Wednesday 20 September 2017

MH CET 2017 Eligibility

MH CET 2017 Eligibility

The State Common Entrance Test Cell Government of Maharashtra conducts an entrance exam that's MHT CET.
MHT CET That Is required for entry to full-time level Classes is for these classes:
·         Health Science- MBBS, BDS, BAMS, BHMS, BUMS, BPTh, BOTh, BASLP, BP&O and B Sc. Nursing, B.V.Sc. and AH.
·         Technical Education- Engineering and Technology, Pharmacy and D.Pharm.
The minimal age for exams will be 17 decades plus also a minimum of 50 percent marks in aggregate are all Needed for the Candidate to look for this exam.

The entrance to MBA/MMS applications in schools in Maharashtra is throughout the entry exam MAH MBA/MMS CET. Through this entrance exam, candidates may get entry to these institutes:

·         All Authorities of Maharashtra Management Education Institutes
·         University Departments of Management Education
·         University -handled Management Education Institutes
All Un-aided Control Education Institutes insured according to the Act

The State Common Entrance Test Cell additionally supposes MAH MCA CET That's an entrance exam for entry to annually/ Direct year of the 3-year full-time postgraduate course at Master of Computer Applications. The entry exam is really for these institutes:

·         All Government Institutes supplying MCA class
·         All Of Government Aided Institutes supplying MCA Course
·         All University Departments supplying MCA class
·         University Managed Institutes that provide MCA class
·         All Un-Aided MCA Institutes coated according to the Act

Minimum Age for its Exam

For That the MHT CET 2017 Exam, the offender has to be at minimal of 17 years old. According to the instructions, the offender should have been born before or on December 31, 1999. For your 2017 exam for its Arrived and Unani classes, the candidates have to be born before or on October 1, 1999. Each candidate must offer age evidence that certifies the candidate qualified for this exam. The era evidence documents may be:

·         A birth certificate
·         Secondary School Certificate i.e. SSC Certificate
·         School Leaving Certificate
Notice- The Minimum age qualification criterion doesn't endure for MAH CET ran for entry to MMS and MBA classes. Also, the age qualification criterion doesn't hold.

MAH MCA CET


The MAH MCA CET is an entrance exam for the initial season or two direct year entry to MCA course. The candidates have to have scored at least 50% aggregate marks within their undergraduate diploma course in any field for entry to the first year program or the candidate has to be graduated from Computer Science or Information Technology to apply to the exam for entrance into the next year of the MCA application.

Wednesday 19 July 2017

Class X Results Board

Class X Results Board

Of the 60,000 Vishwas group students, 17,236 failed in two subjects. To clear the CBSE board examination, a student has to pass in five subjects. While 5,918 students passed in three main subjects, it was in science that 5,034 students stumbled.

An analysis of this year’s Class X board exam result has shown that students from Delhi government schools who were asked to appear as ‘private’ candidates have struggled the most with science subjects. Of the 64,570 private candidates, close to 60,000 were under the government’s “Vishwas” group.
Formed as part of the Chunauti scheme launched last year, the Vishwas group comprises students who have failed twice in Class IX and who appear for Class X board exams as private candidates. Only 1,654 of the total number of private candidates have cleared the examination — a pass percentage of 2.56 per cent.

CBSE Class 12 Maths Paper: Lengthy But Easy, Says Students
Chunauti was started by the government to improve learning levels in schools funded by them. Covering students from classes VI-IX, students were divided into sections depending on their reading abilities. Under the scheme this year, there was a group in Class X, which had students who had failed in Class IX and were put into the Patrachar Vidyalaya (private) mode. They had, however, attended regular classes at Delhi government schools. For these students, studying social sciences was compulsory.
However, they could choose two languages and two subjects from science, home science and mathematics. Teachers who taught the Vishwas group students, however, said they were quite sure they would not be able to clear the exam. Explaining this, A K Jha, principal of a government school in Rohini, Sector 8, said, “As these students have the choice to drop only one subject, most of them ended up dropping mathematics, and opted for science. Children in government schools generally find science and mathematics difficult even though we give them the best teachers.”
However, educationist Anita Rampal said this has happened because the science textbooks under the Chunauti scheme were poorly designed. “I was aghast when we saw the textbooks. There are just one-page chapters on a concept. The rest of the books was filled with questions which students were made to memorise,” she said.
Hopeful that the these students who have failed in one or two subjects will clear the boards in the improvement exam, the Delhi government has started conducting remedial classes. “Since June 19, we have been holding 90-minute classes for those who have failed in one subject, and three-hour classes for those who have failed in two subjects. Teachers have been told to focus on important portions than on chapters,” a senior Directorate of Education (DOE) official said.