101 Fact About Iits & Iitians

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101 About

4.0 Number of IIT-JEE aspirants


(2005-2009) 3.84
3.5
lac
3.0
3.11
2.87 Lac
2.5
lac
2.43
2.0 Lac
1.98
1.5 Lac

1.0

0.5

0.0
IITs & IITians
The booklet comes to you from (A Unit of Resonance Eduventures Pvt. Ltd.)
N
LOCATIONS OF INDIAN INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (IITS)

IIT-Mandi (2009)
H.P.
IIT- Punjab (2008)
(Rupnagar) IIT-Roorkee (2001)

IIT-Delhi (1961) IIT-Guwahati (1994)

IIT- Rajasthan (2008) IIT-Kanpur (1959)


IIT-Patna (2008)
IIT-Indore (2009)
M.P.
IIT-Gandhinagar (2008)
IIT-Kharagpur (1951)

IIT-Bhubaneswar (2008)
IIT-Bombay (1958)

IIT-Hyderabad (2008)

IIT-Madras (1959) Established IIT


New IIT
PREFACE
What is great in being an IITian? You will get the answer when you look in to the
biographies of these Tech grads occupying the top rungs of R&D or management
positions in almost all technical companies in the public and private sectors in
India. Many even hold senior positions in PWD, the railway and the Army, busy
bringing about a 'Technology and Societal Transformation'. A University of
California study found that 10 per cent of all start-ups in the Silicon Valley
between 1995 and 1998 were by Indians, most of whom had come from the IIT
system.

The concept of the IITs originated even before India gained independence in 1947.
It was conceptualized that the future prosperity of India would depend not so
much on capital as on Technology, which eventually resulted into developments
leading to the first IIT in the country in 1951. With time more IITs were setup
and these institutions trained scientists and engineers, with aim of developing a
skilled work force to support the economic and social development of the country
in post independence era.

The IIT entrance process is unique and uncorrupted. In IITs you have competitive
excellence. You compete with the best in the world. You may have been the best in
your school but you realize that the guy sitting next to you is 10 times better than
you, you learn how to compete and excel in life.

This booklet unveils some basic facts about the IITs and strengthens your desire
rock solid to get into an IIT. Get prepared to make a difference to the billion people
of India.

Best Wishes.

R K Sharma
Vidhu Gaur
&
Place: Kota Entire Student Welfare & PR Team
Great visionaries from IITs
Chief Executive Officer One of the 7 founders of
of Reinsurance Division, Infosys Technologies.
Burkshire Hathaway Currently the non-
Inc. executive chairman and
Touted as a possible Chief Mentor of Infosys.
successor to Warren His lectures delivered
Buffett. around the world have
been published in as a
book - A better India:
Ajit Jain A better world. N.R.Narayan Murthy
Born: July 23, 1951 in Orissa, India M.Tech., IIT-Kanpur (1981)
B.Tech., IIT-Kharagpur (1972) Born: August 20, 1946,
Mysore, Karnataka, India

1972 Batch Indian Wa s t h e C E O o f


Administrative Service Vodafone Group plc.
(IAS) officer. Serves on the Board of
MS Economics, Ohio Directors of Cisco
University, Ph. D. Systems and Safeway,
Economics. I n c . To o k M S i n
Appointed 22nd engineering and MBA
Governor of Reserve from the Haas School of
Bank of India on 5 Sept. Business, University of
Duvvuri Subbarao 2008. California, Berkeley. Arun Sarin
Born:11 August 1949 Born: October 21, 1954
B.Tech., IIT-Kharagpur (1969) B. Tech., IIT-Kharagpur -1975
Metallurgical Engineering

Co-founder of infosys. He has been an elected


Currently serves as the member of the Indian
Chairman of the new Parliament representing
Unique Identification Andhra Pradesh in the
Authority of India Rajya Sabha since June
(UIDAI). He was the 2004 & has been the
Inspiration behind the Minister of State
book - (Independent Charge)
The World is Flat. for Environment and
Nandan Nilekani Forests since May, Jairam Ramesh
Born: 2 June 1955 2009. Born: 9 April 1954
B.Tech., IIT-Bombay (1978) (Chikmagalur, Karnataka)
B.Tech., IIT-Bombay (1975)
with incredible achievements.
Special advisor on Indian-American
management reforms to engineer who is a pioneer
the Secretary-General of of digital technology
the United Nations. including HDTV and
Independent director at MPEG4. He conducted
Goldman Sachs, is a seminal research in
member of the board of digital compression,
trustees of the University signal processing and
of Chicago. He became other fields. Netravali has
Rajat Gupta McKinsey & Company’s been President of Bell Arun Netraval
Born: December 2, 1948 first MD born outside of Laboratories and Chief Born: May 26, 1946,
(Maniktala, Calcutta) the US, completing three Scientist for Lucent (Bombay, India)
B.Tech., IIT-Delhi (1971) full terms at the coveted Technologies. B.Tech., IIT-Bombay (1967)
position.

He is one of the co- She joined Motorola in


founders of Sun 1984 and became its
Microsystems and Executive Vice President
became first CEO & in 2005. She switched to
Chairman of Sun Cisco Systems as CTO.
Microsystems and then Fortune Magazine called
became a general partner her one of four rising
of the venture capital firm stars on its Most
Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield Powerful Women list,
Vinod Khosla & Byers in 1986. In 2004, placing her between the Padmasree Warrior
Born: January 28, 1955 Khosla formed his own 10 "highest paid" and the Born: 1961, Vijayawada,
New Delhi, India firm, Khosla Ventures. "Young and Powerful" Andhra Pradesh, India
B.Tech., IIT-Delhi (1976) categories. B. Tech., IIT-Delhi-1982
(Chemical Engineering)

Joined as assistant He worked as an


commissioner in I-T investment banker with
Department in 1995; Goldman Sachs since
resigned as additional 1999 and lived in
commissioner in 2006, Hongkong for 11 years
started work for before moving to
accountable governance Mumbai.
and right to information. He is considered as one
Founded Parivartan in of the most popular
Arvind Kejriwal 2000, an unregistered English novelists in India Chetan Bhagat
Born: 1968 “people’s movement”. by New York Times. Born: April 22, 1974
B. Tech.,IIT-Kharagpur (1989) New Delhi, India
B.Tech., IIT-Delhi -1995
(Mechanical Engineering)
n Side
An Institute of National Importance in India 9

Importance of Indian Institutes of Technology 10

The History of IITs and its emergence 13

Incredible IIT Grad Speak 15

Courses offered at IIT 18

Teaching Environment and Methodology 23

IIT-JEE 32

FAQs 45

Tips for IIT-JEE Preparation 51


A n Institute of National Importance in India:

1. One which serves as a pivotal player in developing highly skilled personnel


within the specified region of the country/state.
2. Only a chosen few institutes make it to this coveted list and are usually
supported by the Government of India or any international institutes to develop
centers of excellence in research, academics, and other such elite schools of
education.
3. In India, all of the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), Indian Institutes of
Information Technology (IIITs), National Institutes of Technology (NITs) and some
other institutes are Institutes of National Importance. The admission to these
institutes is solely through highly competitive examinations like the Indian Institute
of Technology - Joint Entrance Examination / All India Engineering Entrance
Examination (IIT-JEE / AIEEE) etc.

Indian Institute of Technology (IIT)


4. The Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), are a group of fifteen autonomous
engineering and technology-oriented institutes of higher education.
5. The IITs were created to train scientists and engineers, with the aim of developing a
skilled workforce to support the economic and social development of India after
independence in 1947.
6. In order of establishment, they are located in:
1. Kharagpur (1951), 2. Bombay (1958), 3. Madras (1959), 4. Kanpur(1959),
5. Delhi (1961), 6. Guwahati (1994), 7. Roorkee (IIT 2001), 8. Bhubaneswar (2008)
9. Gandhinagar (2008), 10. Hyderabad (2008), 11. Patna (2008), 12. Punjab (2008)
13. Rajasthan (2008), 14. Indore (2009) and 15. Mandi (2009).
7. Each IIT is an autonomous university, linked to the others through a common IIT
Council, which oversees their administration.

9
8. They have a common admission process for undergraduate admissions, using the
Joint Entrance Examination (popularly known as IIT-JEE) to select around 8,000
undergraduate candidates a year.
9. Postgraduate Admissions are done on the basis of the Graduate Aptitude Test in
Engineering (GATE), Joint Management Entrance Test (JMET), Joint Admission Test
to M.Sc. (JAM) and Common Entrance Examination for Design (CEED).
10. Most of the IITs were created between early 1951 and 1960 as the Institutes of
National Importance through special acts of Indian Parliament. The success of the
IITs led to the creation of the Indian Institutes of Information Technology (IIIT) in the
late 1990s and in the 2000s.

of Indian Institutes of Technology

11. IITs are known to produce the successful leaders in every chosen field.
12. They help the students to globalize their potential.
13. Elevate their personality and transform into a hard working, committed treasure.
14. They also give scope to be recognized as one of the top most performers.
15. In any big corporate enterprise, at least one out of the top five leaders will be an
IITian.
16. Be it a small venture or Research and development organization with an IITian behind
it, is proved to be a huge success in terms of the results produced in a very less time.

17. The students at IIT strive to acquire the qualities like:


a. Problem-solving attitude.
b. Exposure to research and analysis.
c. Education to handle life.

