Indian Institute of Technology Joint Entrance Examination

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The Indian Institutes of Technology Joint Entrance Examination (IIT-JEE) was an annual engineering college entrance examination in India. It was used as the sole admission test by the 16 Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) and Indian School of Mines Dhanbad (to be converted into IIT).[1] The examination was organised each year by one of the various IITs, using a round robin rotation pattern. It had a very low admission rate (about 10,000 in 500,000 in 2011).

In 2013 it was replaced by the two-phase Joint Entrance Examination.[2]

History

The first IIT, IIT Kharagpur, started in 1951. In the initial few years (1951-1954) students were admitted on the basis of their academic results followed by an Interview in several Centers across the country. From 1955-1959 admission was via an all India examination held only for IIT Kharagpur (other IITs had not started by then). Branches were allotted through Interviews/counselling held at Kharagpur.[citation needed]

The common IIT-JEE was conducted for the first time in 1960,[3][4] when it had four subjects including an English language paper. The examination since evolved considerably from its initial pattern. The IIT-JEE was initially called the Common Entrance Exam (CEE); its creation coincided with that of the 1961 IIT Act.[5]

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

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 sit the paper, out of more than 450,000 applicants.

In September 2005, an analysis group of directors of all the IITs announced major reforms to the examination. These were implemented from 2006 onwards. The revised test consisted of a single objective test, replacing the earlier two-test system. In order to be eligible for the main examination, candidates in the general category had to secure a minimum of 60% aggregated marks in the qualifying examination of the XIIth standard organized by various educational boards of India, while candidates belonging to Scheduled Caste (SC), Scheduled Tribe (ST) and Physically Disabled (PD) categories must secure a minimum of 55%.

In 2008, the Director and the Dean of IIT Madras called for 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 IITs.[6]

In 2008, the Indian Institutes of Technology, for the first time, went overseas with their entrance examination as they set up a centre for the competitive test in Dubai.[7] The number of candidates appearing in Dubai hovered around 200 to 220.[8]

Seats

The number of students taking the examination increased substantially each year with over 485,000 sitting IIT-JEE 2011. This represented an increase of 30,000 students (6.5%) from 2010.[9]

The availability of seats in recent years is as shown below:

Institute Intake (2003) Intake (2007) Intake (2008) Intake (2009) Intake (2010) Intake (2011)[10] Intake (2012)[11]
IIT (BHU) Varanasi 568 686 766 881 1057 1057 1057
IIT Bhubaneshwar 120 120 120 120 120
IIT Bombay 600 574 648 746 880 880 880
IIT Delhi 552 553 626 721 851 851 851
IIT Gandhinagar 120 120 120 120 120
IIT Guwahati 350 365 435 498 588 615 615
IIT Hyderabad 120 120 120 140 140
IIT Indore 120 120 120 120
IIT Kanpur 456 541 608 702 827 827 827
IIT Kharagpur 659 874 988 1138 1341 1341 1370
IIT Madras 554 540 612 713 838 838 838
IIT Mandi 120 120 120 120
IIT Patna 120 120 120 120 120
IIT Rajasthan 120 120 120 160 160
IIT Roorkee 546 746 884 1013 1155 1155 1155
IIT Ropar 120 120 120 120 120
ISM Dhanbad (to be converted into IIT)[1] 444 658 705 923 1012 1034 1034
Total 4583 5537 6992 8295 9509 9618 9647
Attendance 455,000 485,000[9] 512,000

From 2008, six new IITs were opened with 120 seats each, increasing the total number of seats to almost 7000. For 2009, admissions were made to two more IITs, namely IIT Indore and IIT Mandi (Himachal Pradesh) taking the seat count to almost 8300. In 2011, with additional courses in several old and new IITs, the total seat count crossed 9600.

Criticism

In 2012, Super 30 founder and mathematician Anand Kumar criticised the New Admission Norms, saying that the decision of the IIT Council to give chance to students having 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.[12]

IIT-JEE was conducted only in English and Hindi, which was criticised as making it harder for students where regional languages, like Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, 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 exams be conducted in Gujarati.[13] A second petition was made in October by Navsari's Sayaji Vaibhav Sarvajanik Pustakalaya Trust.[14] 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 is in violation of article 14 of the Constitution of India. PMK, political party in Tamil Nadu holds a demonstration at Chennai for conducting IIT-JEE and other national entrance exams in regional languages also, particularly Tamil in Tamil Nadu.[15] Pattali Makkal Katchi party has filed Public Interest Litigation in Madras High Court for conducting IIT JEE entrance exam in Tamil also. They submitted that every year 7.63 lakh students were completing 12th standard 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 up the entrance exam in their medium of instruction, based on their mother tongue.[16][17]Shiv Sena urged MHRD to conduct IITJEE and other national undergraduate entrance exams in regional languages, particularly Marathi language in Maharashtra.[18]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 ISM Dhanbad to be converted into IIT
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  4. 5.2 lakh to appear for IIT-JEE
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  6. D Suresh Kumar. JEE fails to get the best: IIT dons. The Times of India. 31 Jul 2008.
  7. 5 lakh aspirants to sit for IIT-JEE in 2012
  8. IITs hike number of examination centres for JEE
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External links