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Mohit diwakarCurrent Student
Contributor-Level 6
Starting at Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology? You'll be fine — just don't overcomplicate it.First few months, focus on settling in. Make friends in your hostel and class — that circle matters a lot more than people think.Don'
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Starting at Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology? You'll be fine — just don't overcomplicate it.First few months, focus on settling in. Make friends in your hostel and class — that circle matters a lot more than people think.Don't ignore academics from day one. It is easy to get carried away early but CGPA matters later for placements and internships.Explore clubs and societies, but don't join everything. Pick 1-2 you actually enjoy and stay consistent.Start building a skill early (coding, core subject, whatever your branch needs). Even 30–40 mins daily go a long way.And honestly don't compare too much. Everyone looks sorted in the beginning, but most people are figuring things out.Enjoy the campus, manage your time and you will have a solid 4 years.
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Mohit diwakarCurrent Student
Contributor-Level 6
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 o
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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 take:If you want a traditional, job-direct course → this may feel different.If you want flexibility, exploration, and a broader skill set → it's a strong option.
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Mohit diwakarCurrent Student
Contributor-Level 6
At Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology, both are good — just different paths.COE/CE (Computer Engineering):More coding-focusedBetter placement stats overallEasier path into software rolesECE (Electronics & Communication):Mix of el
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At Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology, both are good — just different paths.COE/CE (Computer Engineering):More coding-focusedBetter placement stats overallEasier path into software rolesECE (Electronics & Communication):Mix of electronics + codingSlightly tougher academicallyGood options in both core + IT (many still go into software)Simple take:If you're sure about coding/tech jobs → CE is the safer betIf you want flexibility or interest in electronics → ECE is solidMost ECE students still end up in IT roles, but CE gives you a more direct advantage.
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6 days ago
I got 76.7 percentage in board and 77 percentile in JEE Mains, can I get CSE in thapar university?
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Mohit diwakarCurrent Student
Contributor-Level 6
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 /
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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 / BiotechnologyMaybe some newer or lower-demand branches (depending on cutoffs)If your goal is CSE, you might want to:Look at other private collegesOr take a drop and try improving your scoreDon't lose hope — just adjust the strategy 👍
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Mohit diwakarCurrent Student
Contributor-Level 6
There's no fixed “marks” cutoff for Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology — it works on percentile/rank, and it changes every year.Rough idea based on trends:CSE / COE → ~95–97+ percentileENC / ECE → ~90–95 percentileMec
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There's no fixed “marks” cutoff for Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology — it works on percentile/rank, and it changes every year.Rough idea based on trends:CSE / COE → ~95–97+ percentileENC / ECE → ~90–95 percentileMechanical / Electrical → ~85–92 percentileCivil / Chemical / Biotech → ~70–85 percentileMarks vary each paper, so focus on percentile. Also, Thapar has a board marks quota, so strong 12th % can help.You don't need a perfect score — mid 80s–90s percentile can still get you in.
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Mohit diwakarCurrent Student
Contributor-Level 6
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 anoth
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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 itBut don't lock in yet if you can still improve your scoreYou're in a good spot. Just play it smart and keep options open.
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Mohit diwakarCurrent Student
Contributor-Level 6
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, exposureDecent peer group and opportunitiesOverall stable placementsBut real tal
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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, exposureDecent peer group and opportunitiesOverall stable placementsBut real talk:Core mechanical jobs are limited and not very high-payingMany students shift to IT/analytics laterYour growth will depend a lot on your own skills, internships, projectsSimple take-If your other options are similar or lower tier → it's worth itIf 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 in core mechanical.
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Mohit diwakarCurrent Student
Contributor-Level 6
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–AprilLast dates fal
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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–AprilLast 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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Mohit diwakarCurrent Student
Contributor-Level 6
At Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Pilani (BITS Hyderabad):You get tier-1 exposure, peer group, brand valueEco + CSE combo is powerful (tech + finance/business)But it's 5 years and you need to maintain CG to secure CSEAt Thapar Inst
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At Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Pilani (BITS Hyderabad):You get tier-1 exposure, peer group, brand valueEco + CSE combo is powerful (tech + finance/business)But it's 5 years and you need to maintain CG to secure CSEAt Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology (Thapar):CSBS (Computer Science in Business Systems) is good and industry-alignedMore straightforward 4-year pathDecent placements, less uncertainty👉 Simple way to decide:Want top-tier exposure + can handle risk → BITSWant safer, direct CS path → Thapar
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Mohit diwakarCurrent Student
Contributor-Level 6
Thapar mainly offers B.Tech through 10+2 (PCM) route, not lateral entry into all branches. And aerospace isn't a standard core branch there.What you can do:If you want Thapar → go through 12th (PCM) + JEE routeOr look for colleges that offer
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Thapar mainly offers B.Tech through 10+2 (PCM) route, not lateral entry into all branches. And aerospace isn't a standard core branch there.What you can do:If you want Thapar → go through 12th (PCM) + JEE routeOr look for colleges that offer lateral entry after diploma (but even there, branch change to aerospace can be tricky)So yes, possible path exists — but not directly from your current diploma into aerospace at Thapar.If aerospace is your goal, better to plan the path carefully from here.
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