10
d. High standards.
e. Spirit of community.
f. Entrepreneurial skills.
g. Leadership skills.
18. Discipline
From the very inception, The Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) have been
successfully able to manage the discipline in terms of following:
• A proper and timely implementation of a planned curriculum.
• Timely conduction of tests and submission of projects
• Timely conduction of extra curricular activities.
• Strictly maintaining the ethical norms of 'No Ragging'
IITs have always maintained ethical norms of not bullying an individual just for the
sake of it or for fun but have taken enough care of motivating the inner morale of the
individuals towards studies.
19. Inculcation of the Managerial Spirit
• The events organized at IITs as mentioned above act as catalyst in boosting the
managerial dexterity and poised acumen.
• All the technical festivals popularly known as tech fests are completely organized
by students themselves and this cultivates in them the entrepreneurial spirit in
the following way:
¨ Organizing the events is the whole sole responsibility of the students.
¨ Identifying the sources of sponsorships.
¨ Gathering the sponsorships from various sources.
¨ Pitching in themselves (students):
¥ for the best of the Institute (IIT)
¥ Speaking to the various colleges
¥ For the best of the organized execution of the tech fest

11
¥ For the portrayal of the best of the ability
¥ In-culcation of entrepreneurial attitude
Juxtaposition of engineering capability and managerial skill makes an individual
stand above the rest cutting the clutter.
IIT Basics:
20. Conceptualization of IITs is believed to have happened between Second World War
and our Independence to make India self reliant in technology.
21. Our First Prime Minister Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru's vision, to make the Indian
students to be best equipped with technology that suits the International standards,
gave us now the international acclaim by placing IITs in top 100 premier institutes of
the world.
22. The idea that started with four IITs now has grown to 15 IITs and Institute of
Technology, Banaras Hindu University (IT-BHU) and Indian School of Mines
University, Dhanbad (ISMU- Dhanbad).
23. Now lakhs of intelligent students look up to IIT-JEE and to these institutions as the
biggest scholastic achievement and benchmark for the intelligence.
24. The student intake in IITs is now touching about 8000.
25. The Joint Entrance Examination for the admission into the Country's premier most
institutes Indian Institutes of Technology is popularly known as IIT-JEE.
26. IIT-JEE has come through several modifications in the way it is conducted.
27. It can be said that it is one exam that assesses the caliber of a student through its
questions alone as the admission is based on the merit in this examination only.
28. No group discussion, no face to face interview but the students selected through
this examination will acquire all those qualities that make a person successful in
many respects.

12
HISTORY
The of IITs and its emergence:

29. Refers to the history of the seven IITs namely IIT Kharagpur, IIT Bombay, IIT Madras,
IIT Kanpur, IIT Delhi, IIT Guwahati and IIT Roorkee.
30. The history of the IIT system dates back to 1946 when Sir Jogendra Singh of the
Viceroy's Executive Council set up a committee whose task was to consider the
creation of Higher Technical Institutions for post-war industrial development in India.
31. The 22-member committee, headed by Nalini Ranjan Sarkar, recommended the
establishment of these institutions in various parts of India, with affiliated secondary
institutions.
32. The first Indian Institute of Technology was founded in May 1950 at the site of the
Hijli Detention Camp in Kharagpur and the first convocation address was given by
Jawaharlal Nehru, first Prime Minister of India, in 1956.·The present name 'Indian
Institute of Technology' was adopted before the formal inauguration of the Institute
on August 18, 1951, by Maulana Abul Kalam Azad.
33. On 15 September 1956, the Parliament of India passed an act known as the Indian
Institute of Technology (Kharagpur) Act declaring it as an Institute of National
Importance.
34. On the recommendations of the Sarkar Committee, four campuses were established
at Mumbai (1958), Chennai (1959), Kanpur (1959), and Delhi (1961).
35. The location of these campuses was chosen to be scattered throughout India to
prevent regional imbalance.
36. Student agitations in the state of Assam made Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi promise
the creation of a new IIT in Assam. This led to a sixth campus at Guwahati under the
Assam Accord in 1994.
37. The University of Roorkee, India's oldest engineering college was conferred IIT
status in 2001.
38. In the 11th Five year plan, eight states were identified for establishment of new IITs,
and IT-BHU was recommended to be converted in to IIT.
13
Why IIT are the choicest institutes for Quality Education:
39. The smartest, most successful, most influential Indians seem to share a common
credential they are graduates of the Indian Institutes of Technology, better known as
IITs.
40. Possess the talent to undergo and handle stress effectively as individuals
themselves undergo the rigors of tremendous competition.
41. Many business houses place high value on IIT education and recruit them at much
higher salaries than what they offer others.
42. IITians enjoy the security and prestige attached to their name and position.
43. IIT graduates are the founding stones in the building of our country and revamping it
to make our country, India a techie nation.
The domain and influence:
44. They are not just into high tech business. The head of the consulting firm McKinsey &
Company for the longest period had been an IIT graduate and so was the Vice
Chairman of Citigroup and the former CEO of US airways.
45. Fortune 500 headhunters are always on the lookout for the IIT degree.
46. As Vinod Khosla, B.Tech. IIT Delhi and Co-founder of Sun Microsystems, puts it,
“They are favored over almost anybody else. If you are walking in for a job, you
wouldn't have as much pre assigned credibility as you do if you are an engineer from
IIT”.
At par with the best in the world:
47. Engineering students are not nerds as opposed to bold or creative, IIT somehow
breaks the mold. It turns computer geeks into risk takers and leaders.
Producing Leaders, not just Engineers:
48. One may wonder why so many IIT grads are entrepreneurs. Why so many do start
their own companies and the answer is, it is because of the confidence. They are
lucky enough to be told by people around that they are good and have a bright future.
Students act like entrepreneurs the whole time they are at IIT.

14
Easy on Pocket:

49. IIT may also be one of the best educational bargains in the world.

50. It costs a family just about 40000 rupees a year for room, food and tuition and this is
less than 20% of the true cost. The Indian Government subsidizes all the rest.

No Corruption:

51. Unlike so many other institutions in India, all the IIT students know they are there
because they deserve to be there.

52. For admission in IITs , on being asked, “Can you slip somebody a couple of rupees
and say come on, get my son or daughter in”. Narayan Murthy says, “No, no, never
impossible. There is no corruption. It is pure meritocracy”.

INCREDIBLE IIT GRADS SPEAK


53. Vinod Khosla, B.Tech., IIT Delhi and Co-founder Sun Microsystems
To quote Khosla, “IITs are probably the hardest schools in the world to get into”. He
got into IIT 30 years ago. After graduating, he came to US, co-founded Sun
Microsystems and became one of Silicon Valley's most important venture
capitalists. He is one of the thousands of IIT grads who have made it big in the US.

15
54. Narayan Murthy, M.Tech., IIT Kanpur, Founder, Infosys. He is known as 'Bill Gates of
India'. To quote Murthy, “Its very easy to lose hope in this country. Its very easy to set
your aspirations low but amidst all this, the competition among high quality
students, this institution of IIT sets your aspirations much higher”.

a) He adds, “My son wanted to do Computer Science (CS) at IIT. To do CS at IIT, you
have to be in top 200. He couldn't do that and so he went to Cornell instead”.

b) Think about that for a minute, a kid from India using an Ivy League university like
Cornell as a safety school. Murthy says, “I do know cases where students who
couldn't get into CS at IITs, they have got scholarships at MIT, at Princeton or at
Caltech”.

55. Nobel Laureate, Venkataraman Ramakrishnan, at a public lecture at Indian


Institute of Science campus in Bengaluru, recalled his journey from Baroda- where
he went to school and college before moving to Ohio University for his Ph.D
Ramakrishnan noted that he appeared for the IIT entrance test but did not get a seat
in IIT.

He further added 'My parents were some what old-fashioned; they did not believe in
coaching classes (for entrance tests).

Education that IIT imparts:

56. Over the years IITs have created world class educational platforms dynamically
sustained through internationally recognized research based on excellent
infrastructural facilities. The faculty and alumni of IITs continue making huge impact
in all sectors of society, both in India and abroad.

57. Institute of Technology, Banaras Hindu University (IT-BHU), Varanasi and Indian
School of Mines University (ISMU), Dhanbad which have intake through IIT-JEE, are
the oldest institutions in India and are known for their immense contributions
towards society at large and for science and technology in particular.

16
The primary objectives behind such institutions are to:

58. build a solid foundation of scientific and technical knowledge and thus to prepare
competent and motivated engineers and scientists.

59. create environment for freedom of thought, cultivate vision, encourage growth,
develop personality and self- discipline for pursuit of excellence.

60. kindle entrepreneurial streak.

All of the above help to prepare the students admitted to these institutions for
successful professional and social lives. Today, alumni of these institutions occupy
key positions in industry and academia in India and abroad.

61. Each institute has well-equipped modern laboratories, state-of-the-art computer


network and well stocked technical library. Teaching methods rely on direct personal
contact between the teachers and the students and the use of traditional and
modern instructional techniques. Students live in a pleasant and intellectually
stimulating environment with people having similar goals and aspirations, which is
an exciting and unique experience.

62. Credit-based academic programmes offer flexibility to students to progress at their


own pace. A minimum level of performance is necessary for satisfactory progress.
The medium of instruction is English. 75% attendance is mandatory. These
institutions offer courses leading to Bachelor's degree in a number of engineering,
technological and scientific disciplines.

