
JEE Advanced 2025: Doctors' Son Saksham Jindal Secures AIR 2, Shares Preparation Strategy
Last Updated:
JEE Advanced 2025 Result: After the JEE Main results, AIR 2 Saksham Jindal aims to study B.Tech in Computer Science at IIT Bombay.
The results for JEE Advanced 2025 have been announced. Along with the results, IIT Kanpur has published the topper list and cutoff scores. In this year's exam, Saksham Jindal from Hisar, Haryana, achieved the second rank with a score of 332 marks out of a total of 360.
Previously, Saksham also secured the All India 10th rank in JEE Main 2025, by achieving a perfect 100 percentile. He secured 295 out of 300 marks.
Both of Saksham's parents are doctors, but he chose to pursue a career in engineering. For the past two years, he prepared for the JEE Main and Advanced while residing in Kota. His father, Dr. Umesh Jindal, is a pathologist, and his mother, Anita Jindal, is also a doctor. 'Although my father is a pathologist in Hisar and my mother too had studied medicine, it is my passion for Maths that led me towards engineering," he had told News18 earlier.
A lover of mathematics, upon topping JEE Main, Saksham shared that he focused on understanding each chapter thoroughly. He regularly practiced questions and took weekly tests. By consistently resolving his doubts, he strengthened his grasp on each topic.
'We are usually preparing for JEE Advanced but two months earlier, we shifted our focus towards JEE Main. We increased the focus towards NCERT for the Mains exam. We also took a lot of practise tests from previous question papers to maintain the flow," Saksham told News18 after his JEE Main results.
After the JEE Main results, Saksham aims to study B.Tech in Computer Science at IIT Bombay. His father mentioned that Saksham had always been determined to become an engineer. After completing his class 10 from OP Jindal School in Hisar in 2023 with 98 per cent, Saksham moved to Kota.
First Published:
June 02, 2025, 14:44 IST
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
7 hours ago
- Time of India
Following last year's trend, JEE topper leaves IIT to join MIT, citing better opportunities overseas
Devesh Bhaiya, who secured All India Rank 8 in JEE Advanced 2025 , has chosen to study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the United States instead of joining any of the Indian Institutes of Technology. Devesh is following a growing trend among India's top engineering talent opting for international universities, especially MIT , a TOI report stated. Not the first to make the shift Last year's JEE Advanced topper , Ved Lahoti, who scored 352 out of 360 — the highest in recent years — is also leaving IIT Bombay after one year to join MIT on a fully funded scholarship. In earlier years, students like Chirag Falor (JEE 2020) and Chitraang Murdia (JEE 2014) made similar decisions. Murdia spent a year at IIT Bombay before moving to MIT and later completed his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley. "It seems like MIT trusts the rigour of JEE Advanced and the promise of our Olympiad stars," said Prof Vijay Singh, former professor at IIT Kanpur and retired faculty at the Homi Bhabha Centre for Science Education. Olympiad medals open global doors Devesh Bhaiya has an academic record beyond the JEE rank. He has won three gold medals — two at the International Junior Science Olympiad (2021, 2022) and one at the International Chemistry Olympiad in 2024. He also received the Bal Shakti Puraskar in 2020. At the age of 12, he authored a paper on light pollution. Though Devesh had already secured admission to MIT in March 2025, he still took the JEE Advanced exam as a backup option. Live Events You Might Also Like: JEE Advanced 2025 Results and Toppers List: Rajit Gupta from IIT Delhi zone tops the exam; Check names of toppers here A growing list of students transferring Ved Lahoti said, 'I'm fully satisfied with IIT Bombay. But it lags in research. Globally, it's not even in the top 100. So, I applied to MIT — and when it came through, I took it. A lot of students have taken transfer to MIT and when I asked them, they said the transfer was truly worth it.' Several other top rankers have taken the same route. Nishank Abhangi spent a year at IIT Bombay in 2019–2020 before moving to MIT. Mahit Gadhewala, who secured All India Rank 9 in 2022, also transferred after one year at IIT Bombay. According to Prof Singh, the first student to set this trend was Raghu Mahajan. He studied at IIT Delhi for a year, moved to MIT, completed his PhD at Stanford, and is currently spending a year at the International Centre for Theoretical Sciences in Bengaluru. "He was very committed to coming back to India," said Prof Singh. Ved Lahoti expressed a similar sentiment: "I have no plans to settle in the USA." You Might Also Like: Kota's Rajit Gupta, first JEE topper from the IIT coaching hub, shares secret success mantra learned from his mom (The article was originally published in TOI)


Time of India
19 hours ago
- Time of India
JEE rankers choose MIT over IIT for research, global options
