On April 7, 2013, over 10 lakh students appeared
for JEE Mains that will act as a screening examination (in conjunction with
Class XII Board Examination marks) for JEE Advanced to be held in June 2013.
JEE Mains (with Class XII Board Examination marks) will also be the basis for
admission into the NITs and other regional engineering colleges across India.
Many websites have already published the solutions
to the JEE Mains paper and students must be having an idea of the approximate
score they will get. But as always, the relative score matters for which this
analysis is presented. To carry out this analysis, I have also talked to at
least 60 students (intelligent, average, below average and poor) who took the
examination this year to gauge the level of difficulty of questions and come up
with the expected rankings vs score of students as well as the qualifying score
for JEE Advanced. Not to forget that Class XII Board Examination marks have not
been considered in this analysis. However, the inferences presented in this
article should not be very different even after considering Class XII Board
Examination marks.
JEE Mains this year had just one paper that had all
three subjects – Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry with equal weightage. There
were 90 questions in all, 30 of each subject and the total marks was 360 (120
marks for each subject). Overall, the paper was easy with the difficulty level
of questions only slightly higher than Class XII Board Examinations. The type
of questions asked were “Single Correct Answer Type” and “Assertion-Reason
Type”.
The real test here was of speed that I had been
stressing on in my articles and during my interactions with students at Patna
Book Fair and other seminars. So, students who had been following my series of
preparatory articles on www.gyancentral.com,
especially the last week preparation series
(http://www.gyancentral.com/articles/graduate/engineering/indian-institutes-of-technology/jee-2013:-solving-aieee-papers-is-going-to-help-especially-with-mathematics)
should easily be able to qualify for this year’s JEE Advanced. Especially in
Mathematics, I had advised to go through Eduwiser’s Mathematics Series by Prof.
K. C. Sinha and you will notice that all the Mathematics questions asked in JEE
Mains this year were directly from these books.
Fig. 1 :
Level of Difficulty
Talking about the difficulty level, I personally
found Mathematics easier than the other two. But based on the student and
teacher feedback, the chart shows the level of difficulty of questions in each
subject. So, among the individual subjects, Chemistry was supposedly easier
whereas Physics was the most difficult (comparatively). The numbers also
clearly indicate that attempting the right questions in the examination can easily
let any aspirant through, since there are sufficient number of easy questions
asked; you just need to find them in the paper.
The above figures give you the topic-wise break-up
of each subject. In each subject, if you had concentrated on preparing the
chapters I had asked you to, you must have scored well. As expected, Coordinate
and Vectors/3-D formed 27% of the Mathematics portion and all these questions
were pretty straight forward and hence less time-consuming. Algebra formed the
major portion of Mathematics as is always the case.
In Physics, Heat, Electrostat, Current &
Magnetism, Modern and Sound formed more than 50% of the Physics paper. In
Physics, a couple of questions were tricky and one question from Modern Physics
(the one on modulated frequency) was out of syllabus, which made the paper a
little difficult.
In Chemistry, if you had control over Physical and
Organic Chemistry, the paper must have been a cakewalk for you.
Coming to the most important part of this article –
expected ranking of students who know their approximate scores and the expected
cut-off for JEE Advanced 2013.
Since I believe in equal opportunity for all, I am
only going to discuss the cut-offs for the General Category. According to my
analysis, the topper is expected to get about 342 marks. I talked to the
FIITJEE topper and he has scored 330. So, the topper is expected to be from
some other Coaching Institute. The competition will become very tough in terms
of marks as we go lower down the rankings.
The cut-off for JEE Advanced for General Category according to me, should be around 129 marks (refer the given table; considering only 51% of 150,000 = 75000 approx. will qualify for JEE Advanced).
The cut-off for JEE Advanced for General Category according to me, should be around 129 marks (refer the given table; considering only 51% of 150,000 = 75000 approx. will qualify for JEE Advanced).
Tabulated above is the aggregate score against one’s
expected ranking according to my analysis.
The actual data will however be known only when the
results are out on May 7, 2013 (on this date, only the scores will be released).
Until then, we can only publish the ‘expected’ rankings and ‘expected’ cut-offs.
The Class XII marks also need to be considered for the actual rankings. The way
forward for students now is to focus on other major examination(s) – be it JEE
Advanced and/or some regional engineering entrance examinations.
If you have any questions/comments, you can interact with me on www.facebook.com/abbyshekchandra
Wishing all the students “All the Best” for their
results and their upcoming examinations. Hope the article helps!
Disclaimer : All the data in the article are solely based on the
author’s individual analysis. The author does not guarantee the numbers to
match the actual outcome.
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