St. Joseph's College has a crackling new and sunny facade, the kind of building that would make you bright and wakeful once you enter every morning. Clean and white like new notepaper, its walls are as beamy as its energetic students. You will catch a boisterous bunch of them shooting the hoop if you walk in sometime post-lunch.
St. Joseph's has everything a proper college life should have - a nice little outdoor canteen that sells samosas, puffs, coffee and ice-cream; a couple of shady trees with circumscribing benches on which students sit and go yappity-yap; and a parking lot, demarcated by year and packed with gleaming Pulsars, Activas and Hondas. And to top it all, the college is co-educational! Now you know where Tollywood movies get the inspiration for their college flicks.
However, there isn't too much time for kids from Joseph's to indulge in Tollywood style gallivanting. That's because the attendance law has been passed in this school, too. They have what is called 'Central Attendance'. No, it's not something sophisticated like centralized warehousing or ERP, but just a roll call at the start of the day. And then there is a roll call for every period. And if you are in after ten minutes of class starting, you win yourself unasked leave for the day.
But you still get to do lots of stuff apart from studies. St. Joseph has produced Boxing, Judo and Karate champions, and those who are not busy winning medals, still play a bunch of games like Cricket (in the St. Philips field next door that they have access to), Carroms, TT and so on.
The girls unfortunately keep away from the fields generally, 'cause the boys are already slamming away there. St. Joseph's has only a 30%-35% female population, a trend that runs across most undergraduate co-eds in Hyderabad today.
The students seem pretty contented with the placement scene, with
Wipro,
Satyam,
Dell and Delta coming for Computer Science graduates, and BPOs like
Delloitte and
GE coming for the commerce stream.
To top it all, they provide extension services for the Centre for Social Transformation. Nearly 40% of the students of St. Joseph's voluntarily contribute to it - whether it means distributing groceries in slums or adopting a home for the aged.
One of the biggest advantages of a co-ed school is a much richer pool of qualifications to pick faculty from, since they don't try exclusively to get faculty of a single gender. So St. Joseph's boasts faculty with experience in the industry as well as bigger and better educational pedigrees.
I don't know about you, but I would choose St. Joseph's anyday over a college more claustrophobic, with fewer sports to play and no opposite gender! But choice apart, you have to prove your fitment rather well if you want to get in here. They have a detailed admission process that not only looks at your grades, but also interviews you for all the other qualities they seek to develop. Now that's a first in a Sciences and Commerce college.