Monday, August 17, 2015

DPS Ranchi Boy Srijan Sinha Crack AIPMT 2015 with AIR 238



Delhi Public school Ranchi students again proved themselve:and are out with flying colours . SRTJAN stNHA proved himsel again and made the school proud by qualifying the AIPMT 2oL!

in which he secured AIR 238 and UR 20G. NtKtrA suRABHt goT AIR 661 and AYUSH BHADANT got AtR 3061.

They have also qualified AllMS, Jharkhand Medical and has dragged good positions in the same.

They are truly the inspirations for ouistudents. Dr. Ram Singh Principal of Delhi Public School congratulated them for their brilliant performance and said that in the coming years we would like to train the students in such level that more and more students reach the pinnacle and bring glory to the school and their parents too.

Pic of Srijan Sinha


AIPMT 2015 All India topper is Vipul from Haryana !! Khushi is Girls topper

Source : The Times of India


Haryana boy Vipul topped the All India Pre-Medical Test (AIPMT) 2015. The second topper and topper among the girls this year is Khushi Tiwari from Rajasthan. Both the toppers are from unreserved category. The results were declared at 12 noon on Monday. 

Vipul, who hails from Jind, Rohtak road, scored 90% in his class XII boards and he said that he was sure of a good performance in AIPMT as well. "I was happy after my exam but never thought of topping it though. But I am happy that I will be able to pursue medicine from Maulana Azad Medical College, New Delhi. It's a dream come true for my and my parents," said Vipul.

Haryana boy Vipul who topped AIPMT 2015
Speaking to TOI, Vipul said that the re-test helped him work on a few of his weak points. "I was confident that I performed well in the May 3 test. But when the Supreme Court ordered re-test, I took the opportunity to focus on some of my weak areas and worked on them. I think that help perform even better in the re-test." 

Girls topper Khushi scored 86.3% in her class XII boards. She already got admission in All India Institute of Medical Science, Jodhpur. "But I will join Maulana Azad Medical College," she said. Confident to be among the toppers, Khushi speaking to TOI said: "After going through the answer keys I was sure to be among the toppers."

Girls topper Khushi scored 86.3% in her class XII boards
In all 32,862 male candidates and 32,073 female candidates qualified the exams. 

The May 3, 2015 AIPMT 2015 exam was cancelled following complaints of paper leak and the Supreme Court asked CBSE to conduct a re-test. The re-test was conducted on June 25 and as per the Apex Court's direction the results are being declared today.

AIPMT 2015 Result declared: Sharique Tops Ranchi-Jharkhand with AIR 12

The test was re-conducted on July 25 after the Supreme Court cancelled the examination held on May 3 following the leak of the question paper.
A total of 6,32,625 candidates were registered for this examination, out of which only 4,22,859 candidates downloaded the admit card. The examination was conducted at 1,065 centres in 50 cities throughout the country and abroad.
The apex court had cancelled the May 3 examination following the leak of the question paper and circulation of the answer keys through electronic devices across 10 states.
The court, by its June 15 verdict, while cancelling the examination held on May 3, had given CBSE four weeks time to re-conduct the examination and declare the result.

Sharique Topped ranchi with AIR Rank 12. He is student of DAV Gandhinagar and Aakash Institute
AIPMT 2015 _Ranchi Topper_Jharkhand_Shaharique


Sunday, August 16, 2015

List of Best and Top Career Counsellors of India

It is not possible to compile and rate all the career counsellors working in India, yet we are making effort to bring profile of leading Career Counsellors of the country. All career counsellors will be incorporated in this list...

Top Career Counsellor In Delhi

Kum Kum Tandon
MA (Psychology), M.Ed., Dip. Ed & Vocational Guidance(NCERT, New Delhi)
Kum Kum Tandon has been a leading career counselor and expert in career guidance in India since 1986. In a career that has spanned two and a half decades, Mrs. Tandon has developed a unique and integrated approach to career counseling which encompasses both parents and teachers in the key decision‐making processes. Her profound knowledge and experience has inspired thousands of students both in India and abroad, and she has been providing vocational, educational and personal counseling to students of leading schools around the globe.
Mrs. Tandon's interest and passion in providing career guidance to students inspired her to author her widely acclaimed books 'Career Options After 10+2 and Beyond' and 'Study Abroad'. First published in 1990, 'Career Options After 10+2 and Beyond' has been published in two volumes which cover both Science and Technology as well as Humanities and Commerce related careers. Both volumes have been revised annually until 2004. 'Study Abroad', first published in 1996, has also undergone several revisions since its release.
In order to enable convenient and ease‐of‐access to these books for students in both India and abroad, Mrs. Tandon is providing the latest updates of these books on the leading educational website and portal, www.shiksha.com. She currently resides in New Delhi, and often travels to visit her family in Australia and the United States. She can be contacted on her email address: kktandon2003@hotmail.com .

Pervin Melhotra 
Pervin Malhotra is India's top career counsellor. Her immensely popular career query columns in the print and electronic media reach an estimated audience of 50 million. She is the Executive Director, Career Guidance India

Career Guidance India (CARING)
24 Feroze Gandhi Road
Lajpat Nagar-III
New Delhi - 110 024. 
Ph: +91 11 2983 6470, 2983 6480




Dr. Amrita Dass



A.D. Scan Version
Dr. Amrita Dass is a leading Educationist and Career-Consultant of the country. She is the Founder-Director of ICS-International (Established in 1985) and has the distinction of pioneering the career counselling and guidance services in the country.
She is also the Chairperson and Managing Director of ICS Education Ltd.
Dr. Dass is a consultant for a number of leading schools of the country. She has also designed and conducted numerous training programmes on Leadership for Edu-Leaders focusing on Leadership in Education and on Excellence in Education for Teachers. In addition, she has conducted Leadership Programmes for corporates both national and multinationals. She is a columnist for many leading newspapers of the country and writes on a wide range of educational, career and leadership issues.



Top Career Counsellor In Mumbai

Jayanti Ghosh:
Jayanti Ghose is a Career & Education Consultant. Her research in the area of career counselling and guidance spans almost three decades. She is the most widely read career counsellor in India through her print and online career guidance columns.
From 1985 through 1990, she pioneered the concept of career counselling in the premier schools and colleges all over India. In the 90’s, she popularized career writing in the print media. She is very actively involved in personal and group counselling. Her ongoing research, and intuitive understanding of the subject of education and careers, has enabled her to help thousands of students and mid-career professionals in their search for the best career opportunities.
Jayanti Ghose has had a long association with the Times of India. She contributed weekly columns and articles on education and careers for two decades in print editions of Education Times across different cities and states, and the portal www.educationtimes.com, which is now www.myeducationtimes.com.



Education & Career Consultant
Phone: +91-22-23640 101
Mobile:+91-9920235996
Email:jayantighose@counsellor.com

Top Career Counsellor in Jharkhand and Bihar

Vikas Kumar:

 Vikas Kumar is one of the most popular Counsellor in Ranchi & Jharkhand-Bihar having guided more than 15000 students and parents in Jharkhand and across the nation. He has addressed more than 250 seminars and Programs in Ranchi, Bokaro, Dhanbad, Hazaribaag, Delhi, Calcutta, Mumbai, Nagpur, Indore, Bhopal and different cities of Bihar and Jharkhand. He is the only Counsellor in Jharkhand who has been exposed to nuance of Psychology as well as ever evolving Career trend in school, coaching institutes and competitive exams.

