Ludhiana: The Joint Entrance Exam (JEE) Main- 1 was recently conducted in morning and evening shifts at Guru Teg Bahadur Institute of Management and Technology here by National Testing Agency.
As per expert analysis, physics and chemistry sections were of easy to moderate level, while maths had tricky questions and could be considered to be moderate to difficult.
A student of Ryan International School, Chandigarh Road, said, “Physics was easy to moderate in paper 1 but tough in paper 2. Chemistry was moderate in both while maths was relatively difficult and tricky.”
Gurman Singh from Green Land said, “The maths paper was lengthy and difficult.”
Around 2,400 out of approximately 3,000 registered candidates took the exam. tnn
We also published the following articles recently
As per expert analysis, physics and chemistry sections were of easy to moderate level, while maths had tricky questions and could be considered to be moderate to difficult.
A student of Ryan International School, Chandigarh Road, said, “Physics was easy to moderate in paper 1 but tough in paper 2. Chemistry was moderate in both while maths was relatively difficult and tricky.”
Gurman Singh from Green Land said, “The maths paper was lengthy and difficult.”
Around 2,400 out of approximately 3,000 registered candidates took the exam. tnn
We also published the following articles recently
JEE (Main) 2024 Paper-I Analysis: Overall moderately difficult
The National Testing Agency (NTA) is overseeing the JEE Main 2024, an examination for engineering aspirants. The exam took place on January 29 in two shifts. The paper had three parts: Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics, each with multiple sections. Students reported that the paper covered chapters from Class XI and XII, with more weightage given to Class XII in Physics.
The National Testing Agency (NTA) is overseeing the JEE Main 2024, an examination for engineering aspirants. The exam took place on January 29 in two shifts. The paper had three parts: Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics, each with multiple sections. Students reported that the paper covered chapters from Class XI and XII, with more weightage given to Class XII in Physics.
‘Physics paper this year likely to have more competency based questions’
Physics teachers advise class 12 students to understand the CBSE assessment scheme, practice derivations, solve MCQs from NCERT exemplar books, convert physical quantities to SI-units, pay attention to ray and circuit diagrams, explain the meaning of symbols in formulas. Topper’s answer sheets are available on the CBSE website.
Physics teachers advise class 12 students to understand the CBSE assessment scheme, practice derivations, solve MCQs from NCERT exemplar books, convert physical quantities to SI-units, pay attention to ray and circuit diagrams, explain the meaning of symbols in formulas. Topper’s answer sheets are available on the CBSE website.