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Amity Institute for Competitive Examinations - Overview of JEE Advanced & NEET 2025 Performance
Amity Institute for Competitive Examinations - Overview of JEE Advanced & NEET 2025 Performance

Hindustan Times

time6 hours ago

  • Business
  • Hindustan Times

Amity Institute for Competitive Examinations - Overview of JEE Advanced & NEET 2025 Performance

New Delhi, June 2025 — Celebrating a remarkable quarter-century in competitive exam coaching, Amity Institute for Competitive Examinations (AICE) has once again set new benchmarks this year. In an outstanding academic performance, the institute has not only achieved stellar results in both JEE Advanced 2025 and NEET 2025 but also reinforced its position as a coaching institute in Delhi NCR. With this year's triumphs, AICE underlines why it remains the coaching for JEE and NEET, rooted in expert faculty, structured training, and consistent excellence. The rage and rigour of the JEE Advanced are well-known—only the 2.5 lakh scorers from JEE Main qualify. This year, Amitians achieved a remarkable 71.9% success rate in JEE Advanced 2025. Put simply, 2 out of every 3 Amity students cracked JEE Advanced—proof of the institute's rigorous curriculum and high-impact training. Success in JEE isn't easy, but AICE students showcased their dedication and ability to compete at India's most daunting engineering entrance examination. As one student who cleared JEE Advanced put it: 'AICE's mentorship turned concepts into confidence. This result is the living proof.' AICE proudly announced an impressive 84.35% success rate in NEET 2025. This outstanding achievement is a testament to the dedication of their students and the focused, strategic guidance provided by their expert faculty. Adding to this achievement, AICE students delivered stellar performances on the national level: In individual subjects, their students also excelled: Further, AICE saw a surge in students scoring above the 99 percentile, placing them within the 1% of the nation: These results solidify AICE's reputation as the coaching institute for NEET in Delhi NCR and affirm their legacy in producing India's next generation of doctors. Founded in 2000, AICE was created to extend Amity's educational excellence into competitive exam coaching. Over the past 25 years, it has trained tens of thousands of students across diverse exams, including JEE Main & Advanced, NEET, CLAT, SAT, CUET, and various Olympiads. With its trademark excellence—structured curriculum, expert subject mentors, personalised doubt-clearing sessions, regular performance assessment, and counselling—it has become a go-to institute for NEET and IIT coaching. This year's dual victories reinforce AICE's enduring legacy. The institute's consistent coffee of results—from IIT aspirants to medical hopefuls and law-students in training—has built a trust that transcends regions and continues to draw ambitious candidates. Dr. (Mrs.) Amita Chauhan, Chairperson of Amity Group stated: 'Our 25th anniversary comes at a moment of proud achievement. The JEE and NEET results reflect the potential unleashed through AICE's disciplined training. Congratulations to all students, parents, and faculty.' Mrs. Meenakshi Rawal, Director of AICE, added: 'These results celebrate our student-centric methodology. Our success is their success, and every talented learner has been nurtured with care and precision. Excellence continues to define AICE.' AICE operates from 7 strategic locations, easily accessible even to new learners: These centres offer smart classrooms, AI-enabled teaching aids, dedicated mentorship, and weekly tests. AICE's growth plans reflect its confidence in replicating success in new regions. This year's milestone—71.4% JEE Advanced success and NEET's performance—is motivation for AICE's future. As it continues expanding, the institute remains committed to equity and accessibility, ensuring that deserving students in every region can access coaching. With 25 years of expertise and centres in prime locations, AICE remains a smart choice for aspirants: As AICE continues to celebrate 25 years of impact, its legacy becomes the starting point for thousands of future engineers, doctors, and law professionals. With each success, the institute's credibility grows—and expansion becomes its next horizon. For families searching for the coaching for JEE and NEET in Delhi NCR, AICE remains the nation's trusted partner. Note to readers: This article is part of HT's paid consumer connect initiative and is independently created by the brand. HT assumes no editorial responsibility for the content, including its accuracy, completeness, or any errors or omissions. Readers are advised to verify all information independently. Want to get your story featured as above? click here!

