Sri Guru Tegh Bahadur Khalsa College

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Coordinates: 28°41′43″N 77°12′33″E / 28.69528°N 77.20917°E / 28.69528; 77.20917

Sri Guru Tegh Bahadar Khalsa College, University of Delhi
File:Sri Guru Tegh Bahadur Khalsa College seal.jpg
Seal of SGTB Khalsa College, Delhi
Mottoਅਘਾਹਾ ਕੂ ਤ੍ਰਾਘਿ (Punjabi) Aghāhā Kū Trāghi
Motto in English
Look Forward
TypeCoeducation
Established1951
PrincipalJaswinder Singh
Undergraduates~4700
Location,
India
CampusNorth Campus
AffiliationsUniversity of Delhi
Websitesgtbkhalsadu.ac.in

Sri Guru Tegh Bahadur Khalsa College is a constituent college of the University of Delhi. It was established in 1951, and offers courses for science, commerce and arts in India.[1] In 2018, the highest admission cut-off was 99.66 per cent for B.Sc. (Hons) in Electronics in SGTB Khalsa College. In the humanities stream, Khalsa College had set the highest cut-off at 99 per cent for BA (Hons) in Political Science.[2]

The college has 59 classrooms, 19 labs, 6 research labs, indoor and outdoor sports facilities, gymnasium, cafeteria, bank, and medical facilities in proximity, besides other utility services such as post-office and market. The college is well connected by road and Delhi Metro link, and majority students are day-scholars. A hostel for girls can accommodate 147 students, and a hostel for boys was inaugurated in February 2021.

The college have air-conditioned classrooms with projection facilities and Internet, campus-wide wired as well as a wireless network having Internet connectivity, with 24x7 Internet in campus and an overall computer-student ratio of 1 : 2.95.[3]

History

Sri Guru Tegh Bahadur Khalsa College, a constituent college of the University of Delhi, was established in 1951 and has been, since, maintained by Delhi Sikh Gurudwara Management Committee (DSGMC), a statutory body established under an act of the Parliament of India. The focus of the college at the time of inception was to ensure a comprehensive social transformation through access to quality education, in particular to young Punjabi refugees of partition in 1947, and to conserve and promote Punjabi language, culture, and heritage. The college is named after the Ninth Guru of Sikhism Sri Guru Tegh Bahadur, who sacrificed his life to uphold secular values and is an institution with the cosmopolitan environment and progressive outlook. Khalsa College is a constituent of the University of Delhi. The college began in four rooms in a school in Dev Nagar with 49 students and a faculty of 6. It moved to its present location in 1973.

Academics

Academic programmes

At present, there are 18 undergraduate programmes, two B.Tech. programmes, 12 postgraduate programmes, one postgraduate diploma, two undergraduate diplomas, and 9 certificate courses, making a total of 44 programmes. As of the session 2015–16, there were 3,768 students in these programmes, and 140 full-time teachers, out of which 101 permanent. During last four years,[when?] 57 teachers participated in various staff-development programmes. The college offers the following courses:

Academic work

The college has undertaken projects in the field of ciliate zoology and has reported new species of protozoans from Northeast India. It collaborates with the Natural History Museum, London and University of Camerino.

It offers a dual credential programs in collaboration with University of the Fraser Valley and Avans.

Sports

The college has a spacious playing field for hockey, cricket, and football, and facilities for indoor games like table tennis, carom, and chess, as well as a mini gymnasium. The Sant Harchand Singh Longowal Sports Complex consists of a gymnasium. A squash racket room, three table tennis rooms, and changing rooms for players are also in this complex. The college has a floodlit lawn tennis court.

Rankings

College rankings
General – India
NIRF (Colleges) (2020)[4]30

It is ranked 30th across India by National Institutional Ranking Framework in 2020.[1]

Placement

Apart from bringing a varied list of recruiters to the campus, the Placement Cell organises talks, study abroad seminars, internship opportunities and workshops for the collective student body. Training and Placement Cell of the college provides following facilities at the college premises.

  1. Conducting mock personal interviews and group discussions to make students aware of the selection procedures
  2. Summer industrial training, internship and final placement of students.
  3. Conducting industrial visits and industry-oriented training programmes.
  4. Invite professional guest speakers to impart necessary inputs for the above-mentioned activities.

Major recruiters

Major companies visit the campus at the annual placement drive. Some of the major recruiters at Shri Guru Tegh Bahadur Khalsa College are as follows:[5] E&Y, KPMG, Deloitte, PWC, Zomato, SBI, Grant Thorton, TCS, Wipro, Tech Mahindra, IBM Daksh, Genpact, ICICI Prudential, S&P Global Market Intelligence, Protiviti and Housing.com.

