JEE MAIN 2020: Application Correction, Syllabus, Exam Date

IITs have released the following admission schedule which is applicable to those candidates who have accepted seats in undergraduate programs (other than preparatory courses) through JEE (Advanced) 2016.

After the seat acceptance process for round 6 is complete July 20, 2016 by 5 p.m. students will have to follow the schedule as released on JoSAA portal for the admission process to be complete. Students who fail to make it to the institute may send another person on their behalf with an 'Authority Letter'. Failing to report to the IITs for the completion of admission will lead to cancellation of the seat, say the authorities at JoSAA.

The seat acceptance fee paid by the candidates will be transferred to the respective admitting institutes after deducting Rs. 1000/- towards processing fee at the reporting centre.

JoSAA 2016: Counselling schedule for supernumerary seats declared

The schedule for supernumerary seats has been declared by Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA). The sixth and final round of seat allocation under JoSAA for admission into IITs/NITs/IIITs/GFTIs came to an end yesterday, July 20.

The supernumerary round is being conducted by Central Seat Allocation Board (CSAB). Supernumerary round is for students from Union Territory (UTs) who can apply in Home State quota at three NITs namely- Durgapur, Calicut and Surat.

Students from Andaman & Nicobar Islands should apply at NIT Durgapur.

Students from Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Daman & Diu should apply at SVNIT Surat.

Students from Lakshwadeep and Kandvi should apply at NIT Calicut.

Schedule:

Online registration, choice filling and locking will be open from July 28 (10 am) to July 30 (5 pm).

List of seat allotment will be published on August 1 at 1 pm.

Reporting at allotted institute from August 2 (10 am) to August 5 (5 pm).

Eligibility for applying through supernumerary round:

Candidates having their State code of eligibility as any of the UTs, as per their class XII certificate/ mark sheet and who did not get a seat till round 6 can apply

 OR

 Candidates who did not report against an allotment in earlier round.

 Candidates who reported against allotted seat to RC or PI but seat was cancelled due to change in category and are still un-allotted.

 Candidates who reported against allotted seat to RC but withdraw the allotted seat.

 Candidates who have paid initial fee (Rs 45,000 for candidates with the category tag GEN, OBC-NCL and Rs. 20,000 for candidates with the category tag SC, ST, GEN-PwD, OBC NCL PwD, SC-PwD or ST-PwD) and reported against allotment of JoSAA 2016 but did not report to the allotted Institute till 26 th July, 2016, 5:00 PM for academic Session 2016-17 .

JoSAA 2016: 187 vacant seats in NITs unlikely to be made available to rest of India students

 JoSAA 2016: IIT Goa has zero vacant seats, 96 seats vacant at other IITs

A total of 73 seats in Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) and 23 seats in Indian School of Mines, Dhanbad (ISM soon to IIT Dhanbad) have been declared vacant by Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA).

A total of 10,572 seats were up for grabs in 23 IITs (including ISM) this year. Out of these, 10,476 seats have been filled after six rounds of seat allocation were conducted. In 2015, only two rounds of seat allocation were conducted which lead to 341 seats remaining vacant.

For 2016, IIT Kharagpur offered the maximum number of seats at 1341, with only 7 seats remaining unclaimed. The maximum number of vacant seats among all IITs is 38 at IIT-BHU.

 Four new IITs - Goa, Jammu, Dharwad and Bhilai admitted their first batch of students this year. While IIT Goa and IIT Jammu offered 90 seats each, IIT Dharwad and IIT Bhilai had 120 each. Out of these four, IIT Goa has reported zero vacancy. Other IITs which reported zero vacancies includes- Kanpur, Mandi and Hyderabad.

The percentage of vacant seats reported at IITs in 2016 is 0.76% and at ISM is 2.52%.

JoSAA 2016: More than 2,700 seats vacant after the end of sixth round

Despite six rounds of seat allocation conducted by the Joint Seat Allocation Authority 2016 (JoSAA), around 2,700 engineering seats out of the total of 34,781 seats remain vacant. These seats are vacant across 92 centrally funded technical institutes including IITs and NITs.

Around 92 seats are vacant in IITs after the conclusion of the final round of allocation. Around 3,200 seats were vacant last year, when there were only four rounds. Last year, 9.4% seats were vacant, which has dropped to 8.2% this year. 

