Is it necessary to give Jee advanced to get into IIT?
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Is it necessary to give Jee advanced to get into IIT?
Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) provide BTech admission to candidates who qualify for Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) Advanced and on the basis of IIT cut off. However, JEE Advanced is not the only criteria for IIT admissions. Before appearing for this exam, candidates also need to take JEE Main.
Is bits and IIT syllabus same?
The BITSAT and JEE preparation is similar. There’s not much difference in the PCM syllabus of BITSAT and JEE. A BITSAT aspirant has to prepare for two more additional sections i.e. English and Logical Reasoning. For PCM subjects, JEE preparation covers your BITSAT preparation.
Can you get nit without Jee advanced?
JEE Advanced is not required for admission into NITs. It is only required for admission into Indian Institute of Technology (IIT).
How to prepare for IIT JEE exam?
Preparing for IIT JEE Exam does not mean that you go into the world of books and forget there is other world too. Enjoy your life while studying. You can always get some time for yourself amid your busy study schedule. If you have passion like painting or playing an instrument don’t give up on it just because you have to study.
Should the IIT-JEE be radically reformed?
Radical as it may sound, this sentiment has been gaining ground of late. The HRD ministry mooted a proposal to radically reform the IIT-JEE by even dismantling the JEE-Advanced, the flagship exam for the IITs. That proposal, however, was shot down by the IIT council a couple of months back.
Why do so many students fail IIT-JEE?
Even students who plod on and finish their degrees do not end up doing anything remotely related what they studied in IIT. Such mismatches happen because unlike most other college admission processes, IIT-JEE restricts itself to a written exam, without any test of interest.
What are the best physics books for IIT-JEE preparation?
Even when I studied for IIT-JEE around 25 years back, the recommended Physics books for preparation were Fundamentals of Physics by Resnick and Halliday, and Problems in General Physics by I E Irodov: both college-level calculus-based physics books. I presume things have gotten only more difficult since then.