Student life

College societies

Academic societies

  • Curieux – The Computer Science Society: It was launched on 11th February, 2014 under the guidance of Mr. Param Dev Sharma. Curieux society is one of the Top Tech-Societies of University of Delhi. It equips students with the environment and expertise needed to succeed in this IT driven world. Curieux boasts off a competitive programming club as well which aims to encourage interest and instill skills in this field.
  • SPARKS-The Physics Society
  • BA Program Society;Festival:Revel
  • Catenation- The Chemistry Society
  • Raah – the Business Economics society; festival: Perspica; society magazine: Bizonomist
  • Comsoc- The Commerce Society; Festival: Comzone.
  • The Business Café(TBC) is the editorial board of Department of Commerce. The department has its own line of bi-monthly e-business magazine, BizGeist. The inaugural edition of BizGeist was uncovered by Dr. Saudamini Das (NABARD Chair Professor at Indian Institute of Economic Growth). TBC also publishes the annual department magazine, Spectracom.[6]
  • Ecotryst – economics society; festival: Convergence and Annual Economic Conclave; Society Magazine: E-Quest
  • English Literary Society; festival: Arabesque
  • Hindi Sahitya Sabha – the Hindi literary society; newspaper: Aagaaz
  • Punjabi Literary Society
  • Dāstaan – The History Society
  • Aakriti – the zoology society
  • Prakriti – botany society
  • Polis- political science society, festival- Eudaimonia
  • Aavritii – The Electronics society
  • Junto - The Civil Services Society
  • Enactus - Social Entrepreneurship Society
  • TradeX - A student Organization focusing on Trading related activities in stocks, commodities, crypto, and other disciplines.

The college magazine, The Tegh, consists of English, Hindi and Punjabi sections.

Co-curricular and extracurricular societies

  • Connecting Dreams Foundation, Sgtb Khalsa Chapter-Social Entrepreneurship Society, Currently having 2 running projects : Project Sarvaangeen & Project Kilkari.
  • CHALCHITRA - The Filmmaking Society. It was founded in 2021 by Pradyumna Bawari, Divgunn Singh, Tushar Mittal, Anushka Roy, Aryan Rana, Eshvarya Bhagwani, Gurbani Kaur and Dipneet Kaur under the guidance of Mr. Asad Ahmed and Mr. Nachiketa Singh.
  • ETRAM – The Western dance society
  • Swarang – the music society.
  • Acrostic – poetry society. This was founded in 2012 by three students Niyati, Shakti and Malini under convenorship of Novy Kapadia and held its maiden poetry recitation event in October 2012 with poets, professors and students of various colleges of Delhi University in attendance.
  • Pinhole – photography society. This was founded in the academic year 2012–13, and held its first successful exhibition in October, where they showcased works of the society members.
  • DADS – debate and discussion society.
  • Anhad – divinity society
  • Environmental Club
  • Vigour – Bhangra and Gidha society
  • Renaissance – fashion society; deactivated
  • Trendsetterz – choreography and dance society. The first president of the society, Shaily Tandon, led the choreography team.
  • Strokes – fine arts society
  • Ankur – Dramatics society
  • Teghpreneurs - The Entrepreneurship and Development Cell
  • FinWisory - The High Finance Society

Noted people

College principals

  • G.S. Talib, 1951-1952
  • Sachdev Singh, 1952-1954
  • G.S. Mansukhani, 1954-1955
  • Prof. Niranjan Singh, 1955-1957
  • G.S. Bal, 1957-1971
  • Gurdip Singh Randhawa, 1971-1992
  • Udham Singh, 1988
  • Tirath Singh, 1988-1995
  • D.S. Claire, 1995-2005
  • Jaswinder Singh, 2005–present

Notable alumni

References

  1. ^ http://www.sgtbkhalsadu.ac.in/abt.jsp[dead link]
  2. ^ "Delhi University issues first cut-off, LSR asks 98.75% for B.A - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 5 January 2019.
  3. ^ "Welcome :: Shri Guru Teg Bahadur Khalsa College University Of Delhi Powered By :: Redox Systems Pvt. Ltd". www.sgtbkhalsadu.ac.in. Retrieved 5 January 2019.
  4. ^ "National Institutional Ranking Framework 2020 (Colleges)". National Institutional Ranking Framework. Ministry of Education. 11 June 2020.
  5. ^ "Welcome :: Shri Guru Teg Bahadur Khalsa College University Of Delhi Powered By :: Redox Systems Pvt. Ltd". www.sgtbkhalsadu.ac.in. Retrieved 5 January 2019.
  6. ^ "Editorial Board Report 2018-19". 19 April 2019.

External links