.
This means the university does not exactly “reserve” seats for agriculture graduates, but the course eligibility itself prefers students who already studied agriculture in their bachelor’s degree. Since the subjects in M.Sc Agriculture are advanced and specialized, having a B.Sc Agriculture background is usually required to understand the curriculum properly.
So in simple terms, at LPU the main requirement for postgraduate agriculture courses is having a relevant agriculture degree with the minimum percentage. Admission is then decided through merit or entrance scores rather than giving preference through reserved seats to certain undergraduate courses