Sri Chaitanya felicitates top rankers of IIT-JEE, NEET
Sri Chaitanya felicitates top rankers of IIT-JEE, NEET

Hans India

time10 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Hans India

Sri Chaitanya felicitates top rankers of IIT-JEE, NEET

Hyderabad: On the occasion of Sri Chaitanya Educational Institutions once again securing All India No. 1 Ranks in national-level competitive examinations like IIT-JEE (Main & Advanced) and NEET 2025, the grand 'AIRAVAT Champions Celebrations' were conducted with pomp and enthusiasm on Thursday. The event was held at Shilpakala Vedika in the presence of a massive gathering of Sri Chaitanya toppers, students, and faculty members from across the country. 'AIRAVAT' served as a platform to honor academic excellence and to celebrate the achievements of meritorious students. World Chess Champion Gukesh D and actor Adivi Sesh graced the occasion as chief guests. Sri Chaitanya Directors Sridhar Yalamanchili, Sushma Boppana and Seema Boppana participated in the event as Guests of Honour and felicitated national-level toppers. Gukesh D said, 'Just like in chess, success in competitive exams like JEE & NEET requires strategic thinking, discipline and mental resilience. Through this association, I am committed to inspiring students not only in academics but also in developing lifelong skills for success.' Adivi Sesh said, 'My heartfelt congratulations to every Sri Chaitanya student who topped the IIT-JEE and NEET exams in 2025. Behind these extraordinary achievements lies a strong foundation of planning and dedication. Sri Chaitanya has truly emerged as a pioneering institution, consistently producing talented individuals for engineering and medical fields at national and international levels.'

NEET 2025: From Doubt To Dream, Jodhpur Boy Bags AIR 15 With 670 Marks
NEET 2025: From Doubt To Dream, Jodhpur Boy Bags AIR 15 With 670 Marks

News18

time21 hours ago

  • Health
  • News18

NEET 2025: From Doubt To Dream, Jodhpur Boy Bags AIR 15 With 670 Marks

Last Updated: Manvendra Singh from Jodhpur secured AIR 15 in NEET 2025 with 670/720 marks. Though disheartened after the tough exam, his hard work and discipline led to this big success Hard work and faith in oneself can turn even the toughest challenges into success stories. Manvendra Singh from Jodhpur, Rajasthan, has proven this by securing All India Rank 15 in the NEET exam with a score of 670 out of 720. His achievement has brought immense pride to his family. Manvendra dedicated six hours daily to coaching and spent the rest of his time studying, apart from six hours of sleep. His discipline and consistency led to this outstanding success. His dream is to become a neurosurgeon and serve people. Though not particularly interested in sports, Manvendra enjoys drawing and playing the flute, reflecting his creative side. The Paper Was Tough, But Faith Kept Him Going This year, the NEET paper set by NTA was considered difficult. Manvendra felt disheartened after the exam. However, his coaching mentors and family reassured him that a tougher paper meant a lower cut-off. Gradually, he regained confidence in his performance. Initially inclined towards Physics and Maths, Manvendra chose Biology to pursue his dream of becoming a doctor. He advises aspiring students to study Physics with genuine interest, as it can be a challenging yet rewarding subject. Manvendra scored 96.20% in his Class 12 exams. He encourages students to develop the habit of reading beyond the syllabus, not limiting themselves to just NCERT books. This, he says, strengthens overall preparation. Manvendra's mother, Manju Kanwar, is a homemaker, while his younger brother Navdeep is currently in Class 10. Manvendra's journey is a testimony to hard work, discipline, and the power of belief. First Published: June 18, 2025, 08:20 IST

When will disabled NEET aspirants get their SC-sanctioned rights?
When will disabled NEET aspirants get their SC-sanctioned rights?

Indian Express

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • Indian Express

When will disabled NEET aspirants get their SC-sanctioned rights?