It was only from this year that the students were allowed to exercise the option of withdrawing a seat from the allocation process.

"Every year, a large number of seats remain vacant and the situation is unlikely to change in the coming years. Students opt for courses which can land them high paying jobs and on the other hand, institutes design a course taking the research part into consideration. Location of the institute also plays an important part when students choose a seat," said a senior official of the Central Seat Allocation Board (CSAB 2016).

The number of vacant seats might increase over time as many students are opting for private engineering institutes over state-run premier institutes in far-off locations.

NEET - II Conducted on 24th July, 2016 - An analysis of the paper

The National Eligibility cum Entrance Test - II (NEET-II) was conducted on July 24thin accordance with the orders passed earlier in May 2016 by the Hon. Supreme Court. The firm stand adopted by the Hon. Supreme Court regarding the mandatory status of the NEET, theordinance passed by the Union Governmentoffering a partial leeway to some states, the Hon. Supreme Court passing strictures against the Ordinance - all went on to ensure that this examination generated great interest and heated debate.

Although the conduct of this examination was not spared from multiple incidents of alleged leakage of the question paper, by and large the examination has been successfully concluded. With nearly 5 lac students reportedly having appeared for the examination, there is now great anticipation regarding the announcement of the results, expected by 17th August 2016.

An analysis of the question paper for this examination reveals that it was largely along expected lines, although a few surprises did await students in the form of questions that were not based on the NCERT textbooks.

The 180 questions - 45 each on Physics and Chemistry, and 90 on Biology, were distributed almost equally between the syllabi for XIth and XII (ratio 9:11), underscoring the importance of regular studies from XIth itself, and not merely for XIIth.

In Physics, several questions were calculation oriented, involvingelaborate steps and consequently required a long time to solve them. Many of the questions across all subjects were application oriented, requiring a candidate to possess an in-depth understanding of the concepts and their accurate application to a given situation, not merely a knowledge of the matter in the textbook.

In Biology, questions on Genetics and Biotechnology; Human Physiology; and Ecology were among the most numerous - around 40% of the questions can be attributed to just these three topics. Similarly, in Physics, questions related to Electricity and Magnetism, and Mechanics together account for almost 50% of the paper. Chemistry saw a fairly equal distribution among Physical, Inorganic and Organic sections of Chemistry - although there was a notably high sprinkling of moderate to difficult questions.

A comparison of this test with the AIPMT (now designated NEET-I) conducted earlier in May is inevitable, especially as an estimated 3.4 lac students opted to appear for the NEET-II by agreeing to forsake their claim to the NEET-I scores, in the hope of doing better.  The paper on the overall was of comparable degree of difficulty, and the extra 2 months of preparation time afforded to such candidates will certainly see most of them improving on their performance.

Candidates from the states of Tamil Nadu, West Bengal,Maharashtra, Gujarat, etc, were unprepared for the NEET, and will certainly not feel that 2 months of preparation time was adequate, especially given the differences in syllabi. However the Ordinance passed by the Union government has provided them with the option of securing most of the admissions available in these states through the local state-specific examinations.

A matter of intense curiosity among the student community is the expected minimum cut-off scores for admissions to the prestigious medical colleges. With admissions to around 15,000 total seats across the country being dependent on scores of this examination, it is generally expected that a score of at least 540to 550 out of 720 will be essential for a candidate from the open category to secure an admission to a reputed medical college. Colleges such as Maulana Azad Medical College and Lady Hardinge Medical College in New Delhi, and similar government medical colleges in places such as Chandigarh, Lucknow, Patna, Gwalior, Mumbai, Ahmedabad, Kolkata, Chennai, Bengaluru etc will see relatively higher cut-offs - at least 10% higher than those for other colleges.

In the years to come, as the primary eligibility examination for admissions to medical courses such as MBBS and BDS, the NEET will evolve as the most important event in the annual academic calendar of students aspiring to become doctors, just as the JEE is for aspiring engineers.

Indian Institute of Technology, Indore (IIT-I) has recently been in the news after its management's decision to hike the semester fees for its Ph.D. students from Rs 8,350 to Rs 19900. The IIT- Indore management suspended the fee hike on July 23, 2016, following an uproar amongst the PhD students against the hike.

2 days after the fee hike protest, another incident of students' protest has surfaced in the institute. This time, it is against mental torture and harassment of a female student in the Institute.