Qualification:

  • MA (Psychology).
  • MA (Yoga Psychology, Gold Medalist).
  • PG Diploma in Guidance and Counselling

Institutional Experience:

  • Psychological Counsellor:Delhi Public School, Bokaro.
  • Centre Manager:FIITJEE, Bokaro.
  • Centre Head: Frankfinn, Bokaro.
  • Sr Manager, Jharkhand:Brilliant Tutorials, Ranchi.
  • Zonal Manager:IIT Study Circle, Ranchi,

Specialization: First to revolutionize concept of Pre Counselling for Top Ranking Aspirants of IIT-AIIMS and CLAT. Launched more than 100 career counselling programs. 

He can be contacted at 95707-95071. Psychographicsociety@gmail.com


Psychographic Society
1st Floor, city centre, Club Road, Ranchi


Vikas Kumar: Brief Profile 

Top Career Counsellor in Puna


 Ms. Girija Nair 
 Career Advisor 
Career Experts Careerfutura
Girija Nair, has an experience profile of over 27 years in the field of IT, Telecom, ITES, E commerce. An international consultant, she has lent her professional expertise to over 3000 working professionals at Careerfutura. A mentor to many, she has worked with the country's best of brands and is exposed to the ladder of career growth. A Physics and Electronic Instrumentation Graduate from Mumbai University, she has a string of qualifications, which allows her to be a professional of varied segments


Why Engineers are Crowding Out Others in Exams, and What We Can Do About It

India needs many, many more industrial jobs and a sturdy research infrastructure to absorb the glut of engineers

IIT Kharagpur. Credit: seaview99/Flickr, CC 2.0
IIT Kharagpur. Credit: seaview99/Flickr, CC 2.0
The deep crisis in our higher education system has been highlighted in recent columns by Amartya SenPratap Bhanu Mehta and Niraja Jayal. Our tendency to confuse cause and effect, reform and change, education and employability, skills and knowledge, is so great that we needed their illumination to clear the fog of our incomprehension. Both the crisis and misdiagnosis is so stark that even if we reach the right answers, it is often by asking the wrong questions.
Irrespective of the scale and magnitude of government interference in our top institutions like the IITs, IIMs, Delhi University and Nalanda University, the issue hardly agitates public opinion beyond these campuses and, perhaps, the India International Centre. The absence of agitation is conspicuous in the light of India’s rising gross enrolment ratio.
Aspiring for mobility, not knowledge
This wider apathy is a symptom of the real tragedy of higher education in India – the tragedy of instrumentalisation. Entry into top colleges and universities has become a ticket to economic mobility. Lower rung colleges and universities are merely there to grant social legitimacy via a degree. This may be a reckless generalisation but the fact is that while IIT and IIM graduates are able to command eight-figure salaries, our not-so-remarkable colleges have declined to the point that they have become poor substitutes for programs like ‘Skill India’. Whether we admit it or not, our universities are no longer an abode for creating and disseminating knowledge.
Obsession with the ‘aspirational India’ story has certainly perverted the traditional arena of knowledge creation and dissemination. This perversion is political but governments cannot be held solely responsible. The interference of the government is merely a manifestation of the lack of demand for autonomous knowledge-creating educational institutions. The upper middle class who could have created this demand pressure exercised easy exit options by sending their children abroad.
The aspirational India story is more about getting a better job and lifestyle and less about knowledge. It is not just the institutions that help achieve economic and social mobility which are affected, but also examinations like the one to select civil servants. Remember the protests over the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) conducting an aptitude test for civil services aspirants? It has finally been decided that the Civil Services Aptitude Test, or CSAT, will just be held for qualificatory purposes and that its score, beyond the qualification stage, will not make any difference. The argument of the protesters, besides the language controversy, was that the CSAT favoured students from engineering and other technical backgrounds.
Last  month came the news that the IIMs too have decided to change the format of their CAT (Common Admission Test) to add descriptive questions in addition to multiple-choice format questions. The reason is to introduce diversity, because the previous format rendered itself to easy exploitation by engineers.
March of engineers
The CSAT and CAT issues seem pretty similar, but the question they should prompt us to ask is not why all our exams favour engineering students but why India produces so many engineers despite the shortfall in engineering jobs. With a thin manufacturing sector spread across product types that values skilled low wage workers more than educated professionals demanding high salaries, the CAT and UPSC application basket is flooded with engineering applicants. The quality of research infrastructure being what it is, and with the added burden of middling salaries, few engineers opt to pursue careers in R&D. Those who do migrate overseas.
This means India’s surplus output of engineers ends up looking for non-engineering, crowding out non-engineers in the process.
The data is clear. The composition of successful Civil Services (Mains) candidates has indeed changed with the percentage of engineers increasing from 40.2% in 2010 to 45.9% in 2011 following the introduction of CSAT. While the CSAT appears to have helped engineers, the fact is their proportion had been steadily rising even before the aptitude test was introduced. The percentage of engineers  among the those who successfully took the Mains exam went from 24.3% in 2004 to 40.2% in 2010. The share of candidates with a Humanities background during the same period  decreased from 50.1% to 37.1%. Clearly, the introduction of CSAT in 2011 had little to do with the increasing number of engineers qualifying for the civil services. Compared to the UPSC, the dominance of engineering candidates in the IIMs is well-nigh complete. Among those selected for IIMs at Ahmadabad, Bangalore, Calcutta, Lucknow, Indore and Kozhikode in 2013, engineers comprised 83 to 95 per cent of the total intake.
As the data suggests, changes in the CAT are needed to ensure greater diversity of intake since the existing exam  places too much emphasis on analytical reasoning and too little on the structure of expression. The civil services exam, on the other hand, was not analytical enough before CSAT was introduced in 2011. CSAT challenged the status quo and some applicants chose to hit the streets over being made to work on their analytical skills. One cannot entirely blame the protestors though, for they have been educated in a way that – in Pratap Bhanu Mehta’s words – “will deprive them of opportunities in so many professions that they think of the UPSC as a life or death issue.”
Behind the engineering obsession
To conclude, let me try to address the high demand for engineering education even when the supply of jobs in the domain is so low. According to estimates, we train more engineers than the United States and China combined. The student intake in engineering colleges has more than trebled between 2006-07 and 2012-13.
One of the reasons for this is undoubtedly the instrumentalisation of higher education. A degree in engineering unlocks social legitimacy, at a very minimum, and also opens up various other opportunities like CAT, UPSC and now entrepreneurship. Just take a note of the number of start-ups that are getting funded by VCs and how many of their founders are engineers, particularly from the IITs. And further how many of these IIT engineers had been placed in investment banks and management consultancies from their respective campuses.
The second reason is the kind of decisions we expect a secondary school student to make when she is clearly not mature enough to do so. The hyper-competitive nature of entry into the top engineering and medical colleges—medical students are only second to engineers in their rising success in UPSC civil services exams—means that the earlier the students and parents arrive at a career decision, the better it is from a preparation point of view. Some coaching institutes start preparing kids for IITs from right after their primary education. A break for a year or two during secondary and higher secondary education is considered taboo.
If we are serious about boosting diversity among our civil servants and management graduates, we should, besides making the examination system more amenable to a diverse section of students, also encourage non-engineers to work hard on their analytical skills. Needless to say, India needs many, many more jobs and a sturdy research infrastructure to absorb the glut of engineers. This will, in turn, alleviate some demand-side pressure from the civil services and management entrance examinations, thus helping achieve the goals of diversification.
As far as our higher education institutions are concerned, it is imperative for ‘knowledge’ as an instrument and an objective to regain primacy. A nation creating knowledge has a better chance of sustaining high rates of growth for long periods of time than a nation with an education system that boasts of a handful of colleges with guaranteed 100% placement while the rest struggle to even create an ecosystem of learning.

