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Joint Entrance Examination – Advanced
Official logo of JEE Advanced 2025
AcronymJEE-Advanced (formerly IIT-JEE)
TypeComputer based test (CBT)
Administrator
Skills tested
PurposeAdmission to undergraduate Engineering, Science and Architecture courses in 23 IITs
Year started1961 (63 years ago) (1961)
Duration2 Papers of 3 hours each(Both papers are compulsory to write); Total 6 hours a day
Offeredonce a year
Restrictions on attemptsMaximum three attempts in three consecutive years
Regions India
Languages
Annual number of test takersIncrease 180,200 (2024)[1]
Prerequisites
  • Candidates should be among the top 2,50,000 successful candidates (including all categories) in B.E./B.Tech. paper of JEE (Main). The percentages of various categories of candidates to be shortlisted are: 10% for GEN-EWS, 27% for OBC-NCL, 15% for SC, 7.5% for ST, and the remaining 40.5% is open for all. Within each of these five categories, 5% horizontal reservation is available for PwD candidates(For Indian nationals and candidates who have secured OCI/PIO cards before 04-03-2021).
  • Candidates should have been born on or after October 1, 1999. Five years age relaxation is given to SC, ST, and PwD candidates, i.e. these candidates should have been born on or after October 1, 1994.
  • A candidate should have appeared for the Class XII (or equivalent) examination for the first time in either 2023 or 2024 with Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics as compulsory subjects with a minimum of 75% aggregate marks or in the top 20 percentile in their 10+2 Board Examination conducted by their respective board for General,EWS and OBC candidates.For SC, ST and PwD candidates a minimum of 65% aggregate marks(as of 2024).
Fee
  • For Indian Nationals and OCI/PIO card holders (where OCI/PIO card was issued before 04-03-2021), Female Candidates (all categories) 1600, SC, ST, and PwD Candidates 1600, All Other Candidates 3200
  • Foreign Nationals & OCI/PIO card holders (where OCI/PIO card was issued on or after 04-03-2021), Candidates Residing in SAARC Countries, USD 100 and, Candidates Residing in Non-SAARC Countries, USD 200 (as of 2024)
Qualification rate26.77% out of which who wrote JEE-Advanced after qualifying JEE-Main
Websitejeeadv.ac.in Edit this at Wikidata

The Joint Entrance Examination – Advanced (JEE-Advanced) (formerly the Indian Institute of Technology – Joint Entrance Examination (IIT-JEE)) is an academic examination held annually in India that tests the skills and knowledge of the applicants in physics, chemistry and mathematics. It is organised by one of the seven zonal Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs): IIT Roorkee, IIT Kharagpur, IIT Delhi, IIT Kanpur, IIT Bombay, IIT Madras, and IIT Guwahati, under the guidance of the Joint Admission Board (JAB) on a round-robin rotation pattern for the qualifying candidates of the Joint Entrance Examination – Main(exempted for foreign nationals and candidates who have secured OCI/PIO cards on or after 04-03-2021). It used to be the sole prerequisite for admission to the IITs' bachelor's programs before the introduction of UCEED,[2] Online B.S.[3] and Olympiad entries,[4] but seats through these new media are very low.[5]

Other universities, such as the Indian Maritime University Kolkata, the Indian Institute of Petroleum and Energy, the Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Petroleum Technology and the Indian Institute of Space Technology, use the score obtained in the JEE-Advanced exam as the sole basis for admission. The Indian Institute of Science also uses the score obtained in the JEE-Advanced exam as one of the basis for admission. The JEE-Advanced score is also used as a possible basis for admission by Indian applicants to non-Indian universities such as the University of Cambridge and the National University of Singapore.[6][7]

The JEE-Advanced has been consistently ranked as one of the toughest exams in the world.[8][9] High school students from across India typically prepare for several years to take this exam, and most of them attending coaching institutes. The combination of its high difficulty level, intense competition, unpredictable paper pattern and low acceptance rate exerts immense pressure on aspirants, making success in this exam a highly sought-after achievement. In a 2018 interview, former IIT Delhi director V. Ramgopal Rao, said the exam is "tricky and difficult" because it is framed to "reject candidates, not to select them".[10] In 2024, out of the 180,200 candidates who took the exam, 48,248 candidates qualified.

