Supported by mom labouring abroad, tribal girl gets seat in IMU

Due to poor job opportunities and low wages in Puliyampatti and nearby areas, many women opt to work abroad, she added. Determined to take a different path, Kavitha said she chose a non-conventional course.
“During CUET coaching at EMRS in Kumili, Chengalpattu, I learned about IMU and was immediately interested. Though it’s a male-dominated field, I wanted to pursue it,” she said. Kavitha later cleared IMU’s common entrance test for admission.
Since IMU is a premier institution, the state government would cover the cost of her education. “This will ease our financial burden and allow us to use my mother’s income for my sister’s higher education,” she said.
So far, 118 students from government tribal schools have gained admission to top institutions across the country – one each in IIT-Madras, TNNLU in Tiruchy, and a government funded technical institute; three each in NIT-Tiruchy, the School of Excellence in Law, and CIPET; two in National Institutes of Hotel Management, and 104 in Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International School of Textiles and Management in Coimbatore.
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