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Katwa College Campus Facilities - Hostel Fees, Infrastructure, Address

LocationBurdwan (West Bengal)
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Updated on - Aug 04, 2025 08:01 PM IST

KCB Campus

Infrastructrure and Learning resources

   The college has been making improvement in its infrastructural facilities in a planned and systematic to keep pace with the expansion in its academic areas.
   The college has adequate number of classes rooms well equipped laboratories two libraries NRSC canteen Boys common Room Guest Room all these effectively to meet the demands of all its courses and facilities a healthy environment for other services in and around the institution. In order to increase the accommodation capacity the Girls Hostel is extended through the utilization of the UGC grant of Rs 25 lacks. The college also has staff quarters. The college properly takes care of maintaining the good condition of the infrastructure and amenities through the utilization of its own building fund and the grants available occasionally from MP and MLA quotas of development fund,Govt resources and UGC grant.
   The college allows access to the Libraries of all students and faculty members for the maximum possible hours throughout the year. The students through the use of the library, keep themselves abreast of up-date knowledge in their discipline.
   The students for the uniform development of the physical side of their personality effectively use the college playground and the multigym facilities inside the college. With out any discrimination between male and female students enjoy equal facilities for the indoor and outdoor games. Sri Utpal Chakravorty a students of arts represented University of Burdwan in the inter University Athletics Meet and Sri Sanjib Ghosh, a student of arts also represented Burdwan University Kabaddi Team in the Inter University Kabaddi Competition.
   Since 1960 students Health Home has been functioning in the College campus,till late it is shifted to Katwa Town site in order to enable the school students of Katwa Town to get the benefit of the service equally. The students Health Home has extended its service to the college and its ailing students. The Hospital provides all time health service to all connected with the college whenever necessary. Doctors visit both the boys and girls hostel. The female students are taken care of by the lady doctors in the hospital.
   The college is always watchful to keep its campus tidy and pollution free by utilizing the services of its gardener and sweepers. Already computers are installed in the libraries,waiting to the operational. However all office works are now being computerized .An auditorium,which the College at present does not have is being constructed being in the 2nd floor of the Administrative Building.

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Students Activities & Clubs

NCC Club -

N.C.C @ KATWA COLLEGE

National Cadet Corps Logo

INDRODUCTION
The Indian Parliament passed the National Cadet Corps Act in 1948, thus creating the National Cadet Corps (NCC). The motto of the NCC is Unity and Discipline. The Aims of the National Cadet Corps are;

To develop qualities of character, courage, comradeship, discipline, leadership, secular out look, spirit of adventure and sportsmanship and the ideals of selfless service among the youth to make them useful citizens.

To create a human resource of organised, trained and activated youth, to provide leadership in all walks of life including the Armed Forces and always available for the service of the nation.

HISTORY
The origin of NCC can be traced back to the 'University Corps' , which was created under the Indian Defence Act 1917 , with the object to make up the shortages of the Army. During the Independence movement, the leaders of our nation had realised the need to create a national level youth organisation, to train and groom young boys as responsible citizens and future leaders of our great country in all walks of life.
National Cadet Corps is a Tri-Services Organisation , comprising Army, Navy and Air Force, engaged in grooming the youth of the country into disciplined and patriotic citizens. In 1920 , when the Indian Territorial Act was passed, the 'University Corps' was replaced by the University Training Corps (UTC. The aim was to raise the status of the UTC and make it more attractive to the youth. It was a significant step towards the Indianisation of the Armed Forces. In 1942 , the UTC was re-christened as the 'University Officers Training Corps' .
During the Independence movement, leaders of our nation had realised need to create a national level youth organisation, to train and groom young boys as responsible citizens and future leaders of our great country in all walks of life, including the defence forces. Consequently, a committee under Shri HN Kunzru was set up in 1946 under the directives of the first Prime Minister, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, to consider the establishment of a nationwide cadet corps, which was born through the Act of Parliament on 15th July 1948 .
The first Prime Minister of India, Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru presided over the function of raising the first NCC Unit at Delhi on the last Sunday of Nov 1948 . This day is traditionally celebrated as the'NCC Day'.
During the 1965 and 1971 wars with Pakistan, NCC cadets were the second line of defence. They organised camps to assist the ordnance factories, supplying arms and ammunition to the front, and also were used a patrol parties to capture the enemy para-troopers. The NCC cadets also worked hand in hand with the Civil Defence authorities and actively took part in rescue work and traffic control. After the 1965 & 1971 Indo-Pak wars the NCC syllabus was revised. Rather than being the second line of defence, NCC syllabus laid a greater stress on developing qualities of leadership and Officer-like qualities. The military training which the NCC cadets received was reduced and greater importance was given to other areas like social service and youth-management


