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| + | ====== College Shuts Mid Course: How Transfer, Refund and Your Degree Are Protected ====== | ||
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| + | **Reviewed on:** 2026-06-12. | ||
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| + | Arjun is in the third semester of a four year B.Tech at a private engineering college in Greater Noida, affiliated to a state technical university. In November the management announces it will close at the end of the semester. Arjun paid the annual fee of Rs 1,10,000 in July. Here is how his situation resolves, step by step, because the same machinery applies to most closures: | ||
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| + | * **His studies continue.** AICTE' | ||
| + | * **His money comes back pro rata.** The academic year runs roughly July to May. If the college teaches only July to December, about five of eleven fee months are used. Arjun' | ||
| + | * **His degree stays safe.** The degree is awarded by the university, not the college. His completed semesters, marks, and credits sit in the university' | ||
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| + | The order of operations matters: secure the transfer first, fight for the refund in parallel, and use RTI to pin down the official record. Here is each piece. | ||
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| + | ===== Step 1: verify the official status, not the management' | ||
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| + | A closing management often understates the problem. Check three sources for your exact course and batch year: the AICTE approved institutions list for technical courses, the UGC recognition pages for the university, and the affiliating university' | ||
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| + | ===== Step 2: write to the university registrar for the migration plan ===== | ||
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| + | The affiliating university is the body that must approve a student protection plan: which colleges will receive students, how credits map, and how examination forms will be handled. Write to the registrar asking for the approved arrangement for your batch, your transfer and migration certificates, | ||
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| + | ===== Step 3: move fast on the transfer ===== | ||
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| + | Receiving colleges have limited sanctioned seats, and migration windows are short. Apply the moment the plan is announced, with mark sheets, enrolment proof, and fee receipts ready. Do not wait for the refund to settle before securing your seat. A study year lost waiting for money is the worst outcome a closure can inflict. | ||
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| + | ===== Step 4: claim the pro rata refund in writing ===== | ||
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| + | Send the college management a dated demand: fees paid, months taught, months undelivered, | ||
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| + | ===== Step 5: use RTI to lock the record ===== | ||
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| + | Unlike a coaching dispute, the closure of a degree college runs through public authorities at every turn, and that makes RTI genuinely powerful here. The affiliating state university, AICTE, UGC, and the state higher education department are all covered. Useful RTI questions: | ||
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| + | 1. Certified copy of the order or letter by which [college name] | ||
| + | was granted progressive closure or had affiliation withdrawn, | ||
| + | with date and conditions. | ||
| + | 2. Copy of the student protection or migration plan approved for | ||
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| + | 3. List of receiving institutions allotted for the said batch and | ||
| + | the number of seats in each. | ||
| + | 4. Status of my enrolment, examination records and credits held by | ||
| + | the university against enrolment no. [number]. | ||
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| + | File through [[file-rti-online-india|the RTI online route]] for central bodies or the state portal for the university. A PIO who stays silent for thirty days can be taken to [[act: | ||
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| + | ===== What this guide does not cover ===== | ||
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| + | A college that keeps operating but withholds your certificates after withdrawal is a different fight, covered in [[practical-guides: | ||
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| + | ===== Frequently asked questions ===== | ||
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| + | ==== I graduated before the college closed. Is my degree still valid? ==== | ||
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| + | Yes, if the college was affiliated and the university recognised during your study period. The university conferred the degree and its records prove it. If an employer or foreign evaluator raises doubts, an RTI to the university confirming the award is strong evidence. | ||
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| + | ==== Will all my completed semesters and credits carry to the new college? ==== | ||
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| + | Within the same university, yes, the credits are university records. If you are moved to a college under a different university, the migration plan defines the credit mapping. Get that mapping in writing before you join, especially for backlog papers. | ||