Monday, August 10, 2015

Sundar Pichai will become new CEO of Google

Sundar Pichari: New CET of Google


In a blog post Yesterday, Google co-founder Larry Page announced a massive restructuring of the company, instituting Sundar Pichai as CEO and shifting himself and co-founder Sergey Brin to a larger holding company called Alphabet. As CEO and President of Alphabet, Page and Brin will oversee Google as well as affiliated companies like the life-extension project Calico and a drone delivery venture called Wing. Alphabet will also direct Google's early-stage funding operations, dubbed Capital and Ventures. Under the new organization, each of those operations will have its own CEO and leadership, while Pichai and Google retain control of search, ads, maps, the Google Play Store, YouTube, and Android.
The reorganizaion also involves significant financial restructuring, as detailed in an associated SEC filing. All Google shares will now be traded as shares of the larger Alphabet holding company, news that drove the company's share price up more than four percentage points in the wake of the announcement. "We’ve long believed that over time companies tend to get comfortable doing the same thing, just making incremental changes," Page writes in the post. "But in the technology industry, where revolutionary ideas drive the next big growth areas, you need to be a bit uncomfortable to stay relevant."

Born in Tamil Nadu, India, he did his schooling from Chennai. He was the captain of his high school cricket team, and took the team to win the Tamil Nadu regional cricket tournament. He earned his Bachelor of Engineering degree from IIT Kharagpur inMetallurgical Engineering. He holds an M.S. from Stanford University and an MBA from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, where he was named a Siebel Scholar and a Palmer Scholar.
Pichai worked in engineering and product management at Applied Materials and in management consulting at McKinsey & Company.
Pichai joined Google in 2004, where he led the product management and innovation efforts for a suite of Google's client software products, including Google Chrome and Chrome OS, as well as being largely responsible for Google Drive. He went on to oversee the development of different apps like Gmail and Google Maps. On 19 November 2009, Pichai gave a demonstration of Chrome OS and the Chromebook was released for trial and testing in 2011 and released in public in 2012 .[11] On 20 May 2010, he announced the open-sourcing of the new video codec VP8 by Google, and introduced the new video format WebM.
On 13 March 2013, Pichai added Android to the Google products he oversees. Android was formerly managed by Andy Rubin. He was rumored to be one of the contenders for the CEO position of Microsoft in 2014.
He serves as a Member of Board of Advisors at Ruba, Inc. He was a Director of Jive Software from April 2011. till 30 July 2013. Pichai is married to Anjali Pichai and has a daughter and a son.



www.psychographicsociety.com

Saturday, August 8, 2015

CSAB 2015 Special Round Counselling Notification: Information Brouchure :NIT_IIIT_GFTI vaccant Seats

Just In :

Schedule has been revised: Just as deadline ended CSAB announced revised counsellng schedule

Revised CSAB-NIT-IIIT-GFTI Special Round Counselling schedule

Posted ; 6 pm: 11th august

*********************************************************************

I. GENERAL

 1) BACKGROUND: Admission to NITs, IIITs, and GFTIs were conducted through JOSAA 2015 and admission/ reporting in different participating institutes from 1st to 4th round was evaluated by the core committee of CSAB on 5th August 2015.

The analysis of the admission data indicated that although in every round seats were allocated in different participating institutes but final reporting at the allotted institutes were lower (approx. 3000+ seats). Further majority of the seats (approx. 50 %) on which candidates did not report, they are either from Computer Science or Electronics and Communication Engineering. 

These all seats were kept blocked by candidates having higher ranking, till 4th round. Therefore, the CSAB core committee decided to hold one special round of counselling for vacant seats. As per JoSAA meeting held on 1st Aug 2015, CSAB -2015 has been authorized to take independent decision to hold another round of counselling, therefore proposed next counselling will be held under CSAB 2015. This round may be called as Special Round of CSAB 2015 for NITs+ systems. The committee reviewed the whole situation, in view of the paucity of time and offered maximum opportunity to the candidates who have already taken admission at different institutes and who could not joined the previous counselling the different modalities were decided.

Counselling Schedule:


Payment of commitment fee of Rs.45,000/- or Rs 20,000/- as per category of the candidate through State Bank of India (SBI) by e-challan.: 9th to 11th Aug, 2015 till 05.00 PM


ONLINE Registration, Filling up the Choices and Locking of Choices (It may take around six hours to enable your registration and choice filling from the time of payment of initial fee at SBI): 9th to 11th Aug, 2015 till Midnight


Publishing of Seat Allotment Result 12th Aug, 2015



II. CANDIDATES WHO CAN PARTICIPATE 2) Each and every candidate who satisfies any one of the following criteria as per JEE Mains 2015 Information Brochure is eligible for participation in Special Round – CSAB 2015 counselling and fulfil criterion as per Table-1 and Table - 2 (a) to (d).


However candidates under Group as per table -2 (e ) to (g) are not eligible to participate Table - 1: Academic Eligibility Criterion (i): Secured a rank in JEE (Main) 2015 Paper-1 (B.E./B.Tech.) AND has obtained 45% [for GEN] or 40% [for OBC-NCL, SC, ST, PwD] aggregate marks in the Class XII (or equivalent) examination*. Marks obtained in the following five subjects will be considered for calculating the aggregate marks: any one language, Mathematics, Physics, any one of [Chemistry, Biology, Biotechnology or technical vocational subject] and any other fifth subject. Criterion

(ii): Secured a rank in JEE (Main) 2015 Paper-2 (B.Arch./B. Planning) AND has Mathematics as one of the subjects in Class XII (or equivalent) examination* AND has obtained 50% aggregate marks [irrespective of whether the candidate belongs to the GEN, OBC-NCL, SC, ST or PwD category] in total five subjects including Mathematics. *Class XII and equivalent examinations are given in Annexure 3. Page |

2 SPECIAL ROUND- CSAB 2015 Counselling Table – 2: Group of Candidates Eligible/ Not Eligible for participation in Special Round of Counselling:

These are three broad heading underwhich elgibility is describe

Category of candidates Eligible for Special Round

Eligible for Choice filling Commitment

 Fee for Participation


Eligibility: Who can apply


1) All Candidates who have JEE Mains Rank but could not register. Yes Yes Yes #

2) Those who had registered but No Seat have been offered. Yes Yes Yes #

3) Those who got the seat in any round and cancelled during reporting at RC but not got seat in further round of seat allocation. Yes Yes No Fee (If already paid)

 4) Those who have been allotted a seat and accepted by reporting at allotted Institute. Yes No New Choice filling/modification. Only Willingness to change Option to FLOAT/ SLIDE No Fee

5) Those who have registered and allotted a seat but did not accepted that seat. It includes dual reporting candidates who also did not report again. No Not Eligible Not Eligible

6) Those who have accepted seats but not reported at allotted institutes. No Not Eligible Not Eligible

7) Those candidates who got withdrawal/ cancellation at PI. No Not Eligible Not Eligible # The commitment Fee of 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. All Eligible Candidates (as per above table) are permitted to participate in this counselling. Candidates who already paid fee during round 1 to 4 in JoSAA 2015 Counselling, need not to pay commitment fee. Candidates under Table -2 (a) to (c) are required to fill their choices of institute and branch in preferential order against the vacancies available.

