Open computer labs for JEE Advance aspirants: CBSE to schools
Prakash Kumar, DH News Service, New Delhi, Mar 15 2018, 17:12 IST
The CBSE has directed its schools to open the doors of their computer laboratories for such students to enable them to take the mock test ahead of the examinations to be held for admission in the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) in May.
Engineering
aspirants can take a mock test for JEE-Advance using the computers
available at their nearby schools which are affiliated to the Central
Board of Secondary Education (CBSE).
The CBSE
has directed its schools to open the doors of their computer
laboratories for such students to enable them to take the mock test
ahead of the examinations to be held for admission in the Indian
Institutes of Technology (IITs) in May.
"This
facility may be extended to the students who are qualified to write
JEE-Advance examination only," the board said in its directive to about
18,000 schools affiliated to it in India and abroad.
The
move is aimed to benefit rural students as the joint admission board of
the IITs have decided to conduct the JEE-Advance in online mode only
from this year, doing away with the system of holding the test in pen
and paper mode.
The IIT-Kanpur is scheduled to hold the mock test for the JEE aspirants between May 1 to May 5.
The
nationwide test is conducted in two parts-JEE Main and JEE Advance.
While the National Institutes of Technology (NITs) and other
centrally-funded technical institutes admit students on the basis of
their performance in the JEE-Main, a joint admission board of the 23
IITs conduct the JEE-Advance for filling their seats.
The
CBSE is scheduled to conduct the JEE-Main in pen and paper mode across
the country on April 8. The computer-based test for the JEE-Main
aspirants, who have opted for it, will be held by the board on April 15
and April 16.
The IITs will conduct the JEE Advance on May 20.
In
a separate notification on Wednesday, the CBSE assured that the
JEE-Main questions will have same difficulty level for each set of the
question papers prepared for this year.
"The
subject experts who have prepared the question papers have certified
that the entire syllabus of Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry has been
covered in each question set by dividing the syllabus of each subject
into an appropriate number of units and choosing an equal number of
questions from each unit," the board said.
In every question paper set, each subject would carry the same percentage of "easy, medium and difficult" questions, it said.
This ensures the same difficulty level of each set of question paper for this year," the board added