DIVISIONS
The NCC is open to all regular students of schools and colleges on a voluntary basis. The officers and cadets have no liability for active military service. It has been divided into four divisions (they are not similar to the Army divisions). The first two divisions are; the Senior Division for college boys and the Junior Division for school boys. The college cadets and the school cadets are trained differently. A single battalion of the NCC, can have companies of the Senior Division and troops of the Junior Division.
The Senior Division is organised into three wings for the Army, Navy and the Air Force and has a strength of 365,000 cadets, while the Junior Division has a strength of 658,000. The Senior Division units are known as Companies. The company is usually stationed at a college, which is under the command of a lecturer who received formal Army training and is known as an Associated NCC Officer (ANO).
A Senior Division company has a maximum of 160 cadets enrolled. Soldiers serving in Army regiments are sent to NCC battalions for two years to train NCC cadets. Each Senior Division company is assigned with a JCO and an NCO to give training. The Junior Division units are known as troops and are located in the various schools, which are under the command of a teacher who has received Army training. Each Junior Division troop is also assigned a JCO and an NCO to give training to the cadets.
The second two divisions are; the Senior Wing for college girls and Junior Wing for school girls. The girls receive their training in the signalling and medical side of the Army. They also focus on physical training, drill, driving & maintenance of vehicles, signalling duties and first aid. The NCC has separate girls units. Strength of the SW and JW are 69,000 and 73,000 respectively.


NSS Club -

NATIONAL SERVICE SCHEME @ KATWA COLLEGE

PHILOSOPHY OF NATIONAL SERVICE SCHEME (NSS)

HISTORY AND GROWTH OF NSS:

 In India, the idea of involving students in the task of national service dates back to the times of Mahatma Gandhi, the father of nation. The central theme which he tried to impress upton his student audience time and agian, was that they should always keep before them, their social responsibility. the first duty of the students should be not to treat their period of sudy as one of the oppurtunities for indulgence in intellectual luxury, but for preparing themselves for final dedication in the service of those who provided the sinews of the nation with the national goods and services so essential to society. Advising them to form a living contact with the community in whose midst their institution is located, he suggested that instead of undertaking academic research about economic and social disability, the students should do "something positive so that the life of the villagers might be raised to a higher material and moral level"

REGULAR ACTIVITIES OF KATWA COLLEGE NSS UNITS

ENVIRONMENTAL ACITVITY
Workshop on Disaster Management A one day Workshop on Disaster Management was conducted by five units of NSS. Katwa College at Katwa College on 03-12-06 from morning 9 am. Till afternoon 4pm. In that workshop 12 Programme Officers and 63 NSS volunteers from P.G Dept, B.U, M.U.C. Women's College Burdwan, Vivekananda Mahavidyalaya, Burdwan Memari College, Memari ,Kalna College, Kalna, Chandrapur College , Chandrapur, Kandra Radhakanta Kundu Mahavidyalaya, Anandaniketan,Society for Mental Health Care, Khajurdihi and host. Katwa College participated Local M.P Mr Abu Ayesh Mondal inaugurated the workshop. Mr. Amitjyoti Sengupta, S.D.O. Mr Swapan Choudhury, District Relief Officer, Dr Haromohan Sinha, a noted social activitist, Mr Dipankar Ghosh, Ex-Production Manager, B.B.C World Service and Dr.Bipattaran Ghosh, Programme Co-ordinator, N.S.S, B.U. participated in the workshop as experts. Prof. N.C Chattopadhyay, Ex-P.O. N.S.S, Katwa College presided. At the end of the workshop participatory certificates were distributed.

Removing Parthenium Plant : A camp was organized for a period of three days (12-9-06 to 15-9-06) on removing Parthenium Plants. 50 student volunteers of N.S.S , Katwa College (39 Boys & 11 Girls) participated in the activity enthusiastically for all the three days under the supervision of the five P.O.s of N.S.S, Katwa College. Inaugurating Camp Prof . G.K Chaudhury, P.O. Unit - I and Mr J.Majumder, P.O. Unit - IV discussed about the hazards of the Partenium Plant.