History

[edit]
IIT Kharagpur, one of the first Institutions where students selected in IIT-JEE were admitted

The first institute among IITs, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, started in 1951. In its initial years before 1961, students were admitted based on their academic results, followed by an interview in several locations across the country. From 1955 to 1960, admissions for the Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur were conducted via a national examination. Academic disciplines were allotted to the students via interviews and counselling sessions held at Kharagpur.

The IIT-JEE was first conducted in 1961 as Common Entrance Exam (CEE), coinciding with the 1961 IIT Act.[11]

In 1978, the English paper was not considered when ranking participants' performance in the examination. In 1998, the English test was discontinued.

In 1997, the IIT-JEE was conducted twice after the question paper was leaked in some locations.

Between 2000 and 2005, an additional screening test was used alongside the main examination, intended to reduce pressure on the main examination by allowing only about 20,000 top candidates to appear for the examination, out of more than 450,000 applicants.

In 2002, an additional exam called the AIEEE was introduced, and it was used for admissions to many institutions of national importance other than the IITs.

In June 2005, The Hindu newspaper led a campaign for reforming the IIT-JEE to eradicate the "coaching mania" and to improve gender and socio-economic diversity.[12][13][14] Two possible solutions were proposed - either a convergence between the screening test and the All India Engineering Entrance Examination (AIEEE), or a two-tier examination. Whereas ranks from the first tier can be used to gain admission to the NITs and other engineering colleges in the country.

In September 2005, the group of directors of all the IITs announced significant revisions to the examination. These were implemented from 2006 onward.[15] The revised examination consisted of a single objective test, replacing and abolishing the earlier two-test system with screener. In the revised examination, to be eligible for taking it, candidates in the general category had to obtain at least 60% aggregate marks in the 12th-grade examinations organized by various educational boards of India, while candidates belonging to Scheduled Castes (SC), Scheduled Tribes (ST), and Persons With Disabilities (PwD) categories needed a minimum score of 55%.

In 2008, the director and the dean of IIT Madras proposed further revisions to the examination, arguing that the coaching institutes were "enabling many among the less-than-best students to crack the test and keeping girls from qualifying". They expressed concern that the present system did not allow for applicants' 12 years of schooling to have a bearing on admissions into IIT.[16]

In 2008, the Indian Institutes of Technology began offering their admission tests in Dubai.[17] Annually, the number of candidates for the examination in Dubai varies between 200 and 220.[18]

In 2013, the AIEEE was renamed JEE-Main, and IIT-JEE was renamed JEE-Advanced; the JEE-Main had become the screening exam for JEE-Advanced.

The two-tier reform suggested in 2005 may become a reality as the Indian government has announced plans for a single entrance exam for all engineering colleges from 2018, with students aspiring for the IITs having to pass the nationwide standardized engineering entrance exam JEE-Main with high marks, and then take the JEE-Advanced to qualify for the IITs.[19] In 2018, the JEE-Advanced exam started being conducted online.

Qualifying percentage (As of JEE Advanced 2024)

[edit]
Minimum percentage of marks prescribed for inclusion in the rank list in 2024
Category Minimum percentage (%)

of marks in each subject

Minimum percentage (%)

of aggregate marks

Common rank list (CRL)                   8.68                30.34
OBC-NCL/GEN-EWS                   7.80                27.30
ST/SC/PWD                   4.34                15.17
Preparatory course

for SC/ST/PWD

                  2.5                7.58
JEE Advanced 2024 Qualifying Criteria published by IIT Madras

Minimum percentage of aggregate/subject marks may be lowered subsequently considering the toughness of the paper and the need of students.

Minimum percentage of marks prescribed for inclusion in the rank list in 2022[20]
Category Minimum percentage (%)

of marks in each subject

Minimum percentage (%)

of aggregate marks

Common rank list (CRL)                  4.17                15.28
OBC-NCL/GEN-EWS                  4.17                13.89
ST/SC/PWD                  2.50                 7.78
Preparatory course

