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Hello Parvat
The height criteria for a man who wishes to join Police forces is as follows:
1. Men: 5 feet 7 inches (170.2 cm)
2. Women: 5 feet 2 inches (157.5 cm)
So if you are a male, then you are ineligible. But if you are a female, then you are eligible to join the police forces.
Thank You!!!
To get into a Sainik School, you’ll need to apply online for the AISSEE through the NTA portal (typically around October–November), meet the age and eligibility criteria for Classes VI or IX, appear for the entrance exam in January, and then clear subsequent medical, counselling, and document verification stages. Admissions are highly competitive and merit-based through this structured process.
Hello,
If you’re looking for the exact 2025–26 board question paper, that will only be available on the exam day; however, you can prepare smartly using the official pattern and previous papers. For Maharashtra Board “Maths 1” (commonly the Algebra paper at SSC level), the exam typically includes a mix of objective questions (MCQs/fill-in-the-blanks/true-false), short answers, and long problem-solving questions covering: Number Systems, Polynomials, Linear Equations, Quadratic Equations, Arithmetic Progression, Coordinate Geometry basics, and Statistics/Probability elements. Weightage is spread so that conceptual clarity and steps carry marks—not just the final answer.
For authentic papers and sample sets, always use MSBSHSE resources and your school’s official material.
For class 10 maths question paper you can check here: https://school.careers360.com/boards/msbshse/maharashtra-ssc-question-papers
Best of luck, and thank you!
Thanks for reaching out!
Yes, BAMS cut-offs can go down or up from year to year; they’re not fixed. Cut-offs are driven by several changing factors: the difficulty of the entrance exam (NEET score distribution), the number of applicants, total seats available in government and private Ayurvedic colleges, category-wise reservation rules, and whether newer colleges open or close seats. Typical year-to-year swings are modest — in many states you’ll see movement of a few marks up or down (say 5–25 marks) — but in unusual years (sharp change in exam difficulty or sudden seat increase), the change can be larger. Government college seats are more competitive and their cut-offs stay relatively higher and stable; private college cut-offs are usually lower and more variable. What matters more than trying to predict an exact decrease is being strategic: check last 3–5 years’ closing marks for your state and for each college you want, keep an eye on category-specific closing marks (SC/ST/OBC/EWS), and be prepared to participate in all counselling rounds (initial, mop-up, stray) because seat movement often happens later.
For more information visit: https://medicine.careers360.com/articles/bams-cutoff
Best of luck,
Hi,
With 396 marks in NEET, your chances for an MBBS seat depend heavily on the college type, state quota, and year-to-year cut-offs. If by “KPC college” you mean a private medical college (like KPC Medical College in West Bengal), then government seats there usually require higher marks; however, private colleges have management/paid quota seats which sometimes admit at lower marks than government seats — so 396 could be in range for certain private or management quota seats in some years, but it is not guaranteed and depends on vacancy and category (General/OBC/SC/ST/EWS). Register for state counselling (wherever you are eligible) as soon as NEET results are out — do not miss deadlines; Add KPC and other private colleges to your preference list (be realistic and include easier options as backups. Check fee structure and management quota costs in advance — private MBBS fees can be very high and vary college to college.
You can use this tool for predict your college: College predictor careers 360
Thank you
Hello Aspirant,
If only the first letter of your grandfather's name is wrong on the income certificate, it is generally a minor clerical mistake and will not create problems in most situations. But if you use this certificate for official verification (scholarship, government jobs, caste/income benefits, etc), then authorities might ask for correction to avoid mismatched. It is safer to apply for correction/re-issue at issuing authority (Tahsildar/Revenue office) to make all the documents uniform.
Yes, you can apply for Intelligence Bureau Security Assistant (IB SA) even without a domicile, as domicile is not required; the main eligibility is being an Indian citizen, having passed at least 10th standard, falling within the age limit of 18–27 years (with relaxations), and most importantly, having knowledge of the local language of the state you apply for, since the post is language-specific, so you just need to choose a state where you can prove language proficiency.
For MBA admission through TS ICET, a residence certificate is generally required if you are applying under the state quota, as it helps determine your eligibility for local category seats. Usually, the residence certificate of the student is preferred, but in some cases, the father’s or guardian’s certificate may also be accepted, depending on the rules of the admitting college or university. Regarding the bonafide certificates from Class 8 to B.Com issued by Telangana schools and colleges, these are helpful to prove that you have studied in Telangana, but most authorities still require an official residence certificate to confirm domicile eligibility.
Hello
Yes, the ICSE 2026 specimen papers have been released by CISCE in July 2025. These cover key subjects like English, Maths, Science, and Social Studies. You can download them from the official CISCE website under the “Specimen Question Papers” section. They’re designed to help students understand the new exam pattern.
IIIT Hyderabad’s selection is mainly based on performance in the channels they accept (JEE Main ranks via JoSAA for some seats, their own UGEE, lateral entry, or other competent-exam/olympiad modes), and the Class XII percentage is typically an eligibility filter rather than the primary selection metric. When institutes mention a percentage threshold (like 60%), they usually refer to the overall aggregate marks in Class 12 rather than a separate PCM-only aggregate — but wording in bulletins changes, so the safest approach is to always check the current year’s official IIIT-H admissions prospectus. Practically speaking, strong performance in JEE/UGEE/other accepted channels is what determines your admission. If you meet the minimum eligibility (pass with required subjects including Mathematics and Physics), then concentrate on performing well in the competitive test or JEE rank.
Thank you!
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