63. M.Sc. Integrated courses in pure and applied sciences and M.Tech. Integrated
courses in a few disciplines are also offered by some of these Institutions. In
addition, some IITs offer Dual-Degree M.Tech. programmes.

64. The admissions to the Undergraduate Programmes at these institutions for all Indian
and Foreign nationals are made through the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE).

17
65. Courses Offered* at IIT:

IIT-Kharagpur

ITBHU-Varanasi

ISM-Dhanbad
IIT-Guwahati

IIT-Roorkee
IIT-Bombay

IIT-Madras
IIT-Kanpur
Programme

IIT-Delhi
B.Tech. 4 Years
Aerospace Engineering
Agricultural & Food Engineering
Biological Sciences and Bioengineering
Biotechnology
Biotechnology & Biochemical Engineering
Ceramic Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Science and Technology
Civil Engineering
Computer Science & Engineering
Electrical Engineering
Electrical Engineering (Power)
Electronics Engineering
Electronics & Communication Engineering
Electronics & Electrical Communication Engineering
Electronics & Electrical Engineering
Engineering Physics
Environmental Engineering
Industrial Engineering
Instrumentation Engineering
Manufacturing Science and Engineering
Materials & Metallurgical Engineering
Metallurgical & Materials Engineering
Mathematics and Computing
Mechanical Engineering
Metallurgical Engineering
Metallurgical Engineering & Materials Science
Mineral Engineering
Mining Engineering
Mining Machinery Engineering
Naval Architecture & Ocean Engineering
Ocean Engineering & Naval Architecture
Petroleum Engineering
Production and Industrial Engineering
Pulp & Paper Engineering

18
ITBHU-Varanasi
IIT-Kharagpur

ISM-Dhanbad
IIT-Guwahati

IIT-Roorkee
IIT-Bombay

IIT-Madras
IIT-Kanpur
Programme

IIT-Delhi
Textile Technology
B. Pharm. 4 Years
Pharmaceutics
B. Des. 4 years
Design
B. Arch. 5 years
Architecture
M. Pharm. Dual Degree 5 years
Pharmaceutics
M.Sc. Integrated 5 years
Applied Geology
Applied Mathematics
Applied Physics
Chemistry
Economics
Exploration Geophysics
Mathematics and Computing
Mathematics & Scientific Computing
Physics
BS & MS Dual Degree 5 years
Physics
M.Sc. Tech. Integrated 5 years
Applied Geology
Applied Geophysics
M.Tech. Integrated 5 year
Geological Technology
Geophysical Technology
Engineering Physics
Industrial Chemistry
Mathematics & Computing
Polymer Science and Technology
B.Tech./M.Tech. Dual Degree 5 Years
Aerospace Engineering
Aerospace Engineering with M.Tech. in Applied
Mechanics with specializations in
Biomedical Engineering
Agricultural and Food Engineering with
M.Tech in any of the listed specializations

19
IT BHU-Varanasi
IIT-Kharagpur

ISM-Dhanbad
IIT-Guwahati

IIT-Roorkee
IIT-Bombay

IIT-Madras
IIT-Kanpur
Programme

IIT-Delhi
Biochemical Engineering
Biochemical Engineering & Biotechnology
Bioengineering with M.Tech. in Biomedical
Technology
Biotechnology
Biotechnology & Biochemical Engineering
Ceramic Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering with M. Tech. in
Hydrocarbon Engineering
Chemical Engineering with M. Tech. in
Process Systems Design & Engineering
Civil Engineering
Civil Engineering with M. Tech. in Applied
Mechanics in any of the listed specialization
Civil Engineering with M. Tech. in Infrastructural
Civil Engineering
Civil Engineering with M. Tech. in Structural Engineering
Civil Engineering with M. Tech. in any of
the listed specialization
Computer Science & Engineering
Computer Science & Engineering with M. Tech. in
Information Technology
Electrical Engineering
Electrical Engineering with M. Tech. in Applied
Mechanics with specialization in Biomedical Engineering
Electrical Engineering with M. Tech. in
Communications and Signal Processing
Electrical Engineering with M. Tech. in
Communication Engineering
Electrical Engineering with M. Tech. in
Information & Communication Technology
Elec tri cal Engine ering with M. Tech. in Micro elec tron ics
Electrical Engineering with M. Tech. in
Microelectronics & VLSI Design
Electrical Engineering with M. Tech. in any
of the listed specializations
Electrical Engineering with M.Tech. in
Power Electronics
Electrical Engineering with M. Tech. in
Power Systems and Power Electronics

20
ITBHU- Varanasi
IIT-Kharagpur

ISM-Dhanbad
IIT-Guwahati

IIT-Roorkee
IIT-Bombay

IIT-Madras
IIT-Kanpur
Programme

IIT-Delhi
Electronics & Communication Engineering
with M. Tech. in Wireless Communication
Electronics & Electrical Communication Engineering
with M. Tech. in any of the listed specializations
Energy Engineering with M.Tech in Energy
Systems Engineering
Engineering Design with M.Tech in Automotive
Engineering
Engineering Design with M.Tech in Biomedical Design •
Engineering Physics with M.Tech in Engineering
Physics with specialization in Nano Science •
Industrial Engineering with M. Tech. in
Industrial Engineering and Management •
Manufacturing Science & Engineering with •
M. Tech. in Industrial Engineering & Management
Material Science & Technology •
Mechanical Engineering • •
Mechanical Engineering with M. Tech. in Computer
Aided Design & Automation •
Mechanical Engineering with M. Tech. in Computer
Integrated Manufacturing •
Mechanical Engineering with M. Tech. in Energy
Technology •
Mechanical Engineering with M. Tech. in Intelligent
Manufacturing •
Mechanical Engineering with M. Tech. in Product Design •
Mechanical Engineering with M. Tech. in any of the
listed specialization •
Metallurgical Engineering •
Metallurgical Engineering & Materials Science with
M. Tech. in Ceramics & Composites •
Metallurgical Engineering & Materials Science with
M. Tech. in Metallurgical Process Engineering •
Metallurgical & Materials Engineering •
Metallurgical & Materials Engineering with M.Tech. in
Metallurgical & Materials Engineering •
Mineral Engineering with M.Tech. in Material
Technology •
Mineral Engineering with M.Tech. in Mineral
Resource Management •
Mining Engineering • •

21
ITBHU- Varanasi
IIT-Kharagpur

ISM-Dhanbad
IIT-Guwahati

IIT-Roorkee
IIT-Bombay

IIT-Madras
IIT-Kanpur
Programme

IIT-Delhi
Mining Engineering with M.Tech. in Mining Engineering •
Mining Engineering with MBA •
B.Tech./M.Tech. Dual Degree 5 Years
Mining Engineering with M.Tech. in Safety
Engineering and Disaster Management in Mines •
Naval Architecture & Ocean Engineering •
Naval Architecture Engineering with M.Tech. in
Applied Mechanics in any of the listed specializations •
Ocean Engineering & Naval Architecture •
Petroleum Engineering with M.Tech. in Petroleum
Management •
Process Engineering with MBA •
Bhubaneswar

Gandhinagar

Hyderabad

Rajasthan
Punjab
Indore

Mandi

Patna
Programme
IIT

IIT
IIT
IIT

IIT

IIT
IIT
IIT

B.Tech. 4 Years
Chemical Engineering
Civil Engineering
Computer Science and Engineering
Electrical Engineering
Mechanical Engineering

66. Current fee structure ** of IITs


Bhubaneswar

Gandhinagar

Hyderabad

Kharagpur

Rajasthan
Guwahati
Bombay

Roorkee
Madras
Kanpur

Punjab
Patna
Delhi

GEN|SC/ST GEN|SC/ST GEN|SC/ST GEN|SC/ST GEN|SC/ST GEN|SC/ST GEN|SC/ST GEN|SC/ST GEN|SC/ST GEN|SC/ST GEN|SC/ST GEN|SC/ST GEN|SC/ST
Total fees
35200/-
10200/-
37825/-
12825/-
40076/-
15076/-
33985/-

40076/-
15076/-

32096/-

39342/-
14342/-
38125/-
13125/-
32120/-

35200/-
10200/-
33985/-

40882/-
15882/-
39920/-
14920/-
8985/-

7096/-

7120/-

8995/-

payable at
the time of
admission IIT- Mandi: 39920/- (GEN), 14920/- (SC/ST) IIT-Indore: 40076/- (GEN), 15076/- (SC/ST)

Total fees payable at IT-BHU, Varanasi ISMU, Dhanbad


the time of admission 21285 /- 30492/- (GEN),1619 (SC/ST)

* &** Source: Counseling Brochutre JEE - 2010

22
Teaching Environment
and
Methodology
67. Regular Classroom Programme:
a) The biggest strength of IITs is the fusion of brilliant techie minds from various parts of
India.
b) This synergism of different brainy minds provides conducive environment of
creativity.
c) The courses range from basic sciences to humanities and courses aim at nurturing
creative designs by means of projects.
d) A typical classroom is equipped with a computer and a projector.
e) Class notes of each lecture are uploaded on web for students to refer again.
f) Also there is a provision of tutorials which are also uploaded on web.
g) Any discussion related to the tutorials is done by assistant teachers who
themselves are students. This practice gives an edge to the students to fine tune
their skills and problem solving approach to the maximum.
h) Other than proper periodical book exams, open book tests and take home exams are
conducted. The concept behind conducting these exams is to build the conceptual
knowledge, inculcate analytical skills and to develop the problem solving attitude in
the students.

23
i) Courses at IIT are of high quality, fixed schedule and classes always happen as per
scheduled time just like assignments. Instructions start and end on fixed days and
are not dragged on. This is the only way of producing a large number of courses in a
short time with least administrative effort.
Teaching through Distance Mode:
68. Course content:
a) From reliable instructors.
b) If from an unknown source in the web, the authenticity is often a question mark.
c) It is not just content that is taught, one can get it from books.
69. IIT’s uniqueness in transmission of education includes:
a) Mistakes are natural - it is ok to make mistakes.
b) Jokes - no need to be serious all the time.
c) Classroom interaction.
d) Outside students get to see the extent of work done by IIT instructors.
e) Extent of work done by IIT students also is seen.
f) Teaching methodology is as important as content itself.
g) Archival of courses of good instructors before they retire.
70. Managing Live Interaction:
a) Indian students do not ask questions, they are to be encouraged to ask questions.
b) In addition, the students are possibly still not comfortable with the technology-the
environment promotes adaptability.
c) Suppose things improve and students do ask questions.
d) Often questions are similar: answering one can satisfy many.
e) A developed filtering mechanism, using teaching assistants.
f) Too many questions - should possibly repeat the lecture and to promote offline
questions.

24
71. Learning Management System (LMS) for discussions
a) Can be used as an additional resource in terms of Slides, assignments, tutorials,
exam questions and their solutions.
b) Colleges synchronize their exams with IITs, grade the papers with IIT professor's
given model answers.
c) Discussion forum: One student posts a question, second one answers, third one
gives another answer, fourth one challenges, teaching assistants resolve - when
discussion goes in the wrong direction, course instructor sets it right thus
interaction is scalable.
d) Whole nation can become a large classroom.
e) IIT Bombay uses the LMS Moodle for all its courses.

25
72. Why
IITians
are known
a)
World Wide
Indian Institute of Technology needs no introduction in India or abroad.
b) Getting into IIT is like assuring yourself towards a successful life, it has been
observed quite often that people doing exceptionally well are in some way or the
other connected to IIT.

73. Is it the Indian Institute of Technology that turns the life of the
student or is it the hidden potential of the student???
a) It's nothing just the environment that unmasks the real you.
b) Humans are very adaptable.
c) We mould ourselves as per the situation, when we see so many people around us
with big- big dreams, we start creating our own.
d) We are highly influential and get easily carried away with the flow. Most of us like to
join rather than creating something of their own; this is the point where IIT stands
alone.
e) IIT is a place where people like to create something of their own if two individuals
follow a same theme they are looked down upon.
f) The culture of The Indian Institute of Technology is like that it truly forces you to build
something different, just out of the league.
26
IITians in the dramatics and politics:
74. Political scenario:
a) Five IITians have formed a new political party in India namely Paritrana.
b) "Giving up handsome pay packages, comfort of family and support of friends wasn't
that easy," says Tanmay Rajpurohit, the national president of the party and B. Tech.
in aerospace from IIT Bombay followed by an MS from GeorgiaTech and double
masters in arts.
c) "But my inner voice told me that I should invest my efforts in my country rather than
making my pockets heavier," said Ajit Ashwalayan Shukla, vice president of the
party. "People think we are crazy so much so that our families have also failed to
understand our motto, but we won't give up," he added.
d) The core team of "Paritrana" comprises Rajpurohit , Shukla, Amit Beesen, also the
vice president and a B. Tech. (Mechanical) from IIT Bombay and an LLB graduate,
Chandrashekhar (national treasurer), B. Tech. (Computer Science) from IIT Kanpur,
Bharat Sundaram, the PRO of the party and B. Tech. from IIT Kanpur and Ph.D. in
electronics from Melbourne.
e) R.K. Misra, IIT Kanpur Alumnus believes that his decision to join BJP has sparked off
a pan-IIT discussion.
f) Misra, a social entrepreneur for five years had earlier won a leadership campaign
organized by a media group. Egged on by friends, Misra now attempts to provide
responses to each of the e-mails received.
75. Versatility in profile-
Dipayan Banerjee:
a) Completed Integrated B.Tech. and M.Tech. in Mechanical Engineering from IIT
Kharagpur in 2007.
b) Was involved in the business development of Anthelion technology Pvt. Ltd., from
2006.
c) Had worked with Larsen & Toubro briefly in the RADAR section of Heavy Engineering
division.

27
Learn to fly high
d) He holds a patent for Design and Development of “Desktop Artificial Hip Joint
Simulator”. He leads all non-technical issues of the company.
e) Co-founder and director of Sambhavami Foundation.
f) The foundation is a Social Entrepreneurial Organization devoted to the cause of
generating employment opportunities in the society by providing the right platform
to the people residing in the bottom of the economic pyramid and help them convert
their ideas into enterprises.
e) Director & Co-founder of Anthelion Technology Private Limited.
f) Anthelion Technology creates a fiction world, which leads away from real life for a
moment of time. In one's own utopia, one forgets contemporary problems of reality.
g) Anthelion helps people visualize, build and operationalize the dreams and concepts.
76. IITs also cater to different fields other than engineering:
a) Branches like that of Humanities, social sciences, communication etc. also have a
wide scope in IITs.
b) Through Humanities and Social sciences, the teachers at IIT try to inculcate and
balance the two crucial factors that are Empathy (quotient) and systemizing
(quotient).
c) IIT Madras has thrown its gates open to the aspiring students of commerce and
humanities streams.
d) Class XII students can now sit for the IIT Humanities and Social Sciences Entrance
Test (HSEE) to gain admission to a five-year integrated Master's programme in
humanities.
e) Excellence in the field of study, a well-rounded personality, self-confidence and
human values are focal areas in this institution.
f) Alumni of the IITs walk the corridors of top industrial houses and research
institutions around the world. The innovative programme leads to the award of an
M.A. degree in economics, developmental studies or English.
g) Other course options available at other IITs like that of Kanpur, Delhi etc.

30
h) Behavioral Science, Economics, English, Human Behaviour and Built Environment,
I.P.R, Technical Communication.
i) Some elective courses are Applied Hindi, Creative Writing in English, Economics of
Industrial Strategy, Entrepreneurship Development Strategies, Fiction of the Indian
Diaspora, Film and Literature, Group Dynamics, Indian Novel in English, Industrial
Sociology, Introduction To Philosophy, Linguistics, Modern Drama, Psychological
Basis of Behaviour, Sanskrit language, Science, Technology and Society.
j) Some post graduate courses are English in Practice, Sociological Theory
Developments and Trends, Language, Society & Culture, Personality Structure &
Dynamics, Seminar (Case Material Based) Minor Project, Planning & Economic
Development, communication skills etc.

31
77. IIT-JEE Indian Institute of Technology-Joint Entrance Examination:
a) Is an annual college entrance examination in India.
b) A total of 17 colleges use JEE as a sole criterion for admission to their undergraduate
programs. The eighteen colleges include the seven old and eight new (2009) Indian
Institutes of Technology, IT-BHU Varanasi, ISMU Dhanbad.
c) The exam is conducted by the various IITs by a policy of rotation.
d) It is one of the toughest engineering entrance exams in the world with a success rate
of around 1 in 45.
e) Candidates who qualify in the IIT-JEE can apply for admission to the B. Arch.
(Bachelor of Architecture), B.Des. (Bachelor of Design), B.Tech. (Bachelor of
Technology), Dual Degree (Integrated Bachelor of Technology and Master of
Technology) and Integrated M.Sc. (Master of Sciences) courses in the various
institutes.
f) Achieving entrance into an IIT is often considered the pinnacle of achievement for a
student of the sciences, and the IITs/IT-BHU/ISM-Dhanbad attract most of the
brightest students of the nation.

32
g) Of the 384,977 candidates who appeared in the examination conducted on April 12,
2009, 10,035 candidates have been declared qualified to seek admission, giving a
selectivity of 1 in 38 overall, 1 in 46 for the 8,295 seats in IITs,IT-BHU and ISMU and 1
in 59 for the IITs only.
h) The JEE has evolved considerably from its initial pattern approximately 45 years
back.
78. IIT-JEE Pattern:
a) Each year IIT-JEE is conducted by any one of the old IITs in round robin fashion.
b) In 2009, it was conducted by IIT-Guwahati.
c) The IIT-JEE 2010, is scheduled on April 11, 2010.
d) It will be conducted by IIT Madras. The Result of the same is scheduled tentatively
0n May 26, 2010.
e) This year IIT-M has introduced a different mode of application through online to
promote online application process.
f) According to the data released by the organizing committee of IIT-JEE, the children
of medical professionals had the highest success rate in the IIT-JEE (for the years
2006, 2007 and 2008).
g) They were followed by the children of engineers.
i) The maximum number of students taking IIT-JEE is the children of government
employees, but they had a much lower success rate.
79. Current examination format:
a) The current pattern is followed since 2006.
b) The current pattern consists of two objective type papers each containing maths,
physics and chemistry sections.
c) The syllabus of the examination is predominantly based on topics covered by the
CBSE Board Examination (AISSCE) and the ISC Board Examination.
d) The pattern of questions in JEE is deliberately variable so as to minimize the chance
of students getting selected by cramming up the probable questions.