for SC/ST/PWD

                 0.83                 3.89

Number of applicants by year

[edit]
Year[21] Registered Appeared Qualified %Qualified
1961[22] 19,500 - - -
1978 29,477 - - -
1988 72,298 - - -
1990 79,559 - - -
1995 92,893 - - -
1997 91,279 - - -
1998 95,419 - - -
1999 112,347 - - -
2000 128,624 - - -
2001 147,775 - - -
2002 178,043 - - -
2003 178,940 - - -
2004 175,355 - - -
2005 198,059 - - -
2006 299,087 - - -
2007 251,803 243,029 7,200 2.96
2008 321,653 311,258 8,652 2.77
2009 398,264 384,977 10,035 2.60
2010 473,982 455,571 13,104 2.87
2011 485,136 468,280 13,196 2.81
2012 506,484 479,651 24,112 5.02
2013 126,749 115,971 20,834 17.96
2014 126,995 119,580 27,152 22.70
2015 124,741 117,238 26,354 22.47
2016 155,797 147,678 36,566 24.76
2017 171,814 159,540 51,040[23] 31.99
2018 165,656 155,158 31,988 20.62
2019 174,432 161,319 38,705 23.99
2020 160,838 150,838 43,204 28.64
2021 151,193 141,699 41,862 29.54
2022 160,038 155,538 40,712 26.17
2023 189,744 180,372 43,773 24.26
2024[24] 186,584 180,200 48,248 26.77
NOTE:
  • (1) Qualifying to take JEE-Advanced does not mean IIT admission.[25][26]
  • (2) Reserved categories have lower qualifying cutoff, (e.g. GEN-EWS/OBC-NCL get 10% relaxation, SC/ST/PWD get 50% relaxation and SC/ST/PWD also get 75% relaxation for preparatory courses in IITs) who are also considered qualified and thus included in the list.[27]
  • (3) From 2013, only a certain threshold number of students from JEE-Main are allowed to take JEE-Advanced.[28]

Organizing institute

[edit]

The JEE – Advanced exam is conducted by the seven zonal Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs): IIT Roorkee, IIT Kharagpur, IIT Delhi, IIT Kanpur, IIT Bombay, IIT Madras and IIT Guwahati on a rotating basis. This list shows the organizers of the exam in recent years.

Year Organizer
2006 IIT Kharagpur
2007 IIT Bombay
2008 IIT Roorkee
2009 IIT Guwahati
2010 IIT Madras
2011 IIT Kanpur[29]
2012 IIT Delhi[30]
2013 IIT Delhi[31]
2014 IIT Kharagpur[32]
2015 IIT Bombay[33]
2016 IIT Guwahati[34]
2017 IIT Madras[35]
2018 IIT Kanpur[36]
2019 IIT Roorkee[37]
2020 IIT Delhi[38]
2021 IIT Kharagpur[39]
2022 IIT Bombay[40]
2023 IIT Guwahati[41]
2024 IIT Madras[42]
2025 IIT Kanpur
2026 IIT Roorkee
2027 IIT Delhi

Paper pattern

[edit]

JEE(Advanced) is conducted in two papers of three hours each - Paper-1 and Paper-2,(both papers are compulsory to write)both the papers consist questions from three major subjects- Physics, Chemistry and Mathematics. Unlike most of the other exams, the type , the number of questions being asked in the paper, the total marks and the marking scheme varies from year to year depending upon the organizing institute, with an average of about 36–38 questions asked from each subject across both the shifts, For example, the 2021 JEE-Advanced paper had 38 questions (19 questions in Paper-1 and the next 19 in Paper-2) from each of the three subjects.

Each paper in every subject is divided into 4 sections(The marking scheme may vary from year to year):

Section Problem type Description
1 4 single-correct MCQs
  • +4 marks for every correct answer
  • 0 marks for unanswered questions
  • -1 mark for every wrong answer
2 3 question stems with 2 questions per stem (numerical answers with two decimal places)
  • +2 marks for every correct answer
  • 0 marks otherwise
3 6 multi-correct MCQs
  • +4 marks if (all) the correct option(s) is(are) chosen
  • +3 marks if all the options are correct but only 3 options are chosen
  • +2 marks if 3 or more options are correct but only 2 correct options are chosen
  • +1 mark if 2 or more options are correct but only 1 correct option is chosen
  • 0 marks if unanswered
  • −2 marks if at least 1 incorrect option is chosen
4 3 fill-in-the-blank questions (answers are non-negative integers)
  • +4 marks for a correct answer
  • 0 marks otherwise
A typical instruction page of the paper mainly consists of information related to the type of question asked, here it explains the multi correct-multiple choice questions

Some previous year papers also included matrix match type questions instead of single-correct multiple choice questions.[43][44]

Syllabus

[edit]

Since the starting of the examination in 1961, the syllabus majorly consists of topics that are taught in Indian High schools, from the curriculum of Class XI and Class XII. These include topics from Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry (Organic Chemistry, Inorganic Chemistry and Physical Chemistry). A recent change in the syllabus was carried out in November 2021, when a revised syllabus was adopted for the exam, this syllabus has been implemented from 2023 onwards. A brief overview of topics asked is listed below.[45]

Higher Algebra (including certain topics from Linear Algebra), Combinatorics, probability (including topics like conditional probability, Law of total probability, Bayes theorem), Geometry, coordinate system (points and lines, circles, parabolas, ellipses and hyperbolas), Trigonometry (including the inverse trigonometric functions), algebraic functions, exponential functions, logarithmic functions, floor function, fractional part function, signum function, even and odd functions, periodic functions, composite Function, inverse functions, limits, derivative of a function, analysis of continuity and differentiability of a function, derivatives and their applications (tangents and normals to a function, angle between curves, Rolle's theorem, Mean Value Theorem, monotonicity of a function, and maxima and minima of a function), indefinite antiderivative of a function, definite integrals, analysis of area bounded by a curve and its axis, and differential equations.

General Physics, classical Newtonian Mechanics, Fluid Mechanics, Thermodynamics, Acoustics (sound and oscillation), Electromagnetism, Electrostatics, Electrodynamics or, Electromagnetism (Both electricity and magnetism) and electromagnetic waves, Modern Physics (radioactivity, Nuclear Physics, elementary Quantum mechanics), Optics ( Both geometrical optics and wave optics)

General studies of substance (moles, molarity, redox reactions, etc), atomic structure (with concerned topics of Quantum Mechanics), states of matter, chemical thermodynamics and chemical kinetics, equilibrium chemistry (both chemical equilibrium and ionic equilibrium), Electrochemistry, colligative properties, titrations (including acid-base and redox), Surface Science and Nuclear Chemistry.

Periodic properties, bonding in chemicals (including the theories of bonding i.e. Valence bond theory, VSEPR Theory and Molecular orbital theory), coordination compounds and complexes, metallurgy, qualitative inorganic salt analysis, hydrogen, detailed studies of reactions, physical and chemical properties, along with their certain compounds of alkali metals, alkaline earth metals, boron family, carbon family, nitrogen family, oxygen family, halogens and noble gases, transition elements (including noble metals), actinides, lanthanides, types of reactions and environmental chemistry.

IUPAC nomenclature, General Organic Chemistry (including hybridization, hydrogen bonding, inductive effects, isomerism, resonance, aromaticity, hyperconjugation, mesomerism, carbocations and carbanions, free radical, bond cleavage including heterolysis and homolysis, stereoisomerism including enantiomers and diastereomers), organic reagents, some named reactions, detailed analysis of reaction mechanisms, the compounds and preparation of hydrocarbons, alkyl halides, carbonyl compounds (alcohols, phenols and ethers), aromatic compounds, biomolecules, carbohydrates and polymers, amines, Chemistry in everyday life and practical Organic Chemistry.

Seats[46]

[edit]
IIT Bombay is one of the most competitive institutes in India to get into and has been the first-preferred destination of high-achievers in JEE-Advanced.

The number of students taking the examination increased substantially each year with 506,484 candidates registered for JEE-Advanced- 2012.[47] However, with the two stage JEE-Main + JEE-Advanced structure from 2013,[48] the number of candidates in JEE-Advanced is fixed at 150 thousand students in 2013 and it is increased in subsequent years to 250 thousand as of 2022.[49] The total seats available in each institute (Seat Matrix) is summarized in table below.[50]

Institute 2002[51] 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011[52] 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024[53]
IIT Bhilai --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- 120 120 127 143 183 183 183 203 243 283
IIT Bhubaneswar --- --- --- 120 120 120 120 120 160 180 180 260 350 369 420 475 475 475 476 496
IIT Bombay 491 600 574 648 746 880 880 880 880 880 903 903 929 1026 1115 1360 1360 1360 1356 1368
IIT Delhi 552 552 553 626 721 851 851 851 851 851 851 851 851 910 1061 1209 1209 1209 1209 1209
IIT (ISM) Dhanbad 444 444 658 705 923 1012 1034 1034 1023 962 935 912 912 1007 952 1125 1125 1125 1125 1125
IIT Dharwad --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- 120 120 126 137 170 185 310 310 385
IIT Gandhinagar --- --- --- 120 120 120 120 120 140 150 150 180 180 194 212 250 250 288 370 400
IIT Goa --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- 90 90 97 150 157 157 157 157 157
IIT Guwahati 250 350 365 435 498 588 615 615 660 660 660 615 645 702 795 902 922 952 952 962
IIT Hyderabad --- --- --- 120 120 120 140 140 210 220 220 240 285 294 317 425 470 505 595 595
IIT Indore --- --- --- --- 120 120 120 120 120 120 120 260 260 275 294 360 360 360 480 480
IIT Jammu --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- 90 120 154 213 237 240 240 280 280
IIT Jodhpur --- --- --- 120 120 120 160 160 200 160 120 160 180 247 352 490 490 530 550 600
IIT Kanpur 456 456 541 608 702 827 827 827 827 827 853 827 827 910 1016 1182 1210 1210 1210 1210
IIT Kharagpur 653 659 874 988 1138 1341 1341 1370 1341 1341 1341 1341 1341 1453 1603 1902 1869 1869 1869 1899
IIT Madras 553 554 540 612 713 838 838 838 838 838 838 838 838 877 967 1133 1133 1133 1134 1128
IIT Mandi --- --- --- --- 120 120 120 120 120 120 145 150 150 200 282 329 329 336 520 520
IIT Palakkad --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- 120 120 120 163 181 188 169 180 200 200
IIT Patna --- --- --- 120 120 120 120 120 200 200 200 200 225 250 361 427 547 582 733 817
IIT Roorkee 402 546 746 884 1013 1155 1155 1155 1105 1065 1030 970 975 1043 1190 1353 1353 1353 1353 1353
IIT Ropar --- --- --- 120 120 120 120 120 120 120 130 155 260 309 346 370 370 395 430 430
IIT Tirupati --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- 120 120 120 180 203 237 237 237 244 254
IIT (BHU) Varanasi 568 568 686 766 881 1057 1057 1057 1090 1090 1090 1090 1090 1167 1364 1589 1589 1589 1589 1589
Total 4369 4583 5537 6992 8295 9509 9618 9647 9885 9784 10006 10572 10988 12080 13674 16053 16232 16598 17385 17740

Note: This intake is only about bachelor's program intake through JEE-Advanced and it is not about intake in IITs, because some IITs also admit students through UCEED and Olympiads.[54][55][56][57][58]

In 2011, additional courses were introduced in the IITs. IIT Tirupati and IIT Palakkad were started in 2015 and four more institutes (IIT Bhilai, IIT Dharwad, IIT Goa, and IIT Jammu) opened in 2016. In 2018, to ensure minimum female enrollment of 14%, the IITs introduced "female-only" and "gender-neutral" seats based on 2017 enrollment statistics; and "super-numerary" seats were allocated per-institute and per-course to reach a 14% target. With these, and slight overall seat increases, the total seat availability was over 12,000, including 801 "super-numerary female-only" seats. For 2019, with the partial rollout of a 10% EWS quota (without a reduction in non-reserved seats) and the increase of the female enrollment target to 17%, the total seats available went up to over 13,500, with over 1200 super-numerary female-only seats. In 2020, with the full rollout of the 10% EWS quota and a 20% female enrolment target, total available seats increased further to 16,053, with over 1500 super-numerary female-only seats.

Criticism

[edit]

In 2012, Super 30 founder and mathematician Anand Kumar criticized the New Admission Norms, saying that the decision of the IITs' council to give a chance to students in the top 20% from various boards in the class 12 examinations was "a decision in haste". "This is one decision that will go against the poor, who don't have the opportunity to study in elite schools," he added.[59]

The IIT-JEE is conducted only in English and Hindi; it has been criticized as being harder for students from places where other Indian languages, like Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam, Urdu, Oriya, Bengali, Marathi, Assamese, or Gujarati, are more prominent. In September 2011, the Gujarat High Court acted on a Public Interest Litigation by the Gujarati Sahitya Parishad, demanding the examinations be conducted in Gujarati too.[60] A second petition was made that October by Navsari's Sayaji Vaibhav Sarvajanik Pustakalaya Trust.[61] Another petition was made at the Madras High Court for conducting the exam in Tamil. In the petition, it was claimed that not conducting the exam in the regional languages violates article 14 of the Constitution of India. The Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK) party, a political party in Tamil Nadu, held a demonstration at Chennai for conducting the IIT-JEE and other national entrance exams in regional languages also, particularly Tamil in Tamil Nadu.[62]

The PMK party filed Public Interest Litigation in the Madras High Court to conduct the IIT-JEE entrance exam in Tamil. They claimed that every year 763,000 students were completing grade 12 in Tamil Nadu, 75% of them from Tamil Medium. They had to take the entrance exam in English or Hindi, neither of which was their medium of instruction nor their mother tongue, and so were denied their fundamental right to take the entrance exam in a language familiar to them.[63][64] Shiv Sena urged the MHRD to conduct the IIT-JEE and other national undergraduate entrance exams in regional languages, particularly Marathi in Maharashtra.[65] In 2017, the Supreme Court ordered JAB to put a bar on the ongoing counseling process. There were three questions comprising a total of 11 marks that were unclear.

JEE(Advanced) has also been criticised for its notoriously tough examination pattern, for a high school student, the questions asked go way beyond the scope of conventional teaching in schools, this forces the students to opt for coaching classes. The coaching classes create a situation of extreme pressure for the students, gradually affecting their mental health.[66]

Coaching

[edit]

Preparation for the Joint Entrance Exam begins typically two to four years before students take the test. Most students who passed this exam attended coaching institutes, which had created a ₹2309992.61 billion industry with annual tuition of up to ₹288850,000.[citation needed] These academies included mock tests multiple times a week, up to 200 students per class, and long hours, ranging from 4 to 7 hours a day, in addition to regular high school work. There were hundreds of academies across the country, and the most famous—in Kota, Rajasthan—attracted approximately 125,000 students each year.[67]

Coaching programs are major corporations, listed on the Indian stock market and also attracting billions of dollars of investment from private equity firms.[68] The high-pressure environment at these coaching institutes has been blamed for a significant number of suicides.[69]

Recent modifications in the exam

[edit]

There were several changes made to the exam in 2018. The Joint Admission Board (JAB) decided to conduct the entire exam online from 2018 onwards, hoping to reduce the chances of paper leak and make logistics and evaluation easier. It said that the online exam would neutralize the problem of misprinting.[70]

JEE(Advanced) 2020 was scheduled on 17 May 2020.However due to the COVID-19 pandemic , the JEE-Main 2020 April attempt was postponed to September(JEE(Main) 2020 September attempt was held from September 1 2020 to September 6 2020),JEE(Advanced) 2020 was also postponed and was held on 27 September 2020.

A series of schedule revisions were carried out in 2021. The former Education minister of India, Ramesh Pokhriyal confirmed the dates for the exam. JEE-Main exam was slated to be conducted in eight sessions over four days— two sessions each day— for each phase, with a total of four phases being held in four different months. The first phase was organized from the 23 to 28 February, while the other phases were scheduled to be organized in the subsequent months of March, April and May. The JEE-Advanced exam was scheduled to be held on 3 July 2021 but was postponed— together with the third and fourth phases of the JEE-Main examination that were to be held in the respective months of April and May— due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The third and fourth phases of the JEE-Main examinations were later held on 20 July - 3 August and 26 August – 2 September, respectively. The JEE-Advanced exam was held on 3 October 2021.

JEE-Advanced 2022 was scheduled to be held on 3 July 2022 in the usual two sessions - Morning and Afternoon (both compulsory). However, with 2022 JEE-Main being postponed from April / May to 20–29 June / 21–30 July, JEE-Advanced 2022 was also postponed and subsequently held on 28 August 2022.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  3. ^ "IIT Madras invites applications for BSc Data Science; Class 11, 12 students eligible to apply". The Indian Express. 2 April 2022. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  4. ^ "IIT-B admission: Math Olympiad qualifiers eligible for UG course". Hindustan Times. 26 April 2019. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  5. ^ "From UPSC to gaokao: Top 10 most difficult exams to crack globally". WION. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
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  9. ^ Kritika Sharma (17 August 2022). "Just how tough is JEE Advanced? Data shows 90% IIT aspirants got half the questions wrong in 2021". ThePrint.
  10. ^ FE Online (22 July 2018). "Why IIT JEE exam is so tough, tricky and complicated: IIT-D director explains".
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  12. ^ S.S. Vasan. Reforming the Joint Entrance Examination system.
  13. ^ Editorial. Reforming JEE needs wider reach[dead link].
  14. ^ National admission test called for[dead link].
  15. ^ Indrani Dutta. New IIT-JEE format from 2006.
  16. ^ D Suresh Kumar. JEE fails to get the best: IIT dons. The Times of India. 31 Jul 2008.
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  19. ^ Govt plans single entrance exam for all engineering colleges from 2018
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