"I knocked on every possible door of the IIT-Indore community to get justice for my case of harassment and mental torture. But no solution has come out in the last one month," she tweeted, tagging the PM and the HRD minister.

Neelesh Kumar Jain, Dean of Academic Affairs, IIT Indore, said, "It was an academic issue. The student who has accused two professors for allegedly harassing and torturing her mentally, had missed her deadline to submit her scholarship forms with the institute, and did not adhere to the prescribed procedures. We have set up a committee to look into the matter, and it will submit its report soon."

However, students of IIT Indore have further raised their voice against the newly formed committee for not having any female member in it. Students have also claimed that there is no student representative in the committee, and it thus violates the Vishaka guidelines.

"According to Vishaka guidelines, a set of procedural guidelines are meant to be observed in cases of sexual harassment. The committee formed to address the issue of mental harassment raised by the student, has a female member in it," said Jain.

Pokemon Go fever grips students of IIT


The global phenomenon, 'Pokemania' has gripped India's premier engineering institutes, Indian Institutes of Technology. Students who might appear to be wandering aimlessly around the IITs, are actually exploring their campuses, desperately looking for Pokemon. Usually gathering around Poke Stops, they reload on supplies of Poke balls, an essential tool for catching Pokemon.

While the game is yet to be launched in India, it has already become a hit major hit in colleges campuses in India. Students of IIT Roorkee have started a unique way of helping their classmates by publishing details of spots frequented by Pokemon. They have gathered this information on a map of their institute.

"We usually roam in the campus at night after our classes are over. It is an exciting game and it is even more interesting to play this game on such a big campus. With good internet connectivity provided to us, we now find ourselves in unexplored places of the campus. I have also found a couple of Pokemon in the classroom as well," said Harsh Bajaj, a student of IIT Kharagpur . With over 2,100 acres of campus land, IIT Kharagpur has one of the biggest campus areas in India.

While there are reports from some colleges in the USA , that academic sessions have been disrupted due to the game, no such case have been reported from colleges in India. "Even if the game has gained momentum amongst the students, it has not disrupted our academic sessions in any way. I personally have not noticed any of my student playing the game in the class," said Prof Bhattacharjee, Student Affairs Dean, IIT Kharagpur

Not all students who play the game burn calories, there are techies who have found a way to play the game without moving a muscle. "We have a big campus but there not many Poke stops in it. So we found a different way of playing the game. We simply tricked the GPS in our device and virtually visited other places and played the game," said Rohan Pandey, a student of IIT Gandhinagar.

So far in India, there has not been any mishap reported, unlike in other countries where people have lost their lives while playing the game.

Foreign students aware about IITs; then why are IIT teams going on awareness visits abroad?

Ever since news of JEE being conducted in foreign countries spread, the MHRD released notifications of the co-ordinating institute for the programme, and the fee structure for foreign students. It was also stated in a recent notification (link) that IIT teams, headed by IIT Bombay (the co-ordinating institute) will be travelling to various countries to create awareness about studying in India. 

According to the Institute Secretary for International Relations, IIT Bombay, "Students in foreign countries want to take admission in IITs. The introduction of an entrance exam in these countries is thus solving that demand." But if there is already a demand for admission opportunities to IITs in the foreign countries, then why are IIT teams conducting awareness drives? As of now, there are no special plans carved as to how the IITs will go about attracting more foreign applicants for the JEE next year. The IITB Institute Secretary, says, "We will first set up a couple of JEE centres in the main areas of various countries to see how any students come forward to register or inquire. We need to know how many people are aware of the JEE and IITs in these countries. Only then can we plan something further."

Moreover, the MHRD notification states that only eligible candidates in foreign countries will be allowed to take the entrance exam; but it hasn't mentioned what criterion would determine the eligibility of the students. Most IITs have pre-set procedures for admission of foreign students to their institute, such as providing recommendation letters and TOEFL scores. However, with the introduction of JEE in some countries, it is still unclear if the IITs will do away with these criteria. "This can only be determined after we visit the countries and have a rough number of prospective applicants. If the applicant count is too high, then we will probably need a second filtering mechanism," said the Dean of International Relations, IIT Bombay.

JEE 2017 is scheduled to be held in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, Maldives, Singapore, UAE and Ethiopia.