33
e) As it is objective type questions, Optical mark recognition answer sheets has been
adopted since 2006.
f) In previous years, there were separate Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry
papers, each of two hours' duration that contained both subjective and objective
Questions.
g) The current pattern is adopted so as to reduce the students' stress.
h) Given the importance attached to the JEE by students all over India, the IITs follow a
rigorous procedure when conducting it every year. The exam is set by the JEE
Committee (consisting of a group of faculty members drawn from the admitting
colleges) under the tightest security.
i) Multiple sets of question papers are framed and the set that is to actually be used on
the day of the exam is known to only about five individuals. The JEE has been noted
for originality in its questions.

80. JEE 2009 Pattern - Physics | Mathematics | Chemistry


Paper-1
No. of Negative
Nature of Questions Marks Total
Questions Marks
Single Choice Question (SCQ) 8 3 -1 24
Multiple Choice Question (MCQ) 4 4 -1 12
Comprehension Type 1x3 4 -1 12
1x3 4 -1 12
Match the column 2 [2, 8] 0 16
Total 20 76
Paper-2
No. of Negative
Nature of Questions Marks Total
Questions Marks
Single Choice Question (SCQ) 4 3 -1 24
Multiple Choice Question (MCQ) 5 4 -1 12
Match the column 2 [2, 8] 0 16
Subjective 8 4 -1 32
Total 19 80

34
More about IIT-JEE:
81. Indian Institute of Technology - Joint Entrance Examination (IIT-JEE) is a common
entrance test for the admission in all 15 IITs, Institute of Technology - Banaras Hindu
University (IT-BHU), Varanasi & Indian School of Mines University (ISMU), Dhanbad.
82. IIT-JEE is considered to be one of the toughest examinations in the world at
undergraduate level. It is conducted by the IITs. 384977 students took IIT-JEE in
2009 for 8295 seats with participant selection ratio of less than 3%. The Main Merit
List of successful candidates is 1.20 times of total number of seats.
83. The Extended Merit List (EML) of IIT-JEE is the list of candidates drawn up with some
further relaxation in the aggregate cut-off beyond the cut-off of the IIT-JEE Main
Merit List. All the candidates who are declared qualified in the EML are eligible for
admissions in institutions like Indian Institute of Space Science & Technology (IIST),
Thiruvananthapuram, Indian Institute of Science Education & Research (IISER) at
Pune, Kolkata, Thiruvananthapuram, Bhopal & Mohali, Rajiv Gandhi Institute of
Petroleum Technology (RGIPT), Rai Bareilly and Indian Institute of Maritime Studies
(Merchant Navy) at Mumbai & Kolkata.
84. Eligibility:
a) A student appearing or appeared in Class-XII board examination with Physics,
Chemistry & Mathematics can appear in IIT-JEE.
b) Candidates belonging to GEN, OBC and DS categories must secure at least 60%
marks in aggregate in their qualifying examination to be eligible to write IIT-JEE.
Whereas, those belonging to SC, ST and PD categories must secure at least 55%
marks in aggregate in the qualifying examination.
c) One can attempt IIT-JEE only twice, in consecutive years. First, with the qualifying
exam and second, in the very next year .

35
Present format of IIT-JEE
85. There are two Objective Papers of 3 hours each having questions from Physics,
Chemistry & Maths. Normally, there is negative marking for wrong answers. IIT-JEE
2009 paper was of 480 Marks (160 marks for each subject). The result of IIT-JEE is
normally declared in the last week of May every year. In IIT-JEE 2009, All India Rank
(AIR) 1st student scored 424 marks (88.33%) while the aggregate cut-off marks for
General category students was 178 (37.08%), for OBC category it was 161 (33.54%)
& for SC, ST and PD categories it was 89 (18.54%) out of 480. It indicates that the
relaxation in the cutoff of other backward classes (OBC) is 10 percent of the general.
The cutoff of Schedule Caste (SC) Schedule Tribe (ST) and Physically disabled (PD) is
50 percent of the general category.
86. Reservation Policy:
The total seats in IIT s are filled up according to Government of India's reservation
policy with 27% seats for OBC (Non-creamy layer), 15% for SC and 7.5% for ST
category students. Further, 3% seats in each category (GEN, OBC, SC & ST) are
reserved for Persons with Physically Disabled (PD) category students. Two seats in
each of the IITs are available for preferential allotment to children of defence services
under Defence Staff (DS) category.
87. All IITs organize annual technical festivals, typically lasting three or four days.
a) The technical festivals are Techfest (IIT Bombay),Cognizance (IIT Roorkee),
Shaastra (IIT Madras), Techkriti (IIT Kanpur), Kshitij (IIT Kharagpur), Tryst (IIT Delhi),
and Techniche (IIT Guwahati).
b) Most of them are organized in the months of January or March. While Techfest is
most popular in terms of participants and prize money involved and also conducted
at a totally different scale.
c) Shaastra holds the distinction of being the first student-managed event in the world
to implement a formal Quality Management System, earning the ISO 9001:2000
certifications.
d) Annual cultural festivals are also organized by the IITs. These include Rendezvous
(IIT Delhi), Thomso & Tarang (previously Rave) (IIT Roorkee), Mood Indigo (IIT

36
Bombay) (also known as Mood-I), Spring Fest (IIT Kharagpur) (also known as SF),
Saarang (IIT Madras) (previously Mardi Gras), Antaragni (IIT Kanpur), Alcheringa (IIT
Guwahati).
e) In addition to these cultural festivals, IIT Kharagpur and IIT Bombay celebrate unique
festivals.
f) IIT Kharagpur celebrates the Illumination festival on the eve of Diwali. Large bamboo
structures (called chatais) as high as 6 metres (20 ft) are made and earthen lamps
(diyas) are placed on them to form outlines of people, monuments, or an event.
Although the competition is held between hostels, it also receives entries by outside
visitors. Coupled with the Illumination festival is the Rangoli festival. In Rangoli, large
panels showing an event or a concept, are made on the ground by fine powder, and
sometimes even by crushed bangles.
g) Unique to IIT Bombay is the Performing Arts Festival (popularly known as PAF).
Technically a drama, each PAF includes drama, literature, music, fine arts, debating,
and dance. All PAFs are held in the Open Air Theater (OAT), on the main campus of IIT
Bombay. Typically two or three hostels (of 14) group together by random draw for
each PAF. All of the dialogues are delivered as voiceovers and not by the actors,
mainly due to the structure and the huge size of the OAT.
h) Recently, IIT Guwahati has also started this Performing Arts Festival (PAF).
88. Culture and Student Life:
a) All the IITs provide on-campus residential facilities to the students, research
scholars and faculty.
b) The students live in hostels (sometimes referred to as halls) throughout their stay in
the IIT.
c) Students in all IITs must choose between National Cadet Corps (NCC), National
Service Scheme (NSS) and National Sports Organization (NSO) in their first years.
e) All the IITs have sports grounds for cricket, football (soccer), hockey, volleyball, lawn
tennis, badminton, and athletics; and swimming pools for aquatic events.
f) Usually the hostels also have their own sports grounds.

37
89. Ranking Worldwide:
a) Most IITs are consistently ranked above any other engineering colleges in India in
engineering education surveys, with regard to quality of faculty, teaching standards,
research facilities and campus placements.
b) In international surveys the IITs figure in lists of top engineering institutions.
c) IIT Bombay was ranked 30th in the world in The Times Higher Education
Supplement- QS World University Rankings 2009 - Engineering/Technology.
d) The Times Higher Education Supplement (2008) ranked IIT-Delhi and IIT-Bombay
157th and 174th best overall universities respectively in their World University
Rankings.
e) The THES also ranked 5 IITs in the top 100 globally for technology with IIT-Bombay
ranking the highest at 36th.
f) For Natural Sciences, IIT-Bombay ranked 77th and was the only IIT to feature in the
2008 rankings.
g) In the Shanghai Jiao Tong University's Academic Ranking of World Universities, only
one IIT (IIT Kharagpur) was listed among the top 500 universities worldwide.
h) The IITs have scored better under most educational ranking criteria than other Indian
colleges and universities and so they continue to achieve top positions in nationwide
surveys.
90. Recognition to the Brand IIT:
a) The degrees provided by IITs are recognised by the AICTE and hence recognised by
all institutions in India.
b) Other factors that have contributed to the success of IITs are stringent faculty
recruitment procedures and industry collaboration. The procedure for selection of
faculty in IITs is stricter as compared to other colleges offering similar degrees. The
Ph.D. degree is a pre-requisite for all regular faculty appointments.
c) Former IIT students get greater respect from their peers, academia and industry in
general. The IIT brand was reaffirmed when the United States House of
Representatives passed a resolution honoring Indian Americans and especially
graduates of IIT for their contributions to the American society.
38
d) China also recognised the value of IITs and planned to replicate the model.
91. General details:
a) The faculty-to-student ratio in the IITs is between 1:6 and 1:8.
b) The Standing Committee of IIT Council (SCIC) prescribes the lower limit for faculty-
to-student ratio as 1:9, applied department wise. The IITs subsidise undergraduate
student fees by approximately 80% and provide scholarships to all Master of
Technology students and Research Scholars in order to encourage students for
higher studies, per the recommendations of the Thacker Committee (19591961).
c) The cost borne by undergraduate students including boarding and mess expenses is
around Rs. 75,000 per annum. It has increased significantly over past ten years.
d) The various IITs function autonomously, and their special status as Institutes of
National Importance facilitates the smooth running of IITs.
e) Such autonomy means that IITs can create their own curricula and adapt rapidly to
the changes in educational requirements, free from bureaucratic hurdles.
f) The government has no direct control over internal policy decisions of IITs (like
faculty recruitment and curricula) but has representation on the IIT Council.
g) The medium of instruction in all IITs is English. The classes are usually held between
7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m., though there are some variations within each IIT.
h) All the IITs have public libraries for the use of their students. In addition to a collection
of prescribed books, the libraries have sections for fiction and other literary genres.
The electronic libraries allow students to access on-line journals and periodicals.
i) The academic policies of each IIT are decided by its Senate. This comprises all
professors of the IIT and student representatives.
j) Unlike many western universities that have an elected senate, the IITs have an
academic senate. It controls and approves the curriculum, courses, examinations
and results, and appoints committees to look into specific academic matters. The
teaching, training and research activities of the institute are periodically reviewed by
the senate to maintain educational standards. The Director of an IIT is the ex-officio
Chairman of the Senate.

