If you are a candidate about to appear for the engineering counselling session beginning Friday, this is an advice best followed.
The Tamil Nadu Engineering Admissions officials are warning students against falling into the trap of dubious consultants, who appear every year at the counselling centre during the admission process. In the guise of helping students, these “agents”, usually commissioned by nondescript engineering colleges that find it hard to attract candidates, end up recommending institutions that pay them even if it is not the best choice that the student could look at given his/her marks and rank.
A senior official at the Anna University said, over the last several years, a few such agents have been caught in the act and handed over to police.
Explaining the modus operandi of these agents, the official said they pose as consultants and target students who haven’t yet decided the college or the course they want to study or had missed the opportunity to avail of a seat in a preferred institution due to their ranks.
Engineering Colleges Tamil Nadu
“They claim they have knowledge about the best colleges for specific courses. Once they earn the trust of the candidates and their parents, they accompany them to the hall during the process and end up recommending the institution that pays them,” said the official.
Best Engineering Colleges
n order to identify such fraudsters, officials appointed by the University will mingle with the candidates starting Friday to see if they are approached by such agents. “We have assigned this duty to a few of our own people at the University. By this we hope to identify the fraudsters,” said the official, adding that the best way for students to avoid such agents is to refuse any help if they are approached by strangers and inform the officials in the centre about such people.
Fat Chance: Diet Coke Fights Obesity?
For related articles and more information, please visit OCA's Food Safety page and our Millions Against Monsanto page.Overweight 6-Year-Old Vows To Change Lifestyle After Second Heart Attack
HOUSTON—Describing his second heart failure in the span of two years as “a real wake up call,” obese 6-year-old Nicholas Bleyer announced Tuesday that he was finally trying to turn his life around.Obesity rates rise in county schools
By the time students in Forsyth County reach high school, more than 40 percent of them are overweight or obese, according to a BMI study released by Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools.