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Do IITians lose their jobs?

Do IITians lose their jobs?

Yes it is true, 15–20\%(or even more) do not get job during campus placement. There will be always some students who doesn’t fit in the crowd. It is mainly due to low CPI, poor communication and management skills. Some people really do not have interest in engineering but as they had cleared JEE so they are in race.

How many IITians go abroad?

Statistically, in every batch of IITians: around 20-30 percent go abroad, majorly to pursue higher studies and sometimes for a job. about 10 percent go for further studies (MBA/M. Tech) within the country.

Who is the richest IITian in India?

In terms of IIFL Wealth Hurun India Rich List 2021 – The Biggest Gainers by Wealth Gain, Jay Chaudhry created weatlth of 1,21,600 in the year.

How many students have dropped out of IITs in last 2 years?

New Delhi: Over 2,400 students have dropped out from the 23 Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) in the last two years, with over half of them belonging to the general category. These dropouts are both at the undergraduate and postgraduate level.

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Is there any caste issue in admission to IITs?

If students have strong background in Mathematics (irrespective of their mother tongue or medium in which they studied before joining IITs), there will be fewer dropouts. Caste shuld not be an issue. Respectable universities in rest of the world will not admit students based on caste.

Will IITs lose global respect if they lower standards?

IF THEY DO, THEY WILL LOSE RESPECT. IITs should not lower standards. There should be no reservation. IITs may lose global respect if standards are lowered. I graduated with B. Tech. from IIT Bombay. I survived (often topped some courses) and financed my global education everywhere due to strong skills in mathematics.

Is there caste-based oppression in IITs?

“The caste-based oppression in IITs is not direct but systematic,” Anoop Kumar, a documentary filmmaker, told ThePrint. “Most of the students who come to IITs under the reserved category are from non-English medium backgrounds and institutions do not make sure that the transition happens.