For any clarification, always visit: http://csab.nic.in/WebInfo/home.aspx


The vacancy status will be displayed Institute wise / Branch wise, and Category wise. Allotment of seat shall be made as per Rank and category based on Choice filled by the candidates or already submitted for 1st to 4th round of JoSAA counselling.

 After getting the seat allotment, candidates are required to report directly (in Person) to the allotted institute. Only after documents verification and if the documents found in order, he/she will be permitted for admission. 3) A candidate may be eligible for seat allocation based on one or both examinations viz., JEE (Main) 2015 Paper-1 (B.E. / B.Tech.) and JEE (Main) 2015 Paper-2 (B.Arch. / B.Planning).

Even for candidates who are eligible to participate in SPECIAL ROUND- CSAB 2015 based on both the examinations, only ONE seat from among the choices filled-in is made available. Page | 3 SPECIAL ROUND- CSAB 2015 Counselling Hence, it is important for candidates to carefully prioritize the academic programs while filling-in the choices.

III. FREEZING, FLOATING AND SLIDING OPTIONS 4) Candidates under Table -2 at (d) above i.e. those who have been allotted a seat and accepted by reporting at allotted Institute will be allowed to change their willingness from FREEZE to FLOAT or FREEZE to SLIDE.

 (A) Freezing: Candidates accept the offered seat and indicate that they are content with the allocated academic program and that they do not want to participate in further rounds of seat allocation

. (B) Floating: Candidates accept the offered seat and indicate that, if admission to an academic program of better/higher preference in any Institute is offered, they will accept it. Else, they will continue with the currently accepted academic program.

 (C) Sliding: Candidates accept the offered seat and indicate that, if admission to an academic program of better / higher preference is offered within the same Institute, they will accept it.

5) If any candidate does not update his/her willingness, it will be considered as FREEZE.

6) Any candidate who willingness is FLOAT or SLIDE, and during this Special round they get upgraded to their higher preference choice (as per their earlier choice list) then the present seat will get cancelled, and cannot be claimed back. IV. PARTITIONING OF CANDIDATES

7) For the purpose of seat allocation, qualified candidates are partitioned into different categories based on (birth) categories, presence or absence of disability and nationality.

On the basis of such a partition, each candidate is assigned a category tag as given below. (i) Category tag GEN: This is assigned to Indian nationals who do NOT belong to OBC-NCL, SC or ST category (or who fail to produce valid OBC-NCL, SC or ST certificate) and are NOT Persons with Disabilities. (ii) Category tag GEN-PwD: This is assigned to Indian nationals who do NOT belong to OBC-NCL, SC or ST category (or who fail to produce valid OBC-NCL, SC or ST certificate) and are Persons with Disabilities. Candidates must produce a valid PwD certificate to be assigned this tag. (iii) Category tag OBC-NCL: This is assigned to Indian nationals who belong to the Non-Creamy Layer of Other Backward Classes and are NOT Persons with Disabilities. Candidates must produce a valid OBC-NCL certificate to be assigned this tag. The backward class must be in the Central List of OBCs. (iv) Category tag OBC-NCL-PwD: This is assigned to Indian nationals who belong to the NonCreamy Layer of Other Backward Classes and are Persons with Disabilities. Candidates must produce valid OBC-NCL and PwD certificates to be assigned this tag. The backward class must be in the Central List of OBCs. Thus, candidates belonging to the Non-Creamy Layer of Other Backward Classes are divided into two mutually exclusive categories and are assigned either one of the tags OBC-NCL or OBCNCL-PwD. Page | 4 SPECIAL ROUND- CSAB 2015 Counselling (v) Category tag SC: This is assigned to Indian nationals who belong to Scheduled Castes and are NOT Persons with Disabilities. Candidates must produce a valid SC certificate to be assigned this tag. (vi) Category tag SC-PwD: This is assigned to Indian nationals who belong to Scheduled Castes and are Persons with Disabilities. Candidates must produce valid SC and PwD certificates to be assigned this tag. Thus, candidates belonging to the scheduled castes are divided into two mutually exclusive categories and are assigned either one of the tags SC or SC-PwD. (vii)Category tag ST: This is assigned to Indian nationals who belong to Scheduled Tribes and are NOT Persons with Disabilities. Candidates must produce a valid ST certificate to be assigned this tag. (viii) Category tag ST-PwD: This is assigned to Indian nationals who belong to Scheduled Tribes and are Persons with Disabilities. Candidates must produce valid ST and PwD certificates to be assigned this tag. Thus, candidates belonging to the scheduled tribes are divided into two mutually exclusive categories and are assigned either one of the tags ST or ST-PwD. 8) Category Tag is assigned based on candidates declaration in JEE (Main) 2015 registration portal/ JoSAA 2015 document verification. V. SEAT VACANCY, QUOTA and CATEGORIES 9) In all the Participating Institutes there are two types of seat quota is present viz. Other State Quota (OS) and Home State (HS) Quota, however in some of the Participating Institution only one quota of seat is available viz., All India quota (AI). 10) All vacant seats after JoSAA 4th Round of Counselling at different participating institutes will be made available for Special Round of Counselling. 11) The academic program wise number of seats available in different Participating Institutes will be notified collectively and available on CSAB portal http://csab.nic.in. 12) The category tags of candidates who are eligible for various seat categories are shown in the table below: Seat category Category tag(s) of eligible candidates OPEN GEN, OBC-NCL, SC, ST, GEN-PwD, OBC-NCL-PwD, SC-PwD, ST-PwD OBC-NCL OBC-NCL and OBC-NCL-PwD SC SC and SC-PwD ST ST and ST-PwD OPEN-PwD GEN-PwD, OBC-NCL-PwD, SC-PwD, ST-PwD OBC-NCL-PwD OBC-NCL-PwD SC-PwD SC-PwD ST-PwD ST-PwD Page | 5 SPECIAL ROUND- CSAB 2015 Counselling VI. RANK LISTS 13) The following TYPES of rank lists have been notified by JEE Apex Board for JEE (Main) 2015: i. Common rank list (CRL): It includes candidates who are assigned the tag GEN, GENPwD, OBC-NCL, OBC-NCL-PwD, SC, SC-PwD, ST or ST-PwD. ii. OBC-NCL rank list: It includes candidates who are assigned the tag OBC-NCL or OBCNCL-PwD. iii. SC rank list: It includes candidates who are assigned the tag SC or SC-PwD. iv. ST rank list: It includes candidates who are assigned the tag ST or ST-PwD. v. CRL-PwD rank list: It includes candidates who are assigned the tag GEN-PwD, OBCNCL-PwD, SC-PwD or ST-PwD. vi. OBC-NCL-PwD rank list: It includes candidates who are assigned the tag OBC-NCLPwD. vii. SC-PwD rank list: It includes candidates who are assigned the tag SC-PwD. viii. ST-PwD rank list: It includes candidates who are assigned the tag ST-PwD. 14) Rank lists for admission through CSAB-2015 are prepared by JEE Apex Board as follows: (i) One set of eight rank lists based on the performance of candidates in JEE (Main) 2015 Paper-1 (B.E. / B.Tech.) and Class XII (or equivalent) examination. (ii) Another set of eight rank lists based on the performance of candidates in JEE (Main) 2015 Paper-2 (B.Arch. / B.Planning) and Class XII (or equivalent) examination. 15) A candidate may appear in one or more rank lists, i.e. in JEE (Main) 2015 Paper-1 (B.E. / B.Tech.) and JEE (Main) 2015 Paper-2 (B.Arch. / B.Planning). VII. SEQUENCE IN WHICH SEAT CATEGORIES ARE CONSIDERED FOR SEAT ALLOCATION

