Placement: Placements brought both anxiety and ambition. Not everyone got their dream job, but we all gained courage. The college tried to bring in companies, and many of us landed decent offers. Workshops, mock interviews, resume writing sessions — all helped prepare us. It was the first time many of us felt like adults — dressing formally, speaking confidently, owning our worth. Even those who weren’t placed left with।
Placement: The placement season was intense. We updated resumes endlessly. We rehearsed answers in mirrors. We waited. Worried. Hoped. Some got placed early, some had to wait longer. But we cheered for each other. Every rejection hurt, but it built us. The placement cell tried their best, arranging interviews, bringing companies. But more than that, they gave us belief. Placement was never just about jobs. It was about trusting our skills, facing fear, and growing together.
Placement: Placement wasn’t just a process—it was a storm. Sleepless nights, repeated CV edits, mock interviews, rejection tears, and hope that refused to die. We sat with trembling hands, spoke with fake confidence, smiled through disappointments. We celebrated friends’ offers with a heavy heart and still meant every clap. The placement cell worked hard. So did we. Not everyone got their dream job. But we all learned resilience. We learned how to accept failure and wait for our turn. We learned how to handle pressure and keep our faith alive.
Placement: The placement season wasn’t just about offers—it was about identity. Each resume was a story. Each interview, a test not just of skill but of spirit. Some cracked it early, smiling with offer letters in hand. Some waited, watched, cried, tried again. Rejection came like thunder. Acceptance like silent rain. We celebrated each other’s success, even when ours was missing. And that’s where college shaped us—teaching us grace, strength, and hope. The placement team tried. The students fought. The system sometimes failed. But no one gave up. Yes
Placement: The placement process was emotionally exhausting. We dressed formally, but inside, we were anxious. Each interview felt like a test of identity. Some of us got through in the first round. Some kept trying again and again. Some never got placed. But we all learned something: that rejection doesn’t mean you’re not capable. That your job title doesn’t define your future. That growth sometimes starts after failure. The placement cell tried its best. Companies came. Offers were made. But more importantly, confidence was built.
Placement: Placement season was intense. There were suit-wearing mornings, anxiety-filled interviews, and a hundred versions of our resumes. We practiced how to smile under pressure, how to answer questions we didn’t always understand, and how to hide our trembling hands. Some of us got placed quickly.
Placement: Hostel life didn’t feel like home at first. But over time, it became something deeper. It taught me what independence really means — To cry and clean up after, to run out of toothpaste and still smile, to be left out and still belong. We weren’t always close. But we shared rice on bad days, and secrets on quieter nights. We danced during storms. We fought over bathrooms. We helped each other pass exams and heartbreaks. Some nights were too loud to sleep. Some nights too silent to bear. But every night shaped us. It was in those cracked walls that I learned to hold myself.
Placement: When the placement season came, we were nervous — not just about jobs, but about our future. We prepared resumes, practiced interviews, and learned to speak about ourselves without fear. Some days we felt hopeful. Some days, broken. But the process built us. We failed interviews. We passed some. We cried. We celebrated. We waited.yed
Placement: Hostel life began with nervous packing and teary goodbyes. The room felt empty at first, the bed unfamiliar, the silence too loud. But slowly, it became home. I learned how to manage small things that seemed big — laundry, alarms, schedules, moods. I shared a room, a bathroom, a dining hall — and eventually, parts of my life. Some nights were filled with jokes and music. Others were just quiet — phone calls home, study lights on, sleep far away. I didn’t always love hostel life. But I respected it. Because it taught me how to stand on my own without losing who I was.
Placement: Placements began with fear. What if I wasn’t good enough? But our preparation sessions helped. We wrote résumés, practiced introductions, faced mock panels. And slowly, I stopped fearing the question, “Tell me about yourself.” Because finally — I had something to say. Some got offers fast. Some didn’t. But all of us learned what interviews couldn’t teach: resilience. The placement didn’t guarantee success. It gave us readiness. And sometimes, that’s even more powerful.
Coimbatore (Tamil Nadu)
Jaipur (Rajasthan)
Kolkata (West Bengal)
Kolkata (West Bengal)