<div>Several students who appeared for the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) Advanced on Sunday found Physics and Mathematic papers not too tough, while the Chemistry paper was easy. <br /><br />Nidhi Kumar, a student of Bangalore International Academy, Jayanagar, said Chemistry was easier than Physics and Mathematics. Echoing similar opinion, Sanjana Sathya, another student, said, “Mathematics was quite difficult and lengthy, while Physics was a bit okay.” Similarly, Shridhar Ginimav from Hubballi said there was sufficient time to attempt all questions and the papers were not very tough. <br /><br />L S Nikitha, a student from the city, too felt the paper was moderate. “I had gone through the hand book for formulae and had solved previous year question papers. The paper pattern was the same. There were no tricky questions,” she said.<br /><br />Dr Sridhar G, MD of Ace Creative Learning, said, “Paper 1 was moderate. Physics was moderately easy as the previous year with 6 easy, 10 moderate and 2 difficult questions. Chemistry was moderate with a marginal increase in the standard when compared to the last year with 8 easy, 7 moderate and 3 difficult questions. The Maths paper was difficult as last year with 5 easy, 8 moderate and 5 difficult questions, respectively,” he said. <br /><br />Sridhar feels that an average student can score between 70 and 80, whereas a well-prepared student can score 130-140 out of 186. Overall, the paper was of good standard and will put students to test,” he said. <br /><br />Most parents were anxiously waiting outside the examination centres in the City. There was a gap of two hours for candidates before they wrote Paper II of the JEE (Advanced). <br /><br />Prasanna Kumar of JP Nagar, who was among them, said that his daughter studied a minimum of four hours in the last two years for the JEE exam. Those attend coaching classes spend at least Rs 1 lakh a year as fees. <br /><br /></div>
<div>Several students who appeared for the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) Advanced on Sunday found Physics and Mathematic papers not too tough, while the Chemistry paper was easy. <br /><br />Nidhi Kumar, a student of Bangalore International Academy, Jayanagar, said Chemistry was easier than Physics and Mathematics. Echoing similar opinion, Sanjana Sathya, another student, said, “Mathematics was quite difficult and lengthy, while Physics was a bit okay.” Similarly, Shridhar Ginimav from Hubballi said there was sufficient time to attempt all questions and the papers were not very tough. <br /><br />L S Nikitha, a student from the city, too felt the paper was moderate. “I had gone through the hand book for formulae and had solved previous year question papers. The paper pattern was the same. There were no tricky questions,” she said.<br /><br />Dr Sridhar G, MD of Ace Creative Learning, said, “Paper 1 was moderate. Physics was moderately easy as the previous year with 6 easy, 10 moderate and 2 difficult questions. Chemistry was moderate with a marginal increase in the standard when compared to the last year with 8 easy, 7 moderate and 3 difficult questions. The Maths paper was difficult as last year with 5 easy, 8 moderate and 5 difficult questions, respectively,” he said. <br /><br />Sridhar feels that an average student can score between 70 and 80, whereas a well-prepared student can score 130-140 out of 186. Overall, the paper was of good standard and will put students to test,” he said. <br /><br />Most parents were anxiously waiting outside the examination centres in the City. There was a gap of two hours for candidates before they wrote Paper II of the JEE (Advanced). <br /><br />Prasanna Kumar of JP Nagar, who was among them, said that his daughter studied a minimum of four hours in the last two years for the JEE exam. Those attend coaching classes spend at least Rs 1 lakh a year as fees. <br /><br /></div>