16) The table given below shows the business rules for seat allocation: Sl. No. Candidate’s category tag Rank list(s) in which the candidate appears Sequence of SEAT CATEGORIES for allocation 1 GEN CRL 1. OPEN 2 GEN-PwD CRL CRL-PwD 1. OPEN 2. OPEN-PwD 3 GEN-PwD CRL-PwD 1. OPEN-PwD 4 OBC-NCL CRL OBC-NCL 1. OPEN 2. OBC-NCL 5 OBC-NCL OBC-NCL 1. OBC-NCL 6 OBC-NCL-PwD CRL CRL-PwD OBC-NCL OBC-NCL-PwD 1. OPEN 2. OPEN-PwD 3. OBC-NCL 4. OBC-NCL-PwD 7 OBC-NCL-PwD CRL-PwD OBC-NCL OBC-NCL-PwD 1. OPEN-PwD 2. OBC-NCL 3. OBC-NCL-PwD 8 OBC-NCL-PwD CRL-PwD 1. OPEN-PwD Page | 6 SPECIAL ROUND- CSAB 2015 Counselling Sl. No. Candidate’s category tag Rank list(s) in which the candidate appears Sequence of SEAT CATEGORIES for allocation OBC-NCL-PwD 2. OBC-NCL-PwD 9 SC CRL SC 1. OPEN 2. SC 10 SC SC 1. SC 11 SC-PwD CRL CRL-PwD SC SC-PwD 1. OPEN 2. OPEN-PwD 3. SC 4. SC-PwD 12 SC-PwD CRL-PwD SC SC-PwD 1. OPEN-PwD 2. SC 3. SC-PwD 13 ST CRL ST 1. OPEN 2. ST 14 ST ST 1. ST 15 ST-PwD CRL CRL-PwD ST ST-PwD 1. OPEN 2. OPEN-PwD 3. ST 4. ST-PwD 16 ST-PwD CRL-PwD ST ST-PwD 1. OPEN-PwD 2. ST 3. ST-PwD VIII. CHANGE OF PERSONAL AND OTHER DETAILS 17) New Candidates (not registered) will be allowed to change Gaurdian's Name, State Code of Eligibility and Gender etc. IX. COMMITMENT FEE AND REFUND 18) The commitment Fee of 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 STPwD 19) The candidates under (a) and (b) category of Table-2 are required to deposit Commitment Fee through CSAB using SBI Collect for this counselling. a. If any candidate got the seat in this round and he/she reports to the allotted Institute then commitment fee will be adjusted in the Institute fee. b. If any candidate got the seat in this round and does not report, then his/her Commitment Fee shall be refunded after deducting the Processing Fee (Rs. 1000/-). c. If any candidate does not get any seat, then their deposited Commitment Fee will be refunded after deducting the Processing Fee (Rs. 1000/-). X. PROCEDURE FOR DEPOSIT OF COMMITMENT FEE , CHOICE FILLING AND LOCKING 20) Procedure for filling-in of choices of academic programs in various Institutes is as given below-  Browse to http://csab.nic.in. Page | 7 SPECIAL ROUND- CSAB 2015 Counselling  Downloading e-challan (If fee not paid during JoSAA 2015 counselling during round 1 to 4) and paying commitment fee as stated above (i.e. Rs. 45,000/- or Rs. 20,000/- as per category of the candidate) in State Bank of India (SBI) by e-challan  candidates should login to the portal http://csab.nic.in using the JEE (Main) 2015 Roll Number and password. (It may take around six hours to enable your registration and choice filling from the time of payment of commitment fee at SBI)  Online registration, Online choice filling, saving and locking of filled choices 21) Procedure after seat allocation broadly involves following stages:  Downloading Provisional Seat Allotment Letter  Reporting to the allotted institute (in Person) for final admission. 22) Candidates will pay Commitment fee of Rs. 45,000/- or Rs. 20,000/- as per category of the candidate, by e-Challan. Candidates should use the e-challan downloaded from the CSAB portal for paying the Commitment fee in any branch of State Bank of India. An e-challan is similar in purpose to a challan used in a bank to deposit money. It will have all the details filled in by the online portal and will have two identical parts (i.e., the challan will be in duplicate). One photo copy of the e challan receipt will be retained by the candidate, and Original copy of the challan be submitted to the admitting institute for records. Important: State Bank Collect will be available for deposit of Commitment Fee by Cash/ State Bank Cheque at any State Bank Branch. SBI Branch will be available on all working days. The list of Branches working on all days including Sunday may be seen at www.sbi.com website. 23) Candidates MUST “lock” their choices. If candidates do NOT lock their choices, last saved choices will be locked automatically in the last minute of last date of choice filling. Candidates will NOT be able to change their choices / preference order any more. Candidates are advised to carefully choose their institutes and branches, as they will lose the Commitment fees if one chooses not to join the allotted institute. 24) After getting the seat in this round, candidates are required to report directly to the allotted institute. Only after documents verification and if the documents found in order, he/she will be permitted for admission.

 25) The proposed Special Round of Counselling will be final round. Thereafter No institute level counselling/ sliding before/ after this round shall be allowed. XI. PROVISIONAL OFFER OF SEAT 26) A candidate who has been allocated a seat is allowed to download the “Provisional Seat Allocation Letter” on CSAB-2015 portal. 27) After getting the seat allotment candidates are required to report directly (in Person) to the allotted institute. Only after documents verification and if the documents found in order, he/she will be permitted for admission. XII. REPORTING AT THE ADMITTING INSTITUTE 28) Candidates should report in person at the admitting institute for document verification and complete all the admission formalities of the institute before the deadline given in Annexure 2, get the admission confirmed and begin the academic session. Page | 8 SPECIAL ROUND- CSAB 2015 Counselling 29) The candidates are required to pay balance Institute admission fee after adjusting Initial Seat Acceptance fee (if paid in 1st to 4th round of JoSAA) or Commitment Fee in Special Round (Rs. 45,000/- or Rs. 20,000/- as per category of the candidate) for confirmation of admission at allotted Institute. Admission fee varies across the Institutes.


The initial registration/ Commitment fee will be adjusted against the admission fee by the admitting institute. XIII. ORIGINAL DOCUMENT REQUIRED DURING REPORTING: Following documents in Original/ Downloaded from CSAB portal must be carried by a candidate, when he/ she reports to the allotted Institution i. Provisional Seat Allotment Letter ii. Proof of fee payment by e-challan of SBI iii. Original Admit Card of JEE (Main) 2015 iv. One passport size photograph identical to the one pasted on the JEE (Main)- 2015 application form. v. Score Card of JEE (Main)-2015 issued by CBSE (downloaded score card is acceptable). vi. Photo ID proof issued by central Govt./ State Govt./ last attended School/ 12th Admit card vii. Class X marks sheet as proof of date of birth and Name of Candidate. viii. Class XII (High School) Board Certificate and Marks sheet of qualifying examination with details of Marks and Aggregate percentage of marks for verification in format provided at Annexure 4. ix. Medical Report in the format as placed at Annexure -5 ( as on JoSAA website) x. Category (SC / ST) certificate, in the format given on JoSAA website (Issued by competent authority) xi. Certificate of category of OBC-NLC, if applicable, is to be issued by the competent authority in the prescribed format given on JoSAA website and should clearly mention that the candidate belongs to Non Creamy Layer.