Plantation & Post Plantation Care : Five units of N.S.S, Katwa College celebrated Aranya Saptaha (Plantation Week) from 14-7-06 to 20-7-06 AT Katwa College premises. In this "Go and Grow Greens" programme, the volunteers planted 110 saplings of Debdaru, Haritaki, Amlaki, Jack Fruit, White Sandal, Malayasian Sal, Palash, Neem, Banyan, Segun, Rain Tree, Mehagani, Sonajhuri etc. The survival rate is 88%. In this plantation programme Dr. D.P Samanta, Former Principle, Katwa College, Dr. T.K Nayek, Co-ordinator, Netaji Open University, Katwa College and many others took part. Prof. Gautam Kumar Chaudhuri, P.O. Unit-I discussed about the objectives and utilities of plantation to the NSS volunteers. For protection the saplings were provided with bamboo cages.
Through out the year NSS volunteers kept watch and took care of the saplings by watering, fertilizers, pruning etc. Prof Arun Kumar Patra, P.O Unit-II, Mr Birbahu Mondal, P.O Unit-III, Mr. Jaharlal Majumdar, P.O. Unit-IV and Mr Parbati Kumar Banerjee, P.O Unit-V were actively associated with this plantation programme.

Regular Beautification and Cleaning Programme : Regular Beautification and Cleaning activities at the Katwa College campus were done on the following days under the supervision of prof. Gautam Kumar Chauduri, P.O. Unit-I, Prof Arun Kumar Patra, P.O. Unit-II Mr Birbahu Mandal, P.O Unit-III, Mr Jaharlal Majumdar, P.O Unit-IV and Mr Parbati Kumar Banerjee, P.O Unit-V. Students involved themselves in cleaning,speading bleaching powder, maintaining the garden and such other activity.

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Katwa College Reviews

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A Modest Yet Functional Campus That Carried Our Dreams, Discomforts,
By Roni majhi | B.A. in Bengali (Honours) | 2023
August 04, 2025 08:01:12

Infrastructure: The infrastructure wasn't elite, but it was sincere. Our college had the basics — classrooms, labs, library, and a field to breathe. We didn’t have air-conditioned auditoriums or hi-tech equipment, but we had enough to learn, explore, and create. There were broken benches, chalk-stained boards, and fan noise during lectures — all part of the experience. The environment felt real, not artificial, and that helped us stay grounded. It reminded us that quality of learning doesn’t always need luxury. Okay

Hostel: The hostel was an entirely different world. It taught me how to manage with little — limited food, little privacy, and no family. Still, I found laughter in corridors, secrets on rooftops, and peace in late-night Maggi. We lived through water shortages, surprise inspections, birthday pranks, and sudden emotional breakdowns. The hostel gave me strength — to share, to struggle, to survive. It wasn’t always easy, but it shaped me in powerful ways.okay

Infrastructure

4

Hostel

4
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The Campus May Not Have Been Lavish, But It Held a Raw Beauty That Felt Warm.
By Jishu das | B.A. in Bengali (Honours) | 2023
July 25, 2025 09:23:34

Infrastructure: Our college buildings were not luxurious, but they had life. The walls weren’t smooth, but they echoed our voices. The corridors weren’t wide, yet held a thousand footsteps of dreams. Classrooms were simple—chalkboard, fans, benches. But within that simplicity, great thoughts were born. The library was a haven for the curious. The labs were basic but functional. Everything wasn’t perfect, but everything worked. We didn’t have fountains or fancy lifts, but we had space to grow.I love my college

Hostel: Life in the hostel was noisy, messy, and magical. We shared everything — meals, moods, bedsheets, and sometimes even dreams. There were curfews we broke, power cuts we endured, and unspoken rules we followed. Sometimes we laughed till 3 AM. Sometimes we cried into pillows without anyone knowing. Hostel life taught us independence in the most chaotic way. It gave us friends who became family. We argued like siblings and forgave like soulmates. It was far from perfect — but that imperfection made it unforgettable.yes

Infrastructure

4

Hostel

5
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The Buildings Weren’t Grand, But Every Corner Knew Our Names, Our Fights,
By Sourav ghosh | B.A. in Bengali (Honours) | 2023
July 20, 2025 09:15:29

Infrastructure: The infrastructure wasn’t polished—but it was personal. Old benches, chipped walls, dusty fans—yet it all felt like home. It wasn’t about how it looked. It was how it felt. We studied under flickering tube lights. We ran up cracked stairs. The labs weren’t ultra-modern, but they gave us real experience. Sometimes the projector failed, sometimes the board was broken. But somehow, we never stopped learning. When classrooms were full, we sat on window ledges. When there was no place to sit, we stood to listen. Infrastructure didn’t give us comfort, it gave us character. It taught us how to adjust, how to focus without luxury. These walls saw our best and worst days. And that’s more important than any polished surface. Lovely

Hostel: The hostel was chaos and comfort at the same time. We fought over fans and laughed over noodles. We shared food, clothes, heartbreak, and silence. There was no privacy, yet no loneliness. There were rules, yet so much rebellion. The beds were hard, the washrooms worse—but the memories were golden. Late-night gossip, sudden birthday surprises, group studies that turned into deep life talks—hostel gave us all. We became siblings without blood, a family of broken sleep schedules and shared shampoo bottles. Sometimes we felt homesick. Sometimes we wished hostel was our real home. But when we left, we realized—this place made us stronger, softer, and real.