Life term for IIT alumni for killing family

Praveen Manwar, a 39-year-old alumni of IIT Kharagpur has been sentenced to life imprisonment by the trial court in Multai on the charge of murder. According to the Betul Police report, he killed his wife Shilpa and two children ablaze in a car on March 3, 2015, because of fears of being HIV infected.

A senior official of the Betul Police station said, "After the investigation, we had charged Manwar under session 302 (Punishment for murder) and 201 (Punishment for causing the disappearance of evidence, or giving false information to screen offender) of the Indian Penal Code. Manwar had confessed to attempting a suicide pact with his wife and two children after he tested HIV positive at a local diagnostic center in Chattarpur, New Delhi."

Manwar had also informed the police that he often visited prostitutes, following which he got symptoms of an HIV infection. "Manwar had a heated argument with his wife after he revealed the HIV test results. He alleges that his wife was also infected with HIV and hence they decided to commit suicide," the senior official added.

However, after further investigations, the police found that Manwar was HIV negative. Shilpa's family members are not happy with the court's verdict and want the death sentence for Manwar. Apart from being an IITian, Manwar also taught at NIT Surathkal, before taking his current job at National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC)

JoSAA 2016: IIT Madras cut off ranks

The Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA) has declared opening and closing for Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs). IIT Madras was ranked No.1 engineering college in India by Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD) in survey conducted in April this year.

Following is the opening and closing ranks (general category) for four year B.Tech programs offered at IIT Madras.


JoSAA 2016: Final vacant seat statistics released

The Joint Seat Allocation process was over on July 20, 2016, with approximately 3,195 seats vacant across 23 Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), Indian School of Mines, Dhanbad (ISM), 31 National Institutes of Technology (NITs), 20 Indian Institutes of Information Technology (IIITs), and 18 Government Funded Technical Institutes (GFTIs).

The official seat allotment statistics were released on the official Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA) portal. Institutes located in the North Eastern part of the country have the maximum number of vacant seats. NIT Agartala has 126 and IIIT Manipur has 58 seats vacant. Amongst the IITs and ISM, there are 96 seats vacant, where IIT Banaras Hindu University has a maximum of 38 vacant seats. 

JoSAA conducted six allotment rounds this year, and as per the records the number of vacant seats has decreased greatly. Approximately 324 seats in IITs, and 5,500 seats in NITs, IIITs were vacant in the year 2015. Only 96 seats in IITs, and 3,099 seats remained vacant this year.

3000 seats vacant in NITs, IIITs, GFTIs; Join campaign to demand spot round.

Can any one get me the FIIT JEE Answer Key for this year.... I was search from the past week but not exact the information im not getting.. I found in www.indianrecruit.in in that they have not mentioned breifly ... pls kindly send me and answer key for this ... Thanks in advance

Do you have an aadhar card?

  • No
  • Yes

0 voters

What r the details that should match with SSC memo?to apply for jee 

Guys pls tell me steps how to solve

Make corrections in JEE Main 2017 application form 

Registered candidates for the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) Main 2017 can amend mistakes in the application form from January 25 to February 3, 2017 only. In a notice released on the official examination portal, JEE authorities stated that all candidates must check their applications for any errors.


Candidates must visit the official JEE Main portal to make corrections. They can make corrections in all particulars other than changing the mode of examination. JEE Main is conducted through offline mode – pen and paper based, and Computer Based Test (CBT).


Aspirants must note that they will have to pay a fee for making corrections. It is a one-time facility provided by JEE unit, candidates must make the corrections carefully, latest by February 3, 2017. If at all there are any errors in the application form for JEE Main 2017, the authorities will not entertain any requests.


January 16 is the last date to register for JEE Main 2017, and the offline exam is on April 2, and CBT on April 8 and 9. 

 Due to a bank holiday in Tamil Nadu, today January 17, 2017, the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) Main office has extended the fee payment deadline for applicants by one more day. Though the application portal is closed, registered candidates who are yet to pay the fees can do it by January 18, 11:59 pm. They must visit the official JEE Main portal and login using their application number and password. 

Read more - https://www.pagalguy.com/news/jee-main-2017-application-fees-can-be-paid-till-january-18-4592658934661120

My name on aadhar card is of the format "name middlename surname"and on the 10th marklist its :"surname middlename name" . My coaching class told me to get my aadhar card updated as per the 10th marlist format ... I don think this is right . Is anyne else doing the same thing?