The certificate should have been issued based on the parental income in the financial year 2013-14 viz. 1st April 2013 to 31st March 2014 xii. Certificate for Persons with Disabilities (PwD), if applicable (on JoSAA website). The certificate should be issued from a duly constituted Medical Board. The certificate would be valid for a period of 5 years for those whose disability is temporary. For those who acquired permanent disability, the validity can be shown as permanent. Certificate not issued by a Medical Board or invalid / expired on the date of reporting shall not be accepted in any case.

 Along with above original certificates and downloaded documents, candidates are advised to carry following 1. Printout of locked choices and terms and conditions taken from the CSAB website and duly signed by the candidate. 2. One set of self-attested copies of all the documents listed above. The originals will be returned after verification and self-attested copies will be retained by the Institute. Page | 9 SPECIAL ROUND- CSAB 2015 Counselling XIV. DOCUMENT VALIDITY / VERIFICATION 30) If the documents are found to be invalid for reasons other than wilful forgery / act of cheating, then the following rules will be applied in addition to the change of category tag: (A)

If the OBC-NCL, SC, ST or PwD certificate is found to be invalid or not produced AND the candidate satisfies all other requirements AND the seat is allocated in the OPEN category, then the offer of admission will be confirmed. (B) If the OBC-NCL certificate is found to be invalid or not produced AND the candidate satisfies all other requirements AND the seat is allocated in OBC-NCL category, then Allocated seat will be cancelled. The rule as stated above in (B) for OBC-NCL will be applied similarly if the SC or ST certificate is found to be invalid or not produced. (C) If the PwD certificate is found to be invalid or not produced AND the candidate satisfies all other requirements AND the seat is allocated under the PwD category, then Allocated seat will be cancelled. * * * END * * * Page | 10 SPECIAL ROUND- CSAB 2015 Counselling ANNEXURE 1 List of Participating Institutions – Special Round- CSAB 2015 NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF TECHNOLOGY (NITs) 1. Dr. B R Ambedkar National Institute of Technology, Jalandhar 2. Malaviya National Institute of Technology Jaipur 3. Maulana Azad National Institute of Technology, Bhopal 4. Motilal Nehru National Institute of Technology Allahabad 5. National Institute of Technology Agartala 6. National Institute of Technology Calicut 7. National Institute of Technology Delhi 8. National Institute of Technology Durgapur 9. National Institute of Technology Goa 10. National Institute of Technology Hamirpur 11. National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal 12. National Institute of Technology Meghalaya 13. National Institute of Technology Nagaland 14. National Institute of Technology Patna 15. National Institute of Technology Puducherry 16. National Institute of Technology Raipur 17. National Institute of Technology Sikkim 18. National Institute of Technology Arunachal Pradesh 19. National Institute of Technology, Jamshedpur 20. National Institute of Technology, Kurukshetra 21. National Institute of Technology, Manipur 22. National Institute of Technology, Mizoram 23. National Institute of Technology, Rourkela 24. National Institute of Technology, Silchar 25. National Institute of Technology, Srinagar 26. National Institute of Technology, Tiruchirappalli 27. National Institute of Technology, Uttarakhand 28. National Institute of Technology, Warangal 29. Sardar Vallabhbhai National Institute of Technology, Surat 30. Visvesvaraya National Institute of Technology, Nagpur 31. National Institute of Technology Andhra Pradesh INDIAN INSTITUTES OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IIITs, Triple-I-Ts) 1. Atal Bihari Vajpayee Indian Institute of Information Technology & Management Gwalior 2. Indian Institute of Information Technology (IIIT) Kota, Rajasthan 3. Indian Institute of Information Technology(IIIT) Kalyani, West Bengal 4. Indian Institute of Information Technology(IIIT) Sonepat, Haryana 5. Indian Institute of Information Technology(IIIT) Una, Himachal Pradesh 6. Indian Institute of Information Technology(IIIT), Sri City, Chittoor District, Andra Pradesh 7. Indian Institute of Information Technology(IIIT), Vadodara, Gujrat 8. Indian Institute of Information Technology, Allahabad 9. Indian Institute of Information Technology, Design & Manufacturing, Kancheepuram Page | 11 SPECIAL ROUND- CSAB 2015 Counselling 10. Pt. Dwarka Prasad Mishra Indian Institute of Information Technology, Design & Manufacture Jabalpur 11. Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Information Technology Amethi (A Campus of IIIT Allahabad) 12. Indian Institute of Information Technology, Manipur 13. Indian Institute of Information Technology, Srirangam 14. Indian Institute of Information Technology, Lucknow 15. Indian Institute of Information Technology, Dharwad 16. Indian Institute of Information Technology, Kurnool, Andhra Pradesh 17. Indian Institute of Information Technology, Kottayam, Kerla OTHER TECHNICAL INSTITUTES FUNDED FULLY OR PARTIALLY BY CENTRAL OR STATE GOVERNMENTS (OTHER GOVERNMENT FUNDED TECHICAL INSTITUTES OR OTHER-GFTIs) 1. Assam University, Silchar 2. Birla Institute of Technology, Mesra, Ranchi 3. Gurukula Kangri Vishwavidyalaya, Haridwar 4. Indian Institute of Carpet Technology, Bhadohi 5. Institute of Infrastructure, Technology, Research and Management-Ahmedabad 6. Institute of Technology, Guru Ghasidas Vishwavidhyalaya, Bilaspur 7. National Institute of Electronics and Information Technology, Aurangabad (Maharashtra) 8. National Institute of Foundry & Forge Technology, Hatia, Ranchi 9. Sant Longowal Institute of Engineering and Technology 10. School of Engineering & Technology, Mizoram University, Aizawl 11. School of Engineering, Tezpur University, Napaam, Tezpur 12. School of Planning & Architecture, Bhopal 13. School of Planning & Architecture, New Delhi 14. School of Planning & Architecture: Vijayawada 15. Shri Mata Vaishno Devi University, Katra, Jammu & Kashmir 16. Indian Institute of Crop Processing Technology, Thanjavur, Tamil Nadu Page | 12 SPECIAL ROUND- CSAB 2015 Counselling ANNEXURE 2 Schedule for Special Round - CSAB Counselling for NITs/IIITs/GFTIs: S. No. Counselling Activity Schedule 1 Payment of commitment fee of Rs.45,000/- or Rs 20,000/- as per category of the candidate through State Bank of India (SBI) by e-challan. 9th to 11th Aug, 2015 till 05.00 PM 2 ONLINE Registration, Filling up the Choices and Locking of Choices (It may take around six hours to enable your registration and choice filling from the time of payment of initial fee at SBI) 9th to 11th Aug, 2015 till Midnight 3 Publishing of Seat Allotment Result 12th Aug, 2015 4 Directly Report (in Person) to the Allotted Institutes with Original and one set of Self attested Photocopy of all documents for verification Permitted for admission only, if documents found in order Delays or disruptions in service due to breakdown of CSAB computer servers [due to reasons beyond the control of CSAB 2015] shall be rectified as early as possible and notified on the web (www.nitp.ac.in). The decisions of CSAB 2015 in this regard shall be final and binding. Page |