39
92. Credit system of performance:
a) All the IITs follow the credits system of performance evaluation, with proportional
weighting of courses based on their importance.
b) The total marks (usually out of 100) form the basis of grades, with a grade value (out
of 10) assigned to a range of marks. Sometimes, relative grading is done considering
the overall performance of the whole class.
c) For each semester, the students are graded on a scale of 0 to 10 based on their
performance, by taking a weighted average of the grade points from all the courses,
with their respective credit points.
d) Each semester evaluation is done independently and then the weighted average
over all semesters is used to calculate the cumulative grade point average (known
as CGPA or CPI (Cumulative Performance Index).
93. Top Recruiters at IITs
a) The IITs across various cities in India invite companies mainly from the Information
Technology (IT) sector.
b) Some of the past recruiters at IIT Madras include McKinsey, Analog, Cosmic
Circuits, Lehman Brothers, Capital One, Reliance Industries, Google India,
Murugappa Group and Morgan Stanley among others.
c) In addition to leading Indian companies, many software and automobile companies
from abroad also recruit students from the different IITs.
94. IIT Placements Procedures:
a) IIT placements procedures generally differ from place to place, with a few processes
remaining common.
b) IIT Bombay sends invitations to various companies with appropriate information and
a Job Announcement Form (JAF).

40
c) The placement office at IIT Madras also sends placement invitation letters to the
companies along with a summary of the courses available at the institution. The
companies that wish to participate in the recruitment process are required fill in an
employer registration form, which is generally attached with the placement
invitation letter from the respective IITs. After the concerned companies accept the
invitation, a mutual suitable date is finalized for the recruitment process.
IITs See Highest Pay Packages
(According to the News update of December 3, 2009)
d) The IIT attracted the virtual who's who of the job market - Microsoft, Intel, ITC, Shell,
Morgan Stanley, Tower Research, HUL and British Gas, among others.
e) The IIT authorities said that, "This time there is expected to be a rise of 20 to 30 per
cent in the average salary offered to its students."
f) It has been a major turn around for the IITs which had badly sunken in the recession
last year. Recording a major drop-down, the number of multi-national recruiters sunk
by 53 percent from 3,031 in 2008 to 1,606 in 2009.
g) The placement season that began in December 2008 dragged on until June 2009.
While a global major offered nine IIT-Kanpur students Rs.25 lakh a year, Kharagpur
posted the highest salary of Rs.22 lakh a year.
h) Although IIT-Bombay was averse to disclose the remunerations notched up on day
one, Ravi Sinha, placement in-charge, said, "This year also saw a good start with
some great offers.”
i) The information technology sector, in the wake of the meltdown, however, seems to
have lost some of its charm.
j) S.K.Srivastava, placement in-charge at IIT-Kharagpur said that, "We are expecting
the core engineering companies which comprise 50% of the lot this year, to make
some good offers.”
k) Abhishek Malhotra, India partner and in-charge of recruitment of global
management consultancy firm, Booz and Company, assured that, "This time, the
company has improved the number of offers and salary structure.”

41
IIT-JEE 2009 Analysis:
95. Aggregate Total and subject-wise marks for the first and last admitted
candidates.
Common Merit List
Maths Physics Chemistry Total AIR
153 149 122 424 1
31 75 72 178 8295
OBC Category
Maths Physics Chemistry Total AIR
143 144 126 413 1
63 32 66 161 1930

SC Category
Maths Physics Chemistry Total AIR
100 111 115 326 1
41 5 43 89 967

ST Category
Maths Physics Chemistry Total AIR
118 95 106 319 1
40 24 25 89 208

PD Category
Maths Physics Chemistry Total AIR
87 87 115 289 1
36 33 20 89 138

42
96. Aggregate Total of Different Categories
(500th for GE and 100th for OBC/SC/ST/PD)
Common Merit List
Rank Aggregate Marks 1301 181
1 424 1401 177
501 302 1501 174
1001 278 1601 171
1501 262 1701 167
2001 249 1801 164
2501 239 1901 161
3001 230 1930 161
3501 223 SC Category
4001 216 Rank Aggregate Marks
4501 211 1 326
5001 205 101 170
5501 200 201 146
6001 196 301 132
6501 191 401 121
7001 187 501 112
7501 184 601 105
8001 180 701 99
8295 178 801 95
OBC Category 901 91
Rank Aggregate Marks 967 89
1 413 ST Category
101 282 Rank Aggregate Marks
201 260 1 319
301 244 101 114
401 231 201 91
501 223 208 89
601 216 PD Category
701 210 Rank Aggregate Marks
801 204 1 289
901 199 101 108
1001 194 138 89
1101 190
1201 186

43
97. Subject wise cutoffs and aggregate cutoffs Minimum Qualifying Mark for
Ranking (MQMR) and Aggregate Cut-off

MQMR
Aggregate Cut-off
Chemistry
Merit List Mat hematics Physics (out of 160)
(out of
(out of 160) (out of 160)
160)
General
11 11 8 178
(CML)
OBC 10 10 8 161
SC 6 6 4 89
ST 6 6 4 89
PD 6 6 4 89
98. (a) Marks of the first and the last ranked candidates in JEE merit lists
Merit Marks of the first candidate Marks of the last candidate
List Che. M ath P hy. Agg. Che. Math Phy. Agg.
General
122 153 149 424 72 31 75 178
(CML)
OBC 126 143 144 413 66 63 32 161
SC 115 100 111 326 43 41 5 89
ST 106 118 95 319 25 40 24 89
PD 115 87 87 289 20 36 33 89
(b). Maximum and minimum marks scored in different subjects
by candidates in JEE merit lists
Chemistry Mathematics Physics

99. Aggregate cut-off for Extended Merit Lists:


Merit list General OBC SC ST PD

44
100.FAQs on IIT-JEE preparation
(i). What is the best method of preparing for the IIT-JEE?
One should opt for a Classroom Training Programme if it is available in vicinity. This
helps a student to understand concepts easily.
(ii). What is the right time to start preparing for IIT-JEE?
The best thing is to start as early as possible, right from the 9'th standard if possible.
However, one must start just after clearing class Xth if not started earlier. In such a
scenario the student gets adequate time of 2 years to prepare for the IIT-JEE. This
ensure that his/her preparation for the IIT-JEE is complete before the pressure of
Board examinations begins to tell.
(iii). Which is the easiest subject to score?
It depends on the relative toughness of papers in a particular year alongwith the
relative grading on how did your competitors appearing for the exam performed.

45
101.FAQs on programmes, process & procedures in IITs
(i). Should I prefer a Dual-degree program or a B. Tech. program?
The answer depends on whether you are talking about the two programs in the same
department, or different departments. Let us take the two possibilities separately.
If you are comparing Dual and B. Tech. in the same department, say Dual (CSE)
versus B. Tech. (CSE), then the answer is very simple. Go for B. Tech. The dual-
degree programs are fantastic, but the way IIT Kanpur policies have been designed,
it is much easier to change one's program from B. Tech. to Dual, and it is much more
difficult to change the program from Dual to B. Tech.. So why should one decide on
Dual now. Take up B. Tech. program now, and if you get excited about the Dual
degree program after you join IIT, you can move to Dual-degree at that time. (Rules of
IIT Kanpur permit a change of program from B. Tech. to Dual-degree till the beginning
of 7th semester).
However, it may not hold the same for other IITs. Another view is that it is little too
early to decide what your specialization should be in the M. Tech., program. Hence,
the suggestion is to follow only those dual-degree programs where M. Tech., is in a
broad discipline (allowing you to choose your specialization in the fourth year
typically), and not like those dual-degree programs where you have to decide now a
narrow area of specialization, for which you know even less at this time.
(ii). Which IIT has the most liberal branch change rules?
Many IITs allow top one percent students to choose their branch without any
restrictions. IIT Kanpur does not have such a rule, but traditionally it has allowed
anyone with a CPI of 10.0 to choose their branch. (And the number of students with a
CPI of 10.0 at the end of 2nd semester is more than one percent of the batch).
All IITs have a lower limit of strength in a branch, and the number of students in that
particular branch cannot go below that level.
IIT Bombay says 85 percent of existing strength. IIT Delhi, IIT Roorkee and IIT
Guwahati have set the limit at 90 percent of existing strength. IIT Kanpur has set the
limit at 60 percent of the sanctioned strength. So, IITs at Delhi, Roorkee, and

