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With a GMR of 42,000 in WBJEE and SC category, plus a TFW rank of 10,000, your chances for a TFW (Tuition Fee Waiver) seat are quite low because TFW seats are very limited (only 5% of total seats) and are usually taken up by much lower TFW ranks (generally within 3k–5k for popular branches in government and top private colleges). However, being SC category does improve your chances for getting a seat under reservation in government or private colleges through GMR, but the TFW quota is allotted strictly by TFW rank, not category rank. So realistically, you may not secure a TFW seat, but you should still get admission through SC quota in lower/mid-tier private engineering colleges in WB.
Actually there is no JEE Mains cutoff for the M.Sc. Mathematics program at TIET as admission is based on academic record they take 40% based on your Class 12 marks and 60% from your ug marks where Mathematics is compulsary.you need overall aggregate of 60% in your graduation and no backlogs from the first two years to apply there.
If you need alternative you can consider institute like IITs, IISc, and NITs through the IIT JAM exam, or other reputable universities like GFTIs ,DTU and BITMesra where jee main closing rank for the General category was around 25,764.
Hope it helps..
You can't get a good cse college at this rank. Even if you take admission in some other college it would be just a waste of money. In that case I would suggest you to go for private colleges like Heritage Institute of Technology through management quota where you need to pay huge fees.
Other than cse branch you can consider different branches where admission is possible explore WBJEE CUTOFF to find exact options.
And if you dont want these colleges then try reappearing for the next year if you are not a dropper already.
Beat of luck.
You have very low to no chance with this rank if you see last years cutoff the cutoff ranges from 300 to 330 for the home state quota and 310 to 340 for the other state quota. Your score of 296 is below this range.
Thank you..
Yes, after completing B.Com you can take admission in B.Ed, and many students from the commerce stream do this (on average around 20–30% depending on the university). In B.Ed Commerce, the syllabus focuses on pedagogy and teaching methods of subjects like Accountancy, Business Studies, Economics, and Commerce. Core papers include Philosophy & Sociology of Education, Learner Psychology, Curriculum & Pedagogy, Inclusive Education, Educational Technology, Assessment & Evaluation etc. The second year usually has a compulsory school internship/practice teaching where you teach in real classrooms.
Hello,
Thank you for your question!
At that rank, a government PG seat is very unlikely—even for non-clinical branches like Anatomy, Physiology or Biochemistry—because government colleges typically close far earlier. But you can try in private/deemed college in the later rounds for non-clinical subjects, or a state quota where your state has more seats and lower demand.
You can use this tool for predict your college: https://medicine.careers360.com/neet-pg-college-predictor
Best of luck!
This depends on your university. Most public universities open M.A. admissions June–August, and late/second lists run into September. Distance/IDOL modes often accept forms till September/October. The safest way is to check your university’s admission portal .
Thank you!
RCC (Thiruvananthapuram) releases its DRP/PG Diploma notifications annually. The entrance test and interviews are usually scheduled in late summer (Aug–Sep), but the exact date changes every year. Check RCC’s official admissions page and the latest PDF notice—dates, seat matrix, and syllabus are posted there first.
For 5-year LLB, eligibility is 10+2 (Intermediate) or its equivalent. A 3-year diploma (polytechnic) is usually not accepted as a 10+2 equivalent for the 5-year law programme. You have two realistic paths:
So yes—if you want the 5-year route now, you’ll need the Inter qualification first.
After MD Pharm, people work as faculty in medical colleges, in clinical research/clinical trials,regulatory affairs, medical writing/medical affairs with pharma/CROs, and in drug safety roles. Academic salaries are steady; industry roles (PV/MA/CR) often pay more and grow faster.
Hope you will find it helpful!
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