Shivani Engineering College is a technical institution providing ME computer science and engineering course to the graduate student aof the same discipline. The students will have to give the entrance exam and based on their merit, they will be selected.
I got admission to the college on the basis of rank secured in JEE (Joint Entrance Examination) exam . The cutoff for my college is not very high . In my time I got around 95 marks in JEE which is not very good but I got admission to this college . You can also get admission to this college on the basis of rank secured in TNEA exam .
The college offers admission to the students on the basis of marks obtained in JEE (Joint Entrance Examination) and TNEA (Tamil Nadu Engineering Admissions) . I got admission to the college on the basis of marks obtained in JEE exam. I scored around 106 and was offered the admission pretty smoothly.
The college does not take admission of students on the basis of any exam conducted by them or requires any minimum percentage. You only need to be a graduate with B.E. or B. Tech.
The college is based in Chennai so the admission in this college is via an entrance exam named TNAE which is for colleges present in Chennai or widely in Tamil Nadu. The exam is not really hard to score good marks.
The college is decent and can be studied in. The campus is nice and placed at a good location. There are good transport facilities and the faculty is satisfactory too. The col;ege life is fun and placement is done well.
The college helps in inculcating entrepreneurship values in the students so that they become big and successful in the future. They provide them with good and sufficient knowledge and techniques and train them well.
I got admission into this college through my JEE score. The college takes in students on the basis of their performance in the JEE MAIN entrance exam. I scored 79 in JEE and could manage to get admitted into this college.
This can feel like a lot of pressure.
"I think this is the part of the application process that students are sometimes most challenged by," says Niki Barron, associate director of admissions at Middlebury College in Vermont, "because they're looking at a blank piece of paper and they don't know where to get started."
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