Mumbai: Devesh Bhaiya, All India Rank 8 this year in the fiercely contested JEE Advanced, has decided to turn his back on India's elite engineering institutions and head for MIT instead. He won't be alone. Ved Lahoti, last year's Rank 1 and the candidate who has scored the highest in the entrance exam (352/360) in recent history, is also wrapping up his Powai chapter in exchange for a fully funded scholarship at MIT. There's a murmur of a trend here. In 2020, it was Chirag Falor who chose MIT over IIT. Before that, it was Chitraang Murdia, who spent a year at IIT Bombay before transferring to MIT. He now holds a PhD from Berkeley. "It seems like MIT trusts the rigour of JEE Advanced and the promise of our Olympiad stars," said Prof Vijay Singh, once at IIT Kanpur, who later superannuated from the Homi Bhabha Centre for Science Education. Jalgaon's Devesh has a record that goes far beyond the JEE rank: three gold medals, two from International Junior Science Olympiads in 2021 and 2022, and one from the International Chemistry Olympiad in 2024. In 2020, he was awarded the Bal Shakti Puraskar. At 12, when most children were still tracing constellations in the sky, Devesh was mapping their vanishing — authoring a paper on light pollution. He received admission to MIT in March but sat for JEE Advanced anyway — a "back-up," he calls it. Devesh is not alone. But the others chose to stay for a year, to feel the pulse on Indian campuses, before going overseas. They too were accepted by American universities, whose doors — as Professor Vijay Singh notes — open wide for those with Olympiad medals and high JEE scores. The students' reasons for the switch are apparent. "I'm fully satisfied with IIT Bombay. But it lags in research. Globally, it's not even in the top 100. So, I applied to MIT — and when it came through, I took it. A lot of students have taken transfer to MIT and when I asked them, they said the transfer was truly worth it," said Lahoti. Nishank Abhangi, who spent 2019–2020 immersed in IIT Bombay's rigour before packing for MIT, and Mahit Gadhewala, All India Rank 9 in 2022, who also left after a year at IITB, are the other examples. Prof Singh said the first such student to do so was Raghu Mahajan, who spent a year at IIT Delhi, then took off to MIT, completed his PhD at Stanford, and is currently spending a year at the International Centre for Theoretical Sciences, Bengaluru. "He was very committed to coming back to India," recalled Prof Singh. Lahoti too shares the same feelings. "I have no plans to settle in the USA."


India Today
a day ago
- India Today
Chase excellence, not rank: JEE Advanced topper with AIR 2 Saksham Jindal
Getting a top rank in JEE Advanced isn't easy. It takes steady effort, clear understanding, and staying motivated through ups and downs. Many students begin with a simple goal—to study well and do their best. But sometimes, with the right support and hard work, that goal turns into something what happened with Saksham Jindal. At first, he just wanted to give his best. But when he started scoring high in weekly tests at ALLEN and got 100 percentile in the JEE Main January session, he felt more confident. After getting AIR 10 in the April session of JEE Main, he started to believe that a top rank in JEE Advanced was truly Gupta tops with 332/360, from IIT Delhi zoneA HUMBLE START, THEN REALISATION OF A BIGGER DREAM When Saksham Jindal began his JEE preparation, his only aim was to give it his best shot. But things changed quickly as he started topping weekly tests at ALLEN and later secured a perfect 100 percentiles in the JEE Main January session.'The real turning point was after JEE Main April, when I got AIR 10. That's when I knew a top rank in JEE Advanced was possible,' he SETBACK, AND HOW HE BOUNCED BACKSaksham was a district-level cricketer before the pandemic struck. With outdoor sports coming to a halt, he had to let go of his sporting dreams.'It was emotionally tough, but I channelled that energy into my studies,' he during JEE prep, he had his low moments. 'When my scores dropped or I felt burnt out, my mentors at ALLEN stood by me. Their belief in me kept me going.'FUEL BEHIND HIS MOTIVATIONWhat kept him steady through the highs and lows? A mix of love for learning, supportive parenting, and the right peer environment.'I've always loved Mathematics and dreamed of IIT Bombay. My parents gave me freedom and never pressured me. The healthy competition in Kota also pushed me every day.'FINDING BALANCE IN THE PRESSURE COOKERDespite the pressure of JEE prep, Saksham maintained a balance.'I believe consistency is more important than long hours. I made time to listen to music, talk to friends, and sleep well. When stressed, I stepped away from books instead of forcing it,' he structure of tests and doubt sessions also helped reduce WHO MADE THE DIFFERENCESaksham credits a big part of his success to the support at ALLEN.'The regular tests, study material, and doubt sessions were excellent—but what mattered most was how my teachers believed in me, even when I didn't,' he DREAMS AT IIT BOMBAYSaksham plans to join IIT Bombay for Computer Science, drawn by its vibrant tech and startup fascinated by AI and hope to build something impactful. I'm also open to research if I find the right area,' he shares.-----'Don't just chase the rank—chase excellence,' Saksham advises.'Bad days will happen, but don't let them define you. Stay connected with family and mentors—they're your biggest strength. Fall in love with learning, and results will follow.'