Written by Satendra Singh A NEET aspirant with a disability has been messaging me continually since March. Her only question: 'When will the National Medical Commission (NMC) issue revised disability guidelines for MBBS and MD/MS, as per the Supreme Court's directions?' On 14 June 2025, the NEET-UG results were declared. Over 750 students with disabilities from diverse communities — General, OBC, SC, ST, and EWS — have qualified. However, their joy is short-lived. The silence of the NMC and the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) has left them paralysed by uncertainty. Which guidelines will apply? Have more disability assessment centres been designated? Which colleges can they safely choose? The promised web portal listing accessibility-compliant colleges — as ordered by the apex court — is still absent. This is not merely a bureaucratic delay. It seems to be a defiance of the Supreme Court's orders, a betrayal of India's constitutional promise of equality, and perhaps even contempt of court. In April 2022, the Delhi High Court in Neha Pudil vs NMC directed that the discriminatory disability guidelines be revised within six months. Two years later, that direction remains unimplemented. Then in October 2024, the Supreme Court in Omkar Ramchandra Gond vs UOI mandated the NMC to revise its guidelines before the NEET 2025 brochure was published and to establish an Appellate Medical Body. The brochure was released, but the guidelines and the body were not. In the same month, in another landmark judgment — Om Rathod vs DGHS — the apex court went further, ordering the establishment of enabling units for reasonable accommodations, accessibility compliance details on the NEET portal, functional support, including assistive technology, modified pedagogy, and trained staff. None of these directives has been followed. By November 2024, the situation was so dire that the Supreme Court had to summon the DGHS in Anmol vs UOI. Only after the embarrassment of public scrutiny did Anmol receive his rightful MBBS seat. Still, the DGHS has ignored directions to establish Disability Assessment Boards (DABs) in every state and to include doctors with disabilities in these boards, as well as provide them with training on disability justice and ableism. Following the SC's lead, the Punjab and Haryana High Court in January also ordered the formation of an Appellate Board. The NMC ignored that, too. In February 2025, the apex court finally struck down the infamous 'both hands intact' clause as ableist and left scope for further compliance review. But in March, the Suyash Patil case exposed the NMC's indifference again: the student lost an entire academic year due to a clerical lapse in DAB records. The NMC's solution? Accommodate next year. Even when the NMC did form a committee, it stuffed it with the same architects of the old discriminatory policy. Tokenism ruled: just one doctor with a disability, from an institution outside the NMC's purview, with no undergraduate programme. Expectedly, this committee missed its 15 April deadline to publish the revised guidelines. Then came May, and the Kabir Paharia case. The Supreme Court gave relief only one day before NEET 2025. Another student was rescued. Another year lost. Another trauma inflicted. As of today, both the NMC and DGHS have violated their affidavit in the Anmol matter, which had promised to release guidelines by 15 April 2025. NEET 2025 results are out. But disabled aspirants are frozen in limbo, deprived of the ability to plan or hope. Worse, the very committee revising the guidelines includes no medical student with a disability. This is a violation not just of principles of participatory justice, but also of international norms. The World Federation for Medical Education — to which NMC is affiliated — mandates in its Basic Medical Standards (2020) under Clauses 4 and 8 that students must be involved in governance. What we are witnessing is institutionalised impunity. The NMC and DGHS have now routinely defied not just one, but multiple High Court and Supreme Court directives. Why then has no contempt proceeding been initiated? Justice delayed is not only justice denied — it becomes injustice institutionalised. Every day of inaction from the NMC and DGHS is a day of stolen dreams, heightened anxiety, and unconstitutional discrimination against India's most marginalised NEET qualifiers. It is now imperative that the Supreme Court's vacation bench takes suo motu cognisance of this deliberate, systemic, and continuing contempt — and that real accountability, not symbolic compliance, is finally enforced. The writer teaches at the University College of Medical Sciences, Delhi, and is a disability rights activist. Views are personal

‘Solving old JEE Advanced papers helped in preparation for NEET'
‘Solving old JEE Advanced papers helped in preparation for NEET'

The Hindu

time3 days ago

  • Science
  • The Hindu

‘Solving old JEE Advanced papers helped in preparation for NEET'

Solving the old JEE Advanced papers and attending mock tests conducted by the college greatly helped in preparing for NEET, said Expert PU College students Nikhil Sonnad and K.G. Nidhi, who secured All India Ranking (AIR) of 17 and 84, respectively, in NEET 2025. Talking to reporters here, Ms. Nidhi, a native of Kodagu, said: 'I regularly interacted with my teachers and got my doubts clarified. I also interacted with my juniors, and it helped me revise the first-year PU portion.' Mr. Sonnad said he concentrated on basic concepts in Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics and Biology. 'We solved many old JEE Advanced question papers,' he said. Shreyas M. Mahalingappa, with an AIR of 214, set a target to solve the maximum number of questions within a given time, which helped him perform well in NEET. Subramanya Udupa, the academic vice-principal of the college, said that they had students solve a large number of mock papers with a high level of difficulty. 'The scores that our students made are close to what they got in the mock tests,' said the chairman of the Expert Group of Institutions, Narendra L. Nayak. Ten students from the college scored ranks in the top 500, while 15 students scored in the top 1,000 and 24 students scored in the top 2,000. Seven students scored more than 625 marks, 19 students scored above 600, and 57 scored above 575 marks. In total, 233 students scored more than 500 marks. Almost all students who wrote NEET were qualified for admission to the MBBS course, he said. Of students who took NEET long-term coaching from the college, nine scored more than 525 marks, 18 scored above 500 and 54 scored above 450 marks, Mr. Nayak said.

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