Colleges in Punjab
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New answer posted
2 months agoBeginner-Level 4
Lovely Professional University equips students with real-life challenges on an industry oriented and practical based approach of learning. The university applies real projects, case studies and practical assignments to the curriculum in such a way that students can be exposed to real business and technical challenges. The participation of industry representatives, guest lectures, and the professional workshops assist students in their knowledge about the existing expectations in the market.
LPU also pays special attention to internships and industrial training so that the students could practice the knowledge gained in classroom i
New answer posted
2 months agoBeginner-Level 1
Lovely Professional University is a strong MBA option regularly ranked among India's top private universities and visible in global impact rankings. Its MBA programme draws a wide range of recruiters from IT, consulting, banking and core sectors, with recent reports showing a top‑10 percent average package around 13–14 LPA and a peak package in the crores, depending on profile and performance. GLA Mathura and Galgotias Greater Noida also offer MBA courses with decent industry exposure and mid‑range packages, but their scale of company visits and high‑end offers tends to be smaller than LPU's. For a student who values a large ca
New answer posted
2 months agoBeginner-Level 1
Lovely Professional University is a large private university in Punjab, established in 2005, known for a wide range of undergraduate, postgraduate and research programmes across multiple disciplines. The campus is spread over 600+ acres and offers hostels, sports and activity facilities, along with a strong focus on industry‑linked curriculum and skill‑based learning. LPU has appeared in national rankings like NIRF and in global rankings such as QS World University Rankings, generally sitting in the top‑tier band for private universities in India. Placements involve a mix of core, IT and management‑sector recruiters, with outco
New answer posted
2 months agoBeginner-Level 1
LPU‑NEST is mainly based on the Class 11 and 12 syllabus, so NCERT books for Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics and English are the most important starting point. For additional practice, standard JEE‑level books like HC Verma (Physics) and RD Sharma or Arihant problem‑based texts (Mathematics) are commonly used. For aptitude and reasoning, books such as R S Aggarwal's Quantitative Aptitude and Reasoning are helpful. Focusing on NCERT along with a few well‑known practice books is usually enough to cover the pattern and difficulty level of the test.
New answer posted
2 months agoBeginner-Level 1
LPU placements remain strong in the present scenario, with over 2,200 recruiters offering more than 6,000 jobs to the class of 2025. the highest packages reached INR 2.5 crore for BTech Robotics students, alongside a solid INR 1.03 crore second-the highest. Top 10 percent averages hover around INR 12-13 LPA across branches like IT, management, and engineering, varying by performance. Recruiter participation has grown steadily, reflecting consistent industry demand.
New answer posted
2 months agoContributor-Level 7
Honestly, with 77 percentile and ~76% boards, getting CSE at Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology is very unlikely.
CSE/COE usually needs much higher percentile or strong board marks.
But you can still have a shot at:
- Civil / Chemical / Biotechnology
- Maybe some newer or lower-demand branches (depending on cutoffs)
If your goal is CSE, you might want to:
- Look at other private colleges
- Or take a drop and try improving your score
Don't lose hope — just adjust the strategy 👍
New answer posted
2 months agoContributor-Level 7
Honestly, Mechanical at Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology is a solid but practical choice not a “dream” one.
You will get:
- Good campus, labs, exposure
- Decent peer group and opportunities
- Overall stable placements
But real talk:
- Core mechanical jobs are limited and not very high-paying
- Many students shift to IT/analytics later
- Your growth will depend a lot on your own skills, internships, projects
Simple take-
If your other options are similar or lower tier → it's worth it
If you're getting top NITs/IIITs or CS branches elsewhere → prefer thoseGo for it only if you're okay putting in extra effort or genuinely interested
New answer posted
2 months agoContributor-Level 7
With 96 percentile, you're already in a strong position.At Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology, you will likely get a good branch (even CSE/COE chances are decent depending on cutoffs).But honestly don't rush.If you still have another JEE attempt left, it makes sense to wait and try to improve. Even a small jump can open better options (top NITs, IIITs, etc.).Simple way to think-
If Thapar is your safe + comfortable option → keep it
But don't lock in yet if you can still improve your score
You're in a good spot. Just play it smart and keep options open.
New answer posted
2 months agoContributor-Level 7
At Thapar School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the idea is quite different from typical Indian degrees.
Key features:
- You don't get locked into one stream early — you can mix subjects (like economics + psychology + data science).
- Strong focus on critical thinking, writing, and communication, not just exams.
- More discussion-based classes, projects, and real-world exposure.
- Option to explore before choosing a major/minor.
How it's different:
- Most universities in India are rigid (fixed syllabus, one field).
- TSLA (S) is more flexible and interdisciplinary — closer to US-style education.
- Focus is on how you think, not just what you study.
Simple
New answer posted
2 months agoContributor-Level 7
For Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology, there isn't one single fixed “last date” for all master's programs — it changes by course (M.Tech, MBA, MCA, MSc) and rounds.
Usually:
- Applications open around March–April
- Last dates fall around June–July (with multiple rounds/extended deadlines)
Best move: apply as early as possible because seats fill in rounds.
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