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Radheshyam

Radheshyam Zanwar  |6744 Answers  |Ask -

MHT-CET, IIT-JEE, NEET-UG Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Radheshyam Zanwar is the founder of Zanwar Classes which prepares aspirants for competitive exams such as MHT-CET, IIT-JEE and NEET-UG.
Based in Aurangabad, Maharashtra, it provides coaching for Class 10 and Class 12 students as well.
Since the last 25 years, Radheshyam has been teaching mathematics to Class 11 and Class 12 students and coaching them for engineering and medical entrance examinations.
Radheshyam completed his civil engineering from the Government Engineering College in Aurangabad.... more
Asked by Anonymous - Jul 09, 2025Hindi
Career

My daughter got 95.53 percentile in mht cet and 259343 rank un jee mains. Is there any chances of getting CS ir IT branch or Computer specialisations in Cummins college, SPIT, Thakur College or any other top colleges. (SEBC Category)

Ans: Hello dear.
Your daughter has a chance to gain admission to Cummins and possibly to any of the colleges mentioned.

Good luck.
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Radheshyam
Asked on - Jul 09, 2025 | Answered on Jul 09, 2025
Please, list the colleges from best to better in mumbai.
Ans: Currently unavailable due to high volume of questions. Please contact us later for more details.
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Asked by Anonymous - Jun 25, 2025Hindi
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Sir, my daughter scored 91 percentile in MHT CET. Her boards marks are 65 percent. Does she have a decent chance in CS/IT in any good colleges in Pune, mumbai, nagpur or nashik? We dont have Maharashtra domicile and her jee rank was only around 3 lakhs. Please give an elaborate response..
Ans: With a 91 percentile in MHT CET and 65% in 12th boards without Maharashtra domicile, your daughter faces significant challenges for admission to Computer Science/Information Technology in good colleges in Maharashtra, but several options remain available through different quotas and private institutions. Maharashtra's engineering admission system reserves 65% of seats for state domicile students, while 15% are allocated under the All India quota, and 20% under institutional quota. The expected cutoffs for top government colleges like COEP Pune require 99.7-99.9 percentile for CSE and VJTI Mumbai needs 99.6-99.9 percentile for CSE, placing these options out of reach. Similarly, prestigious private colleges like PICT Pune (99.2-99.5 percentile for CSE), SPIT Mumbai (99.3-99.6 percentile), and DJ Sanghvi (98.97 percentile in 2023) are also highly competitive. However, MIT WPU Pune offers more accessible admission with CSE cutoffs at 97.0-98.5 percentile, making it a potential option. Private colleges like Vishwakarma Institute of Technology (VIT) Pune, Thakur College of Engineering, Bharati Vidyapeeth College, and PCET Mumbai have more flexible admission criteria through management quota or direct admission routes. VIT Pune offers 86.3% placement rates with highest packages reaching 51 LPA and median packages around 9.72 LPA, with top recruiters including Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and NVIDIA. Symbiosis Institute of Technology and DKTE Society's Textile and Engineering Institute in Kolhapur also provide strong placement records with 100% placement in specific branches and industry connections. For backup options beyond government colleges, reputed private institutions include MIT WPU Pune, VIT Pune, Thakur College Mumbai, PCET Mumbai, Bharati Vidyapeeth colleges, ABES Ghaziabad, Galgotias Greater Noida, and various other Maharashtra private colleges that accept students through institutional quotas or direct admission processes.

The recommendation is to target MIT WPU Pune for CSE through MHT CET counselling as your primary option, apply to VIT Pune, Thakur College, PCET, and Bharati Vidyapeeth through management quota or direct admission routes, and consider institutions like DKTE Kolhapur and Symbiosis Institute of Technology as strong backup options, while also exploring the 15% All India quota in government colleges and the 20% institutional quota in private colleges during the extended CAP rounds. All the BEST for the Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Asked by Anonymous - Dec 12, 2025Hindi
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Hello, I am currently in Class 12 and preparing for JEE. I have not yet completed even 50% of the syllabus properly, but I aim to score around '110' marks. Could you suggest an effective strategy to achieve this? I know the target is relatively low, but I have category reservation, so it should be sufficient.
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Tech Careers and Skill Development Expert - Answered on Dec 13, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Dec 12, 2025
Career
Dear Sir/Madam, I am currently a 1st year UG student studying engineering in Sairam Engineering College, But there the lack of exposure and strict academics feels so rigid and I don't like it that. It's like they don't gaf about skills but just wants us to memorize things and score a good CGPA, the only skill they want is you to memorize things and pass, there's even special class for students who don't perform well in academics and it is compulsory for them to attend or else the student and his/her parents needs to face authorities who lashes out. My question is when did engineering became something that requires good academics instead of actual learning and skill set. In sairam they provides us a coding platform in which we need to gain the required points for each semester which is ridiculous cuz most of the students here just look at the solution to code instead of actual debugging. I am passionate about engineering so I want to learn and experiment things instead of just memorizing, so I actually consider dropping out and I want to give jee a try and maybe viteee , srmjeee But i heard some people say SRM may provide exposure but not that good in placements. I may not be excellent at studies but my marks are decent. So gimme some insights about SRM and recommend me other colleges/universities which are good at exposure
Ans: First — your frustration is valid

What you are experiencing at Sairam is not engineering, it is rote-based credential production.

“When did engineering become memorizing instead of learning?”

Sadly, this shift happened decades ago in most Tier-3 private colleges in India.

About “coding platforms & points” – your observation is sharp

You are absolutely right:

Mandatory coding points → students copy solutions

Copying ≠ learning

Debugging & thinking are missing

This is pseudo-skill education — it looks modern but produces shallow engineers.

The fact that you noticed this in 1st year already puts you ahead of 80% students.

Should you DROP OUT and prepare for JEE / VITEEE / SRMJEEE?

Although VIT/SRM is better than Sairam Engineering College, but you may face the same problem. You will not face this type of problem only in some top IITs, but getting seat in those IITs will be difficult.
Instead of dropping immediately, consider:

???? Strategy:

Stay enrolled (degree security)

Reduce emotional investment in college rules

Use:

GitHub

Open-source projects

Hackathons

Internships (remote)

Hardware / software self-projects

This way:

College = formality

Learning = self-driven

Risk = minimal

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