Infrastructure

4

Hostel

4
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Walls Were Worn-Out, Benches Were Old, But Within That Simplicity We Built Our Strongest
By Tatai sk | B.A. in English (Honours) | 2024
July 20, 2025 06:49:29

Infrastructure: Our infrastructure wasn’t grand or glossy, but it was alive with energy. The classrooms might not have had high-tech screens, but they had focused minds and spirited debates. The fans made noise, the lights flickered, but nothing could dim our learning spirit. The library didn’t have air conditioning, but the books there cooled our anxiety before exams. Labs were not the most modern, but we made the most of every apparatus. From corridors filled with rushed footsteps to notice boards filled with dreams, every brick had a memory. Even when things didn’t work—Wi-Fi, projectors, or printers—we did. We adapted, adjusted, learned resilience. Infrastructure might not have made headlines, but it shaped us. It showed us that resources matter, but resourcefulness matters more.okay

Hostel: Hostel life is hard to explain to outsiders. It’s more than shared rooms—it’s shared lives. You come from different places, but soon, you’re brushing teeth together at 7 AM, laughing over burnt Maggi, and crying over the same exam stress. You argue over bathroom time. You fight about food. But you also sit together when someone is too broken to talk. The beds were uncomfortable, the washrooms sometimes worse, and yet we found comfort in each other. Rules existed, but breaking them together created memories. That one friend who stayed up all night before your exam, the silent support when you were homesick—that’s what hostel gave us.lovely

Infrastructure

4

Hostel

5
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The Campus Didn't Sparkle, But It Quietly Held Space for All Our Dreams,
By Susmita mandal | B.A. in Bengali (Honours) | 2023
July 19, 2025 01:10:34

Infrastructure: Our college infrastructure wasn’t something out of a brochure. There were no high-tech labs or shiny buildings. But what we had — we used with care, love, and purpose. The classrooms were old, but full of energy. The fans whirred loudly during lectures. The projectors didn’t always work, but our imagination did. The library was small but sacred — a corner of calm in our noisy days. The courtyard wasn’t landscaped, but we built so many memories on that rough ground. The computer lab had limited machines, but limitless motivation. And even in its flaws, the infrastructure felt ours. Not perfect, but familiar.

Infrastructure

4
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The Infrastructure Was Not Luxurious, But It Gave Us Space to Learn Without Pressure and Dream
By Ruma singha | B.A. in Bengali (Honours) | 2023
July 19, 2025 11:17:37

Infrastructure: If you're looking for shining buildings and giant auditoriums, our college wouldn’t impress you. But if you’re looking for peace, simplicity, and sincerity — this was it. Our classrooms weren’t air-conditioned. The benches creaked. But the blackboard held our dreams, and the white walls carried our questions. We didn’t have elevators. But we had stairs we climbed with purpose. The library was small, but the silence inside it made ideas echo louder. The campus had trees that listened to our thoughts. The old canteen served more memories than meals. Love my

Hostel: At first, the hostel felt like a cage. Strange bed, noisy corridor, no family around. But slowly, it became the place where I met a version of myself I never knew. It wasn’t easy. We had power cuts, water problems, and sleepless nights. But in those imperfect moments, friendships were formed. We shared soap, secrets, Maggi, and meaning. We laughed over silly things. We cried when no one noticed. And in each other's chaos, we found calm. I learned how to handle my loneliness, how to find peace in a shared mess, and how to trust people even after disappointments.yes

Infrastructure

4

Hostel

4
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Our College Campus Wasn’t Fancy, But It Held a Raw Beauty That Made Us Feel Free
By Kajol pan | B.A. in Bengali (Honours) | 2023
July 19, 2025 11:07:13

Infrastructure: No glass buildings. No five-star lawns. But a kind of calm that gave your thoughts space to breathe. Our infrastructure was honest — Solid benches, chalk-stained boards, simple corridors where dreams echoed louder than announcements. The library was small but felt like a world. The classrooms were plain but filled with questions that mattered. We didn’t need decor. We needed direction. The sunlight pouring in through cracked windows, the smell of old books, the quiet of a Monday morning — this was our wealth. This was a place where ambition wasn’t pushed, it was grown — slowly, like a sapling finding the sun.okay

