Engineering

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New answer posted

3 years ago

0 Follower 38 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Adv. Ved VinayakLaw educator at Lex Logic You Tube channel.

Contributor-Level 9

Hello, you did not specify whether you were looking for a seat under a reserved category or an open seat. Cutoff percentiles have been announced by the national testing body for various student groups. I've listed them below so you can see if you scored higher or worse than this percentile.
*2022*: JEE Advanced cutoffs for various categories: -
Gen EWS: 63.111414PwD: 0.0031029
General: 88.4121383
OBC NCL: 67.0090297
SC: 43.0820954
ST: 26.7771328.

New answer posted

3 years ago

0 Follower 39 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Adv. Ved VinayakLaw educator at Lex Logic You Tube channel.

Contributor-Level 9

You must achieve a score higher than the national testing agency's cutoff percentage in order to be admitted to any NIT. Even if you haven't addressed it here, I'm certain you are aware of your percentile. I've included a link created by Shiksha that will forecast the likely college or NIT you'll go depending on your test scores. https://www.shiksha.com/engineering/jee-main-college-predictor
I wish you well.

New answer posted

3 years ago

0 Follower 20 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Adv. Ved VinayakLaw educator at Lex Logic You Tube channel.

Contributor-Level 9

A well-informed estimate or prediction based on a few prior factors might undoubtedly produce positive outcomes. Shiksha has released a college predictor as a service to you. Based on your category and, of course, your test results, this will forecast the college and the branch that you can get. I've attached it below for your assistance. https://www.shiksha.com/engineering/jee-main-college-predictor
I wish you well.

New answer posted

3 years ago

0 Follower 47 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Adv. Ved VinayakLaw educator at Lex Logic You Tube channel.

Contributor-Level 9

46 percent has been set by the National Testing Agency as the cutoff for your category. You will only be qualified to apply for admission to any NIT or Central Government-funded institution if your percentile is higher than this. A programme developed by Shiksha can forecast the college you will go based on how well you perform on this test. Try it out. I wish you luck.

New answer posted

3 years ago

0 Follower 259 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Adv. Ved VinayakLaw educator at Lex Logic You Tube channel.

Contributor-Level 9

Now that the JEE Mains results have been released, I can appreciate how anxious you are to find out how you are doing and which universities you will probably be accepted to. To assist you, Shiksha has created a college predictor that can determine the college you will attend based on your performance in this exam. I have attached the predictor in the link below. https://www.shiksha.com/engineering/jee-main-college-predictor
I wish you well.

New answer posted

3 years ago

0 Follower 54 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Adv. Ved VinayakLaw educator at Lex Logic You Tube channel.

Contributor-Level 9

Despite the fact that you haven't explicitly said it this way, I must guess that you did fairly well in the JEE Mains examination. Fortunately for you, the minimum 12th grade point average criteria has been waived for this year's admissions procedure, thus you should be qualified to apply. Hope it's helpful. I wish you luck.

New answer posted

3 years ago

0 Follower 17 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Adv. Ved VinayakLaw educator at Lex Logic You Tube channel.

Contributor-Level 9

You didn't say it explicitly, I'm presuming you're referring to your JEE Mains percentile and subsequent acceptance to any government- or centrally-funded technical institutes. Two and a half wax students are typically designated as being above cut off, and only these students are permitted to participate in the centralised admissions procedure for NITs and are permitted to sit for the JEE Advanced test. The final findings are being released by NTA and should be available at any time.

New answer posted

3 years ago

0 Follower 192 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Adv. Ved VinayakLaw educator at Lex Logic You Tube channel.

Contributor-Level 9

Student must score in the top 99th percentile to qualify into the computer science branch. It's just a straightforward mathematical computation here. 1 percentile indicates that 1 percent of the students scored higher than you. A percentile of 99 indicates that, out of the 10 lakh students who took the JEE Mains exam, about 10000 students scored higher than you. If we add up all the seats in all the NITs for this branch, there aren't as many left.

New answer posted

3 years ago

0 Follower 15 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Adv. Ved VinayakLaw educator at Lex Logic You Tube channel.

Contributor-Level 9

Hello Alok, there are a lot of organisations that advertise guaranteed placement when you finish their courses. But you should only take this with a grain of salt. In all honesty, if everything is legal, it may not be possible to position everyone. But educational institutions use questionable tactics to draw pupils. They are obviously being dishonest by paying prospective companies a small sum of money in exchange for hiring all of their students during placements. After roughly a year, these employers only keep individuals who are deemed suitable and deliver pink slips to everyone else.

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