0 13 SPECIAL ROUND- CSAB 2015 Counselling ANNEXURE 3 CLASS XII AND EQUIVALENT EXAMINATIONS 1. The final examination of the 10+2 system, conducted by a Central or State Board recognized by the Association of Indian Universities (www.aiuweb.org). 2. Intermediate or two-year Pre-University examination conducted by a Board or University recognized by the Association of Indian Universities. 3. Final examination of the two-year course of the Joint Services Wing of the National Defence Academy. 4. Senior Secondary School Examination conducted by the National Institute of Open Schooling with a minimum of five subjects. 5. Any Public School, Board or University examination in India or in a foreign country recognized as equivalent to the 10+2 system by the Association of Indian Universities (AIU). 6. H.S.C. vocational examination. 7. A Diploma recognized by the All India Council for Technical Education (www.aicte-india.org) or a State Board of Technical Education of at least 3 years duration. 8. General Certificate Education (GCE) examination (London, Cambridge or Sri Lanka) at the Advanced (A) level. 9. High School Certificate Examination of the Cambridge University or International Baccalaureate Diploma of the International Baccalaureate Office, Geneva. 10. Candidates who have completed Class XII (or equivalent) examination outside India or from a Board not specified above should produce a certificate from the Association of Indian Universities to the effect that the examination they have passed is equivalent to the Class XII examination

Highest Paid Indian executive : Nikesh Arora



Softbank's Nikesh Arora on India's 'Start-Up Party' and His Rs 850-Crore Salary

Written by  | Updated: August 08, 2015 22:44 IST

NEW DELHI:  "There is a big party going on for start-ups, but some will wake up with a hangover," Nikesh Arora, President of $70 billion Japanese telecom and internet giant Softbank told NDTV in an exclusive interview. Japanese telecom giant SoftBank that owns one-third of China's Alibaba.com has also invested in a number of Indian start-ups including Snapdeal, OYO Rooms, Ola Cabs and Housing.com.

Nikesh Arora, who was the fourth most-important person at Google, quit the tech giant last year to join SoftBank. He has recently been named as the President and the successor of SoftBank by its founder Masayoshi Son. His SoftBank compensation at $135 million (approx Rs. 850 crore) makes him the highest paid India-born executive beating Microsoft's Satya Nadella and Pepsi chief Indra Nooyi.

When asked about his mind-boggling compensation, Nikesh told NDTV, "A lot of the math around my compensation is sensational. People don't have the numbers right. Yes, I do get paid well. But if I wasn't adding value. I would give it back," he said.

Nikesh Arora is now betting big on the Indian e-commerce space and looking for more start-ups to fund. "India's time has come. There will be a huge amount of growth in the next 10 years in India. Start-ups will create a new kind of consumerism in India." He says India is now more "investor friendly" and is off to a good-start.

Nikesh Arora says Softbank is investing millions of dollars in start-ups not to "sign cheques and drive up valuations. "Instead, the Japanese telecom giant is looking for ways of having a legacy that lasts 300 years by "creating the future Bill Gates, Jack Ma, Steve Jobs of the world."

Softbank's recent investment in OYO rooms, a budget hospitality start-up founded by 21-year-old school pass-out Ritesh Agarwal has created a huge buzz. Describing the young entrepreneur, Nikesh says, "I have met many entrepreneurs around the world. He (Ritesh) will match them dollar-to-dollar in his maturity and ability to talk about business, ability to absorb and ability to listen."

Source: NDTV
Story First Published: August 08, 2015 21:32 IST

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Internship offer Begins in IITs, Kharagpur Campus jubiliant with better offers

A Times of India Report


KOLKATA: Internship offers at the Indian Institute of Technology-Kharagpur IIT-KgP, have gone up by 50 per cent this season, a statement said on Wednesday. 

"The Institute experienced year-on-year increase of 33 per cent in the number of companies visiting campus and 50 per cent growth in the number of offers being extended respectively," the statement issued by IIT-Kharagpur said. 

Top global brands such as Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank, Microsoft, Facebook, Texas Instruments and Nomura, alongside FMCG giants ITC, Hindustan Unilever and Reckitt Benckiser, visited the campus with the start of the 2015-2016 internship season on Aug 1. 

A total of 72 internship offers were extended on the first day of the season itself. 

With an expected increase of 100 per cent in the number of pre-placement offers (PPOs) from last year, IIT Kharagpur is looking forward to superior placement statistics in 2015. 

"The trend for opportunities at IIT-Kharagpur is increasing every year. With the increasing number of PPOs we believe that companies really like the talent that IIT-Kharagpur is offering," said SK Barai, chairman, Career Development Centre, IIT-Kharagpur.

Over 4,400 students drop out of IITs, NITs in three years

A Times of India Report

NEW DELHI: Over 4,400 students dropped out of IITs and NITs in the last three years due to various reasons including "academic stress", the government said on Wednesday and assured that corrective actions have been initiated.

As many as 2,060 students dropped out from various Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) from 2012-13 to 2014-15, human resource development minister Smriti Irani informed the Lok Sabha during Question Hour.
 

During this three-year period, 2,352 students dropped out from the National Institutes of Technology (NITs).

"The reasons for dropouts may be attributed to shifting to other colleges/institutions, personal reasons, medical reasons, getting jobs during PG courses, inability to cope with academic stress etc," Irani said in a written reply.

In 2014-15, IITs witnessed 757 dropouts which was higher than 697 dropouts (2013-14) and 606 (2012-13). During this period, IIT Roorkee saw the highest number of dropouts at 228, followed by IIT Kharagpur (209) and IIT Delhi (169).

 
Interestingly, there were no dropouts at IITs in Mandi, Jodhpur, Kanpur, Madras and Ropar during 2014-15 period.

There are 16 IITs and 30 NITs in the country.

Of the NITs, there were 717 dropouts in 2014-15, lower than 785 seen in the year-ago period. In 2012-13, the dropout numbers stood at 850.

Irani said there is a mechanism for helping students who are under stress. The government is committed to address issues related to academic stress, she added.

Sunday, August 2, 2015

Vaccant Seats in Silicon_CV Raman_NIST after first round allotment and in all colleges of Orissa 2015

 After first round allotment more than 33000 BTech seats are vaccant in Orissa.