46
Guwahati allow very few people to get out of an unpopular branch, while IIT Bombay
allows a few more. IIT Kanpur allows lots of people to get out of any branch, except a
few exceptionally unpopular branches. (Traditionally, Chemistry has had problems
with lower limits, and some students despite good performance have been denied
change of program).
All IITs put an upper limit on the batch size after the branch change. IIT Bombay, IIT
Delhi, and IIT Kanpur set the upper limit as the sanctioned strength. So you can get
into that branch only if there is a vacancy. IITs at Kharagpur and Roorkee allow the
batch size to go up by 10 percent of existing strength. IIT Guwahati allows extra
seats upto 10 percent of sanctioned strength. Now, normally, the most popular
courses do not have any vacancies. So it will be impossible to get Computer Science
in Kanpur and Bombay by way of branch change (unless you are one of the top few),
while at other IITs they always create at least a few seats for branch change.
One thing you may note in these rules is that every IIT either controls exit from a
branch or controls entry into a branch. IITs which are liberal in entry into a branch (by
allowing student strength to go up beyond the existing or even sanctioned strength)
are strict in terms of how many students can get out of a particular branch.
Overall,you may not find any significant difference in the number of students getting
branch changes in different IITs.
IIT Kharagpur and IIT Madras don't seem to allow branch change for dual-degree
students. Many IITs have a special provision for allowing B. Tech. students to join the
dual-degree program in the same department till later part of their program. IIT
Bombay allows a B. Tech. student to migrate to Dual-degree till 4th semester, and in
some exceptional cases, even later. IIT Kanpur allows a B. Tech. student to migrate
to Dual-degree till the middle of 7th semester.
Another point to note is that some IITs allow a general category student to change to
another branch where the vacancy is due to non-availability of a suitable reserved
category student, while other IITs will not do so. And this will make a significant
difference in terms of number of students who can get a change in their branch. (And
I have no idea which IIT does what.) IIT Kanpur used to permit changes for a general

47
category student to fill up a reserved seat after one year. Now, it has become more
strict, and this year, will not allow such changes. So the number of branch changes
are likely to reduce.
(iii). How are programs on Mathematics and Computing?
In many IITs, there are programs on Mathematics and Computing. The program is
usually offered by the Department of Mathematics and not the Department of
Computer Science. It means that the major component of the program will be
Mathematics, and the Computing component will be significantly less than what a
pure Computer Science program would offer. But if you are very keen on anything
related to computers, and you can't get the full-fledged program on Computer
Science, then these programs are the next best things in life. You, of course can get
into software industry, though you will find it difficult to get a job in research labs of
IT companies. Also, these programs are getting popular wih financial firms. You
know your mathematics, you hone your analytical skills, and you know the basics of
Computer Science. These are enough to earn a 7- digit salary.

(iv). Which IIT is best for CAT preparation?


IITs do not provide coaching for CAT or any other MBA entrance test. There is private
coaching available in every city and town.
If you are sure that you will like to go for MBA after your under-graduate program,
select the program with the largest closing rank. Statistically speaking, it is likely to
be least competitive.
Since you are not interested in any program, and only want to be associated with IIT
brand, chose a program with least number of years (4-years) and a program where
very few top rankers are likely to be present.
* Source: http://www.cse.iitk.ac.in/~dheeraj/ideas/jee-counsel.html

48
Frequently asked questions (FAQs) | Source:- http://www.iitb.ac.in/jee/
Q1. I appeared in JEE-2008 and JEE-2009. Can I appear in JEE-2010?
Ans: No.
Q2. I appeared in JEE-2008, but did not appear in JEE-2009? Can I appear in JEE-2010?
Ans: No.
Q3. I qualified in JEE-2009. I took admission in one of the IITs/IT-BHU, Varanasi/ISM, Dhanbad by paying full
fees but did not join the programme. Am I eligible to write JEE-2010?
Ans: No.
Q4. I passed 10+2 examination in 2009 and also qualified in JEE-2009. I appeared for counselling for JEE-2009
and was offered admission in one of the IITs/IT-BHU, Varanasi/ISM, Dhanbad, but did not pay full fees at the
institute where I was offered admission and did not join the programme. Am I eligible to write JEE-2010?
Ans: Yes, you are eligible.
Q5. I passed 10+2 examination in 2009 with 50% marks. I took JEE-2009 and did not qualify. I will be appearing
for a re-examination in the year 2010 so that I can improve the percentage of aggregate marks to 60% or
more. Am I eligible to write JEE-2010 and if so how shall I fill up the application form?
Ans: Yes you are eligible. You should darken the second bubble in Item 5 entitled Year of passing 10+2 or
equivalent and darken the SECOND bubble in item 6 entitled number of attempts.
Q6. I passed 10+2 examination in 2009 with 50% marks. I did not write JEE-2009. I will be appearing for a re-
examination in the year 2010 so that I can improve the percentage of aggregate marks to 60% or more. Am I
eligible to write JEE-2010 and if so how shall I fill up the application form?
Ans: Yes you are eligible. You should darken the second bubble in Item 5 entitled Year of passing 10+2 or
equivalent and darken the FIRST bubble in item 6 entitled number of attempts. However, this would be your
last change to take JEE.
Q7. I appeared in 10+2 examination in 2008 and got 50% marks. I did not write JEE-2008. I appeared for a re-
examination for 10+2 in the year 2009 and obtained aggregate mark which made me eligible to attempt
JEE. I took JEE-2009 but could not qualify. Am I eligible to write JEE-2010?
Ans: NO. Candidates who have passed the qualifying examination before October 1, 2008 are not eligible to
write JEE-2010.
Q8. I appeared in 10+2 examination in 2008 and got 60% marks. I did not attempt JEE-2008. I took JEE-2009
and did not qualify. Am I eligible to write JEE-2010?
Ans: No.
Q9. I appeared in 10+2 examination in 2008 and got 60% marks. I did not attempt JEE-2008 and JEE-2009. Am
I eligible to write JEE-2010?
Ans: No.
Q10. I appeared in 10+2 examination in 2008 and got less than 60% marks in the aggregate. I wrote JEE-2008
but did not qualify. I took 10+2 examination in 2009 and got more than 60% marks in the aggregate. I took
JEE-2009 but did not qualify. Am I eligible to write JEE-2010?
Ans: No.

49
Q11. I appeared in 10+2 examination in 2008 and got less than 60% marks in the aggregate. I wrote JEE-2008
but did not qualify. I took 10+2 examination in 2009 and got more than 60% marks in the aggregate. I did
not write JEE-2009. Am I eligible to write JEE-2010?
Ans: No.
Q12. I appeared in 10+2 examination in 2008 and failed. I qualified JEE-2008 but my admission was cancelled. I
appeared in 10+2 examination again in 2009 and got more than 60% marks in the aggregate. I wrote JEE-
2009 but could not qualify. Am I eligible to write JEE-2010?
Ans: No.
Q13. My qualifying examination was conducted in 2008. The results were announced after 30th September
2008, and I got 60% marks. I did not attempt JEE-2008 or JEE-2009. Am I eligible to write JEE-2010 and if
so, how shall I fill up the application form?
Ans: Yes, you are eligible irrespective of whether you attempted JEE-2009 or not. You should darken the second
bubble in Item 5 of the Application Form entitled Qualification and darken the FIRST bubble in item 6.
Q14. My qualifying examination was conducted in 2008. The results were announced after 30th September
2008, and I got 60% marks. I did not attempt JEE-2008 but I attempted JEE-2009 and did not qualify. Am I
eligible to write JEE-2010 and if so, how shall I fill up the application form?
Ans: Yes, you are eligible irrespective of whether you attempted JEE-2009 or not. You should darken the second
bubble in Item 5 of the Application Form entitled Qualification and darken the SECOND bubble in item 6.
Q15. I passed 10+2 exam in 2009 and wrote JEE-2009. I was admitted to the Preparatory Course of an IIT/IT-
BHU/ISM in July 2009 and I am due to appear in the Preparatory Exams in 2010. I wish to appear for JEE-
2010. Am I eligible?
Ans: Yes, you are eligible to appear since admission to preparatory course does not imply that you have joined
any IIT/IT-BHU/ISM, Dhanbad. However, you will not be eligible to undergo the Preparatory course at any of
the above Institutes on the basis of JEE-2010.
Q16. I fall under NRI/PIO/OCI/ foreign national. Does JEE give me any special treatment for admission?
Ans: First of all, you must qualify in JEE-2010. However, for the purpose of course allocation such candidates
would be offered admission in a programme available to other general candidates at their All India Rank
(AIR). These seats offered to foreign nationals (also PIO, OCI, NRI) will be treated as supernumerary.
Q17. I am a studying in a foreign country and the certificate I will get is not listed in the JEE information
brochure/website under qualifying examination. What should I do?
Ans: In all such cases you have to produce a certificate from the Association of Indian Universities stating that
your certificate is equivalent to the 10+2 system of Indian Boards.
Q18. I will be appearing in the qualifying examination in 2010 but it is unlikely that the results will be declared
before 30th September 2010. Should I appear in JEE-2010?
Ans: You are advised to appear in JEE-2011 since if you qualify JEE, you will not be able to meet the admission
requirements by the last date ie 30th September 2010.