Hostel: We’ve all had that one teacher — who didn’t just explain chapters, but noticed when your eyes looked tired. They remembered your name, your silence, your second attempt. Some scolded us because they cared. Some smiled when we needed it most. Some stayed back after class because we didn’t have anyone else to ask. They weren’t celebrities. They were steady. And in a world full of rush, that steadiness saved us. They showed us: You don’t have to be loud to matter. You don’t need perfect words to teach well. You just need to care.Yws

Infrastructure

4

Hostel

4
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A Campus That Chose Simplicity Over Glamour, and Gave Students the.
By Lisa choudhary | B.A. in Bengali (Honours) | 2023
July 17, 2025 09:23:54

Infrastructure: Our college campus wasn’t built for show — it was built for purpose. The classrooms weren’t modern, but they had open windows and a kind of silence you could think in. There was greenery — not in manicured gardens, but in trees that had grown over time like old teachers. You could hear birds, not traffic. That peace mattered more than fancy decor. There were no noisy food courts, no coffee shops with music. But there was a canteen where strangers became friends. There were benches where you could sit with your thoughts.

Hostel: The hostel was more than just a place to sleep. It was where I truly grew up. At first, I missed home every night. The food didn’t taste like home. The bed didn’t feel soft. The room felt empty. But days passed. I made friends, some became family. We shared food, dreams, and deadlines. We cried in the same hallway, laughed in the same darkness during power cuts. We learned how to survive.yes

Infrastructure

4

Hostel

4
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A Campus Without Fancy Designs But With Steady Support That Let Us Focus, Settle In, and
By Rupa pal | B.A. in Bengali (Honours) | 2023
July 17, 2025 09:16:34

Infrastructure: Our campus wasn’t the kind that makes headlines. It had no towering gates or futuristic buildings. But it had peace. Every classroom was clean, airy, and reliable. The fans worked. The blackboards were always ready. The benches, though old, were strong. The library wasn’t massive — but it was warm, quiet, and full of hidden corners for thinking. The labs were functional, the systems in place, the electricity steady. Water was clean, washrooms were maintained, and everything did its job quietly. There were no distractions, no chaos — and that was the real strength of our campus. It wasn’t trying to be something else. It was simply, sincerely enough. And in that simplicity, we found the freedom to learn — uninterrupted, unhyped, and at our own pace. Lovely

Hostel: Teachers weren’t superheroes here. They were human — tired at times, but always present. They answered the same questions ten times. They paused when we looked confused. They waited for us — even when we were slow to catch up. Some explained with perfect clarity. Some shared life stories between two chapters. Some simply believed in us when we didn’t believe in ourselves. I never felt invisible. Even when I didn’t raise my hand, they remembered to check if I was okay. Our faculty may not have been globally famous, but for us — they were the reason we kept moving forward. They taught more than subjects. They taught resilience, humility, and presence. And that made all the difference.yes

Infrastructure

4

Hostel

4
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It Was About How Safe And Stable It Made Us Feel Every Day
By Nandita dey | B.A. in English (Honours) | 2023
July 13, 2025 09:19:52

Infrastructure: Our college didn’t have modern architecture or flashy glass buildings. But it had soul. The classrooms had light. The fans worked. The benches weren’t soft, but they were strong. And there was always space — to sit, to think, to be. The library was my personal haven. No noise, no rush. Just pages and peace. The labs weren’t about show. They were about letting us make mistakes, fix them, and try again. Everything in this campus did its job — not loudly, not showily — but consistently. And in that quiet reliability, we found a kind of invisible strength. Genuine college

Hostel: When I moved into the hostel, I felt two things: freedom and fear. Freedom to wake up when I want. Fear that no one would remind me anymore. I made my own schedule. Missed some meals. Laughed till 2AM. Cried quietly after phone calls home. But slowly, things settled. I learned how to manage time, friendships, moods, pressure. The food wasn’t great — but it felt like routine. The rooms weren’t spacious — but they carried memories. The hostel didn’t make me independent overnight. It made me uncomfortable enough to change. And that was enough.

Infrastructure

4

Hostel

4
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Katwa College FAQs

What are the various facilities available on campus at KCB , Burdwan ?

KCB , Burdwan offers various facilities to its students including Library, Boys Hostel, Girls Hostel, Guest house, Canteen and more.
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