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| + | ==== The receiving college charges higher fees. Do I pay the difference? ==== | ||
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| + | Practice varies. Some state migration orders direct receiving colleges to charge the closed college' | ||
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| + | ==== My education loan was disbursed directly to the closed college. What happens? ==== | ||
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| + | Inform your bank in writing immediately, | ||
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| + | ==== Who decides which college I am moved to? Can I choose? ==== | ||
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| + | The affiliating university and the state government allot receiving colleges, usually by branch and proximity. Many plans allow a preference list when multiple colleges have seats. Submit preferences early and keep proof of submission. | ||
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| + | ==== My college kept admitting students after losing affiliation. What are my options? ==== | ||
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| + | That is a more serious situation than closure. Students admitted without affiliation may need the university to regularise them, which sometimes happens under court orders. Gather your admission documents, file RTIs on the affiliation dates, and consult an education lawyer promptly. Where money was taken on a false promise of recognition, | ||
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| + | Download the college closure transfer and refund checklist (PDF). | ||
| + | ===== College closure: Student transfer, refund, and degree — how to get your rights ===== | ||
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| + | When a college closes — complete guide for students on transfer, refund, and degree: | ||
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| + | - **Step 1: The problem.** (a) private colleges — especially engineering, | ||
| + | - **Step 2: Legal framework.** (a) UGC (the University Grants Commission) has regulations on college closure — the UGC (Establishment of and Maintenance of Standards in Private Universities) Regulations, | ||
| + | - **Step 3: How to get a transfer.** (a) approach the affiliating university (with the closure notice — or the fact of closure — and the request for transfer — the university should: (i) identify other colleges — with the same course — and vacant seats, (ii) issue a transfer certificate — and a no-objection certificate, | ||
| + | - **Step 4: How to get a refund.** (a) demand the refund (from the college — in writing — with the fee receipts — and the closure notice — the college should refund: (i) the fees paid — for the uncompleted period, (ii) the security deposit, (iii) the hostel and mess fees — for the uncompleted period, (iv) the library and lab deposits), (b) UGC/AICTE refund rules: (i) the college must refund the fees — without deduction — for the uncompleted period, (ii) if the student withdraws before the start of the course: full refund — minus Rs 1,000 processing fee, (iii) if the student withdraws after the start — but before the closure: proportionate refund — for the uncompleted period, (c) if the college does not refund: (i) file a complaint with UGC/AICTE (the regulator can direct the college to refund — and can take action — for non-compliance), | ||
| + | - **Step 5: How to get the degree.** (a) if the course is completed (the student has completed all semesters — and the exams — and the project — but the college closed before issuing the degree): (i) approach the affiliating university (which can issue the degree — directly — because the student was enrolled through the college — which is affiliated to the university), | ||
| + | - **Step 6: Practical tips.** (a) keep all documents (admission letter, fee receipts, mark sheets, ID card, attendance record, course syllabus — for the transfer — and for the refund — and for the degree), (b) act quickly (the transfer and refund process takes time — act quickly — to avoid losing a semester — or a year), (c) form a group (with other affected students — and approach the university — and the regulator — and the court — together — for a stronger case — and lower cost per student), (d) file RTI early (to get the closure status — and the refund status — and the transfer status — before the college destroys the records), (e) approach the media (the media attention can pressure the college — and the regulator — to act — and to ensure the transfer and refund), (f) Example: A private engineering college in UP closed mid-course — 200 students were affected — the students formed a group — and approached AICTE — AICTE directed the affiliating university to transfer the students — to other AICTE-approved colleges — the students were transferred — and completed the course — and got the degrees — from the new colleges — the students also filed a consumer complaint — and got a refund of Rs 2 lakh per student — for the uncompleted period — with interest — and compensation. | ||
| + | - **Step 7: Government and regulatory remedies.** (a) UGC Student Grievance Portal (ugc.gov.in — the student can file a complaint — online — for college closure — and non-refund — and non-transfer), | ||
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| + | See [[https:// | ||
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