50
TIPS FOR IIT-JEE PREPARATION

A. You should know how to keep up with the school exams but still not losing focus for
the more important exam like, IITJEE which is going to shape your career.
B. As far as boards are concerned all the topics are equally important but these should
be given more focus than others in case of JEE.
C. Maths- Conics, Complex Numbers and Calculus.
Physics- Kinematics, Thermodynamics, Magneto Stats, Electrostatics, Rotational,
Gravitation.
Chemistry- Chemical and Ionic Equilibrium, Chemical Bonding, Organic, Qualitative
Analysis.
D. Avoid using any calculators while you practice numerical problems because they
hamper your calculation speed.
E. Prepare a time table and stick to it religiously; the time table should be made keeping
in mind your exam timings so that you can perform with greater efficiency.
F. Students who get stressed out soon, should take up to meditation and yoga. It helps
in maintaining a good pace for preparation. Also, it would be quite helpful if you
suggest your mom to give you a nutritious diet consisting of cereals, milk, fruits etc.
G. Putting off your sleep is not at all advisable because it makes you more lethargic for
the days to come. A sound sleep of 6 hours will do but not less than that, taking a
short nap of 30-40 minutes in the afternoon would be a boon.

51
H. Apart from preparing for the exam it is even necessary to have a compatible strategy
for revision because when the student has to face both the boards and JEE it
becomes difficult to handle the pressure.
I. When you are having a vast course to revise you must first tabulate as to which ones
are the topics you are comfortable with and the ones which still pose a problem for
you.
J. Remember, that simply working on topics you are weak at won't be of any good if
you leave aside the strong ones. As when you stand at a three months step from the
exams, you ought to build up a confidence, because, that helps in obviating stress
from building.
K. Hand written notes have a greater impact on your gray matter than the books so, it is
best if you take the revision from your class notes/short notes. Your revision times
should be equally divided among the subjects because all the subjects need
equivalent attention.
L. Remember what it is important to iron out your weak areas but at the same time you
should not compromise on your strength because you do not have to just clear all the
cut-offs; your real aim should be to score high so that you get a good rank.

52
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Study Centres: D-248, Hare Krishna Apartments, 29/9, Raj Chamber, 3rd Floor,
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Plot no. 8, Satya Vihar Colony, e-mail: [email protected] 2nd Floor, Sanskrutik Sankul,
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Tel No.: 011-31922224, e-mail: [email protected]
South Campus 32651927, 32436425
Plot No-7, Adinath Nagar, e-mail:[email protected] MUMBAI
Opp. World Trade Park,
Andheri
J.L.N. Marg, Jaipur (Raj.) - 302018 East 344, Al-Noor Bldg.,
Tel. No.: 0141-3208866, 3152266 15, Pratap Nagar, Opp. Municipal Market, S.V. Road,
Mayur Vihar (Phase 1), Andheri (W), Mumbai - 400 058
West Campus New Delhi - 110 096 Tel. No.: 022-31922222, 32191497
B-99, Vaishali Nagar, Tel No.: 011-31922223, e-mail: [email protected]
Behind National Handloom, 32637291, 32020564
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Tel. No.: 0141-3103666
Paranjpe Udyog Bhavan, 2nd floor,
West Above Khandelwal Sweets, Opp.
East Campus
RZ-3, Indra Park Extn., station,
Krishnam Building, 5/495,
Old Pankha Road, Uttam Nagar, Thane (W), Mumbai - 400 607
Gali No. 5, Near AC Market,
New Delhi - 110 059 Tel. No.: 022-31922228, 32191498
Raja Park, Jaipur (Raj.)
Tel No.: 011-31922225, e-mail: [email protected]
Tel. No.: 0141-3101166
32920033, 32920066
e-mail: [email protected]

53
Nerul Mumbai - 400 088 Road No.-10, Ashok Nagar,
C-11, Amrita Sadan, Plot no. 13/14, Tel. No.: 022-31922225, 32961499 Udaipur (Raj.) - 313 001
Sector-22, Opp. Nerul Rly. Station, e-mail: [email protected] Tel No.: 0294-3192222, 3262733
Nerul (W), Navi Mumbai - 400 706 2427858
Tel. No.: 022-31922227, 32191499 Dadar email: [email protected]
e-mail: [email protected] C-8 (A), Kasturchand Mill Compound,
Near Manish Market, Senapati Bapat BENGALURU
Kandivali Marg, Near Dadar Railway Station, Shop No- 4, Sir Puttannachetty
Swami Vivekanand International Dadar (W) - 400 028/59 complex
School Mob.: 022-31922224, 9769210458 (Opp-BSNL office), Bull Temple Road,
& Junior College, Parekh Nagar, e-mail: [email protected] Basavanagudi, Bengaluru-560004
Behind Gokul Nagar, S.V. Road Tel. No. : 080-31922222
Kandivali (West), Mumbai - 400 Churchgate e-mail: [email protected]
067 Jai Hind College,
Tel. No.: 022-31922226, 32991498 Admissions Office "A" Road, BHUBANESWAR
e-mail: [email protected] Churchgate, Mumbai - 400 020 Shop No- F-19 & 20, First Floor,
Mobile: 022-31922223, 9769210460 Amrita Shopping Complex,
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Swami Ramkrishna Paramhans Tel. No. : 0674-3192222
Junior College, Sri Ram Arcade, UDAIPUR e-mail: [email protected]
Above Bank of Baroda, Govandi (E), Vardhman-149,

Upcoming Study Centres


SURAT , RAJKOT
The infrastructure development at upcoming Study Centres is in progress. The details will be available on website in
due course of time.

Information Centres:
CHANDIGARH PATNA
SCO-172, Sector 38-C, 1st floor, Binda Bihar Apartment,
Chandigarh - 160 036 Opp. Tiwari Beacher Petrol Pump,
Tel. No.: 0172-3255721 Kankarbagh Main Road,
email: [email protected] Patna (Bihar) - 800 020
Tel. No.: 09334592285
INDORE
email: [email protected]
107, Trade Centre,18,
South Tukoganj, RANCHI
Indore - 452 001 (M.P.), Office No.17&18, 2nd Floor,
Tel. No.: 0731-3295721,4274200 City Centre, Club Road,
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email: [email protected] Tel No.: 0651-3249721, 3192222
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To know more SMS RESO at 56677 I www.resonance.ac.in


54
Know your Resonance
Mr.R.K.Verma: Founder & Managing Director, B.Tech., (IIT-Madras, 1994)
Mr. Lokesh Khandelwal:Co-founder & Director (Strategy & Planning), B.Tech.,
(IIT-Kanpur - 1994, CFA-PGDBA [IBSA]).
Mr. S P Raghuwanshi: Additional Director (Academics IIT-JEE Division),
Head of Deptt. (HOD)- Department of Chemistry.
B.Tech., (IIT-Kanpur, 2002).
Dr. (Mrs.) V.P. Mittal: Additional Director (Students Welfare Girls), Ph.D., M.Sc.
(Gold Medalist)
Mr. Asheesh Sharma: Additional Director (Study Centre Academics & Global
Business Development ), B.Tech., (IIT-Kanpur, 2002).
Mr. B.K. Matoria: Additional Director (Students Welfare Boys),
Head of Dept. (HOD) Department of Physics, B.E. (2001)
Mr. Sankarshan Tripathi: Head of Deptt. (HOD) Department of Mathematics,
B.E. (University of Roorkee, 1997)
Mr. Manoj Sharma: Additional Director (Administration & Management)
1. M.I.D. (International Development) Kota University, Kota
2. M.S. (Quality Management), BITS Pilani
3. MDPM&IR, Symbiosis IMS, Pune
4. B.Tech. (DT), Rajasthan Agriculture University, Bikaner
Establishment Year: 11th April 2001

Specialized Field: IIT-JEE Coaching

Total Selections: 5276 Selections up to 2009

Study Centres: Jaipur (2005)


Bhopal (2007)
Delhi, Lucknow, Kolkata, Nagpur and Mumbai (2008)
Udaipur, Bengaluru and Bhubaneswar (2010)
Upcoming Centres: Rajkot & Surat.

Information Centres: Chandigarh, Indore,Patna and Ranchi.


IITs were established in the country to serve as the centres of world-class
research. Their contribution in the development of the country has been far
greater than expected.
‘The IITians are the pride of the family and envy of the neighbors’, as one can read
in IITian Sandipan Deb's book, 'The IITians', Only around 8000 get to the IITs from
more than 3.84 Lakhs applicants. It is easier to get in to MIT than IIT. The IITians
excelled in various fields, headed various prestigious organizations abroad and at
home and made the country proud.
They have shown talent in politics, technology, engineering, finance, dramatics
and in writing. Strive for excellence and success will automatically follow, is the
mantra for the new aspirants of Indian Institute of Technology.
In nine years of its inception, Resonance has risen beyond all the expectations and
the volume and quality of results have proved the success of its mission.
The growth at Resonance in number of students' selections in IIT-JEE
(5276 to date) is matchless as compared to any other institute in the country,
offering both the Classroom and the Distance Learning Programmes (DLP)
courses.

Released in the Interest of


IIT- JEE aspirants & their parents
by
Student Welfare & PR Team

(A Unit of Resonance Eduventures Pvt. Ltd.)

Resonance Eduventures Pvt. Ltd.


Corporate Office: J-2, Jawahar Nagar Main Road, Kota (Rajasthan)-324005
Ph. No.: +91-744- 3012222 | FAX No.: +91-744-2427144
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