
JEE Main 2020 Exam LIVE updates: After being postponed twice, the Joint Entrance Examination -JEE Main is being from September 1 onwards. The JEE paper 2 was held yesterday and today onward the engineering exam will be conducted. Visuals from all across India suggest that students have reached exam halls, however, today is the BArch exam and a vast majority of students will appear for exams from tomorrow onwards when BTech entrance exams will take place.
In a major announcement today, just half-an-hour before the exam began, the Nagpur bench of the Bombay High Court said that the students residing in flood-affected areas in Vidarbha region of Maharashtra can approach the National Testing Agency (NTA), if they were unable to reach the exam centre or reached late. The court also asked NTA to check the veracity of the claims and decide their representation within 15 days.
JEE Main 2020 paper analysis | Students find maths tough, physics lengthy
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the exam is being conducted amid special arrangement, from no shoes with thick soles to mandatory masks at exam hall – several arrangements have been made by the NTA. Over 10 lakh masks, 10 lakh pairs of gloves, 1,300 infrared thermometer guns, 6,600 litres of hand sanitiser and an equal amount of disinfectant liquid, 6,600 sponges, 3,300 spray bottles and 3,300 cleaning staff have been arranged at an additional cost of almost Rs 13 crore. The exam will be conducted at 660 centres across the country, which was increased from 570.
-The overall level of the exam was Easy to Moderate.
-The physics section was considered difficult.
-Maths was moderate and lengthy.
-Students were able to attempt 13-14 questions with ease.
-Chemistry was easy.
-Questions were directly based on NCERT (60-70%).
-Questions were uniformly asked from whole syllabus in each of the subjects.
- Analysis by Navin C Joshi VP, Goprep
Sahil Agarwal, a JEE Main aspirant in Kolkata said, “The paper was comparatively easier than the last session. The numerical part in all the three papers was lengthy and concept-based. The students can expect a cut-off of varies between 85 to 90.”
JEE main paper was lengthy as compared to last year. The paper was calculation based. Chemistry was on tougher than usual. Paper was in sync with the January pattern. Students have felt the paper lengthy as the number of questions decreased as compared to last year. Around 2-3 questions in maths & physics were tricky," said Saurabh Kumar, Director Academics, Vidyamandir Classes
The students who had appeared in the Joint Entrance Examination- JEE Main today rated the overall paper as moderate, with Maths being toughest. The candidates sharing their review with indianexpress.com said that the Maths portion was the toughest of all, Physics- moderate, and Chemistry- easy. According to Ramesh Batlish, head FIITJEE, “Though the paper was comparatively easy than the last session, but candidates faced difficulties in solving the Maths paper, while Chemistry part has balanced questions, and can be termed easier. The Physics was part was moderate, while students took time to solve the numerical section as it was lengthy.”
Education Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank has wished all the best to students taking JEE Main today. The minister in his tweet mentioned, "Today, the second day examinations of JEE have started successfully, according to the information I have received, concrete arrangements have been made by all the state governments with proper arrangements in compliance with the health guidelines issued by the Government of India." The minister also appealed to students to follow the COVID-19 guidelines, and take the exam with patience.
Indian Railways has decided to run 20 pairs of special trains from September 2 to 15 for the convenience of those appearing for these exams in Bihar. Railways decided to run 20 pairs of special trains from September 2 to 15 for the convenience of those appearing for these exams in Bihar.
The first day of Joint Entrance Examination (JEE)-Main saw relatively low attendance of approximately 65% to 70%, according to a government official. About 1 lakh candidates were expected to appear for Paper 2 Tuesday. From Wednesday onward, JEE Main paper 1 or BE, BTech entrance exams have begun
During the exam, picking up problems on the basis of easy, medium and difficult and attacking them in this order goes a long way in ensuring success as initial success generates confidence and calms down the mind to think more analytically for the remaining more ticklish problems. Distribution of Mathematics chapters shows that chapters like 3-Dimensional Geometry, Applications of Derivatives, Limits, Continuity and Differentiability and Matrices and Determinants constitute a higher number of questions in JEE Main, said Aakash Chaudhry, director and CEO Aakash Educational Services.
Chapter-wise distribution in Chemistry suggests that Chemical bonding and molecular structure, Biomolecules, Polymer, Aldehyde Ketone and Carboxylic acids, Equilibrium, Coordinate compounds etc. Constitute the major part of the Chemistry paper. JEE for chemistry is straight forward and based only on the facts given in the NCERT book, said Aakash Chaudhry, director and CEO at Aakash Educational services
"Up to JEE(Main) level, studying Physics is easy but scoring marks in it is not that simple. For this, you must be fast, accurate and smart. Using discretion and picking up the right questions during exam is a very important part of your exam strategy Concepts in physics by Dr. HC Verma is a great source for strengthening the basics after completing NCERT book. Chapters like System of Particles and Rotational Motion, Current Electricity, Electrical Potential and Capacitance, Ray Optics and Units and Measurement etc. are the important ones," said Aakash Chaudhry, Director and CEO, Aakash Educational Services Limited.
Candidates appearing for JEE Main West Bengal had a difficult time reaching their test centres on Tuesday morning owing to heavy rain and lack of transport. The government had asked all state transport utilities to commence bus services from 5 am in view of the exam, but several candidates in North 24 Parganas, Berhampur, Malda and Siliguri claimed that they had to wait for hours, braving downpour, to get a bus to reach their test centres.
The level of difficultly was easy as compared to the January session of JEE Main. Paper-2 as per feedback from students was easy. In the mathematics section had lengthy numerical based questions as compared to the January session of the same paper as questions involved more calculations, claim students. All chapters covered in calculus and coordinate geometry.
Personal masks were not allowed. Every student was given a fresh surgical mask at entry. Every student was made to go through a sanitizing station were they had to sanitize themselves through a foot press lever. Students reported that entry was stopped after 8:30 am. Students were not allowed to carry anything inside the examination hall except a pencil box for drawing, admit card and aadhar card. Transparent water Bottles were allowed.
In its letter, Bawankar highlighted the problems being faced by students appearing for JEE-Main examination and residing in flood-hit areas of Nagpur, Amravati, Akola, Chandrapur, Gondiaand Gadchiroli districts, as reported by PTI. Due to floods, students from these areas will find it difficult to appear for the JEE-Main examination, he said. A division bench of Justices R K Deshpande and Pushpa Ganediwala asked the respondents, the Maharashtra government, the Centre and the National Testing Agency, to consider postponing the examination for students residing in flood-affected areas.
"The situation is grim in several districts due to flood. Students should not suffer for no fault on their part," the bench said. The court said any aggrieved student can file an application to the NTA via their centre coordinator. "The National Testing Agency shall then decide on the application after consulting with the district collector concerned within a period of 15 days, the court ordered read as reported by the PTI. Earlier, the high court on Monday took cognisance of a letter written to it by Nitesh Bawankar, a resident of Bhandara district, raising concern over how students will reach the exam centres to appear for the JEE amid the flood situation.
The test will be held in two shifts, of three hours each, every day till September 6. The first shift exam is being conducted and will conclude at 12.30 pm. The second shift will start at 3 pm instead of 2 pm as sanitization drive will be held in the meantime at exam halls, as per the NTA. At the entry of the registration room their body temperature is recorded through the thermal gun. After due verification, invigilator checks seat allocation chart and direct them to their examination room as per roll number.