Seats Vaccancy in CV Raman:

C. V. Raman College of Engineering, Bhubaneswar
Course Name Total Seats
Applied Electronics & Instrumentation 35
Civil Engineering 17
Chemical Engineering 35
Electrical Engineering 28
Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering 84
Information Technology 23
C. V. Raman College of Engineering,2nd Shift, Bhubaneswar
Course Name Total Seats
Electrical Engineering 40
Mechanical Engineering 19


Silicon Institute of Technology, Sambalpur
Course Name Total Seats
Computer Science and Engineering 29
Civil Engineering 40
Electrical Engineering 102
Electronics & Communication Engineering 96
Mechanical Engineering 36
Electrical Engineering - TFW 4
Electronics & Communication Engineering - TFW 5
Silicon Institute of Technology, Bhubaneswar
Course Name Total Seats
Applied Electronics & Instrumentation 12


National Institute of Science and Technology, Berhampur
Course Name Total Seats
Civil Engineering 16
Electrical Engineering 73
Electrical and Electronics Engineering 41
Electronics & Communication Engineering 17
Electronics & Instrumentation Engineering 39
Information Technology 52
Mechanical Engineering 25
National Institute of Science and Technology, 2nd Shift, Berhampur
Course Name Total Seats
Electrical and Electronics Engineering 38

SNo College Name Total
1 Adarsha College of Engineering, Angul 659
2 Ajay Binaya Institute of Technology, Cuttack 231
3 Apex Institute of Technology & Management, Bhubaneswar 452
4 Aryan Institute of Engineering & Technology, Bhubaneswar 360
5 Balasore College of Engineering & Technology, Balasore 411
6 Barrister Ranjit Mohanty International Institute of Technology, Bhubaneswar 425
7 Bhadrak Institute of Engineering & Technology, Bhadrak 459
8 Bhubaneswar College of Engineering , Khajuria, Khurda 279
9 Bhubaneswar Engineering College BEC, Bhubaneswar 384
10 Bhubaneswar Institute of Industrial Technology, Bhubaneswar 277
11 Bhubaneswar Institute of Technology, Bhubaneswar 307
12 Black Diamond College of Engineering and Technology, Jharsuguda 381
13 C. V. Raman College of Engineering, Bhubaneswar 222
14 C. V. Raman College of Engineering,2nd Shift, Bhubaneswar 59
15 Capital Engineering College, Khurda 369
16 College of Engineering, Bhubaneswar 594
17 College of Engineering, Bhubaneswar,2ndShift, Bhubaneswar 171
18 DRIEMS, Cuttack 688
19 DRIEMS2nd Shift, Cuttack 114
20 Eastern Academy of Science and Technology EAST, Bhubaneswar 365
21 Einstein Academy of Technology and Management, Bhubaneswar 369
22 Gandhi Academy of Technology and Engineering, Berhampur 288
23 Gandhi Engineering College, GEC, 2nd Shift, Bhubaneswar 12
24 Gandhi Engineering College, GEC, Bhubaneswar 495
25 Gandhi Institute for Education and Technology, Khurda 553
26 Gandhi Institute for Technological Advancement GITA, Bhubaneswar 365
27 Gandhi Institute for Technology, GIFT, 2nd Shift, Bhubaneswar 131
28 Gandhi Institute for Technology, GIFT, Bhubaneswar 541
29 Gandhi Institute of Advanced Computer and Research, Raygada 397
30 Gandhi Institute of Engineering and Technology, Gunupur 547
31 Gandhi Institute of Excellent Technocrats, Bhubaneswar 406
32 Gandhi Institute of Science and Technology, Raygada 432
33 Gandhi Institute of Technology and Management GITAM, Bhubaneswar 390
34 Ghanashyama Hemalata Institute of Technology and Management, Puri 284
35 Gopal Krushna College of Engineering and Technology, Jeypore 173
36 Gurukul College of Engineering for Women, Bhubaeswar 399
37 Gurukul Institute of Technology, Chatabar 254
38 HI-Tech College of Engineering, Bhubaneswar 305
39 Hi-Tech Institute of Technology, Bhubaneswar 383
40 Indic Institute of Design and Research, Bhubaneswar 451
41 Indotech College of Engineering, KHURDA 257
42 Indus College of Engineering, Bhubaneswar 262
43 Jagannath Institute of Engineering and Technology, Cuttack 226
44 Kalam Institute of Technology, Berhampur 299
45 KMBB College of Engineering and Technology, Khurda 279
46 Konark Institute of Science and Technology, Bhubaneswar 439
47 Koustuv Institute of Self Domain ,for Women, Bhubaneswar 313
48 Koustuv Institute of Self Domain, for Women,2nd Shift, Bhubaneswar 114
49 Krupajala Engineering College, Kausalyaganga 619
50 Krupajala Engineering College, Kausalyaganga2nd Shift, Kausalyaganga 114
51 Kruttika Institute of Technical Education, Gangapatna, Bhubaneswar 272
52 Maharaja Institute of Technology,Bhubaneswar 464
53 Mahavir Institute of Engineering and Technology, Bhubaneswar 368
54 Mahavir Institute of Engineering and Technology, Bhubaneswar2ndShift 86
55 Majhighariani Institute of Technology and Science, Rayagada 428
56 Majhighariani Institute of Technology and Science, Rayagada2ndShift 110
57 Modern Engineering and Management Studies, Balasore 274
58 Modern Institute of Technology and Management, Bhubaneswar 299
59 Nalanda Institute of Technology, Bhubaneswar 332
60 Nalanda Institute of Technology, Bhubaneswar2ndShift 57
61 National Institute of Science and Technology, 2nd Shift, Berhampur 38
62 National Institute of Science and Technology, Berhampur 263
63 Nigam Institute of Engineering and Technology, Baranga 447
64 NM Institute of Engineering and Technology, Bhubaneswar 482
65 Orissa Engineering College, Nijigarh Kurki, Jatni 411
66 Oxford College of Engineering and Management, Bhubaneswar 491
67 Padmanava College of Engineering, Rourkela 276
68 Padmashree Krutartha Acharya College of Engineering, Bargarh 416
69 Purushottam Institute of Engineering and Technology, Kansbahal 396
70 Raajdhani Engineering College, Bhubaneswar 445
71 Radha Krishna Institute of Engineering and Technology, Bhubaneswar 264
72 Rahul Institute of Engineering and Technology, Berhampur 304
73 Rayagada Institute of Technology & Management, Rayagada 337
74 Roland Institute of Technology, Berhampur 260
75 Samanta Chandra Sekhar Institute of Technology and Management, Semiliguda 336
76 Samanta Chandra Sekhar Institute of Technology and Management,2nd Shift, Semiliguda 114
77 Sanjaya Memorial Institute of Technology, Berhampur 324
78 Satyasai Engineering College, Balasore 338
79 Seemanta Engineering College, Jharpokharia 463
80 Shibani Institute of Technical Education, Bhubaneswar 395
81 Silicon Institute of Technology, Sambalpur 312
82 Silicon Institute of Technology, Bhubaneswar 12
83 Sophitorium Engineering College, Bhubaneswar 357
84 Spintronic Technology and Advance Research, Bhubaneswar 332
85 Srinix College of Engineering, Balasore 360
86 Subas Institute of Technology, Bhubaneswar 386
87 Suddhananda Engineering and Research Centre, Bhubaneswar 253
88 Sundargarh Engineering College, Sundargarh 211
89 Synergy Institute of Engineering and Technology, Dhenkanal 377
90 Synergy Institute of Engineering and Technology,2nd Shift, Dhenkanal 109
91 Synergy Institute Of Technology, Bhubaneswar 295
92 TempleCity Institute of Technology and Engineering,TITE, Bhubaneswar 383
93 The Techno School, Bhubaneswar 425
94 Trident Academy of Technology, Bhubaneswar 442
95 Trident Academy of Technology,2nd Shift, Bhubaneswar 54
96 Vedang Institute of Technology, Khurda 335
97 Vignan Institute of Technology and Management, Berhampur 435
98 Vijayanjali Institute of Technology, Balasore 264
99 Vikash Institute of Technology, BARGARH 298
100 VITS Engineering College, Khurda 223
101 Vivekananda Institute of Technology, Bhubaneswar 375
  Total
33032