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Indian
Institute of Sciemce |
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The Indian Institutes of Technology, or
IITs, are a group of seven autonomous engineering and technology oriented
institutes of higher education established and declared as Institutes of
National Importance by the Government of India. 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.
The students and alumni of IITs are colloquially referred to as IITians.
In order of establishment, the seven IITs
are located at Kharagpur, Mumbai (Bombay), Chennai (Madras), Kanpur, Delhi,
Guwahati, and Roorkee. Some IITs were established with financial assistance and
technical expertise from UNESCO, Germany, the United States, and the Soviet
Union. Each IIT is an autonomous university, linked to the others through a
common IIT Council, which oversees their administration. They have a common
admission process for undergraduate admissions, using the Joint Entrance
Examination (popularly known as
IIT-JEE) to select
around 4,000 undergraduate candidates a year. PostGraduate Admissions are done
on the basis of the GATE
and CEED. About 15,500
undergraduate and 12,000 graduate students study in the seven IITs, in addition
to research scholars. |
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Admission Procedure
Admission to undergraduate programs in all IITs is tied to
the Joint Entrance Examination, popularly known as IIT-JEE. Candidates who
qualify admission via IIT-JEE can apply for admission in B.Tech. (Bachelor of
Technology), Dual Degree (Integrated Bachelor of Technology and Master of
Technology) and Integrated M.Sc. (Master of Sciences) courses in IITs. IIT-JEE
is a science-oriented entrance exam, testing candidate's knowledge of
mathematics, physics and chemistry. It is conducted by an IIT chosen by a policy
of rotation. Admission is very competitive, given the huge population of India;
the undergraduate acceptance rate through JEE has a low ratio, around 1 in 55,
with about 300,000 annual test takers for about 5,500 seats. Only about
4,000 of these seats are offered by IITs, the rest belonging to other institutes
that use IIT-JEE. Only students who have completed (or will complete at the end
of the current academic session) their higher secondary studies from a
recognised educational board are allowed to appear for IIT-JEE. The IIT-JEE is
well known for frequently changing the types of questions asked in order to
discourage study by rote. Since IIT-JEE 2006, the format of the question paper
was changed to a single objective test-based paper, replacing the earlier system
that employed two tests. The candidates belonging to the general category must
secure a minimum aggregate of 60% marks in the qualifying examination of the
XIIth standard organised by various educational boards of India. Candidates
belonging to Scheduled Caste (SC), Scheduled Tribe (ST) and Physically Disabled
(PD) categories must secure a minimum aggregate of 55% in the qualifying
examination. The upper age limit for appearing for the IIT-JEE is 25 years.
The age limit is relaxed to 30 years for candidates classified in the SC, ST and
PD categories. Starting with IIT-JEE 2007, a candidate can take IIT-JEE a
maximum of two times, and students who are selected for an IIT cannot attempt
the examination again.
The admissions into the postgraduate programmes are made through various exams,
primarily the Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering (GATE) for M.Tech. and some
MS courses. Other prominent entrance exams include JAM (Joint Admission to M.Sc.)
for M.Sc., and JMET (Joint Management Entrance Test) for Management Studies |
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