Know all about IIT JEE Exam - Sarthaks.com

The (Joint Entrance Examination) JEE is an engineering entrance examination conducted for admission to various engineering colleges in India. It is organized by two different examinations: the JEE Main and the JEE Advance.

The Joint Seat Allocation Authority takes the joint admission process for a total of 24 IIT campuses, 18 Indian Institute of Information Technology campuses, 32 NIT (National Institute of Technology campuses) and 19 other Government Funded Technical Institutes (GFTIs) based on the rank picked up by a student in JEE Mains and JEE Advanced.


There are very few institutes, such as the Indian Institute of Petroleum and Energy, the Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Petroleum Technology, the Indian Institute of Space Science and Technology, the Indian Institutes of Science Education and Research, and the Indian Institute of Science, which use the score obtained in the JEE Advanced examination as the basis for admission. These organizations don't participate in the post-assessment advising meeting. Any Undergraduate Student who takes admission to an Indian Institute of Technology can't show up for the JEE Advanced assessment once more, yet the equivalent isn't the situation with IISc, IISERs, RGIPT, IIPE, and IIST since they have isolated and selective counselling meetings.

JEE Main has two papers, Paper-I and Paper-II. Candidates may pick either or the two of them. The two papers contain numerous decision questions. Paper-I is for admission to B.E / B.Tech courses and is led in a Computer Based Test mode. Paper-II is for confirmation in B.Arch and B.Planning courses and will likewise be directed in Computer Based Test mode aside from one paper, specifically the 'Drawing Test' which will be led in Pen and Paper mode or disconnected mode. From January 2020 an extra Paper - III is being presented for B.Planning courses separately.

JEE Main, in contrast to JEE Advanced, has a fixed test structure and isn't liable to change each year. Paper-1 is of three hours span and comprises of thirty different decision (single-right) inquiries in every one of the three subjects (material science, science and maths). 4 imprints are granted for right answers and 1 imprint is deducted for off base answers.

Another example comprising of 20+5 inquiries per subject is presented in January 2020 with 20 numerous decision questions + 5 mathematical sort question. In different decision addresses 4 imprints are granted for right answers and no imprints are deducted from mathematical sort questions.

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