logo
Nagaland Board Results 2025 date: NBSE HSLC, HSSLC scores releasing on April 25, websites to check here

Nagaland Board Results 2025 date: NBSE HSLC, HSSLC scores releasing on April 25, websites to check here

Hindustan Times23-04-2025

The Nagaland Board of Secondary Education, NBSE, will be releasing the results of HSLC or Class 10 and HSSLC or Class 12 board examinations on April 25, 2025. As per the board, the results will be released by afternoon.
Students who appeared in the board examinations will be able to check their marksheets from the official website at nbsenl.edu.in.
Also read: AP SSC Results 2025: Where and how to apply for supplementary exams, re-counting; check details
As per the board, the provision to download the marks/marksheet will also be available in the NBSE portal.
Worth mentioning here, the board has not mentioned any specific time for the announcement of result.
Also read: Last Chance to Apply: Registration process for 'SBI Youth for India Fellowship 2025' closes soon
This year, the Nagaland board Class 10 examinations were conducted from February 12 to February 24, 2025. Whereas the Class 12 board exams were held from February 11 to March 7, 2025.
The board said it will issue the documents to the Centre Superintendents only from May 2 to 6, 2025. The Centre Superintendents will collect and distribute the documents to schools under his/her centre. In case, a Centre Superintendent cannot come, he/she can authorize another Centre Superintendent who is coming to collect the documents on his/her behalf, the board said.
Also read: JEE Advanced 2025: Registration begins at jeeadv.nic.in, direct link to apply for IIT JEE here
Students can follow the steps mentioned below to check the results when out:
For more related details, students are advised to visit the official website.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kota's forgotten students: What happens when you don't crack JEE Advanced
Kota's forgotten students: What happens when you don't crack JEE Advanced

The Hindu

time6 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Kota's forgotten students: What happens when you don't crack JEE Advanced

The coaching centres of Rajasthan's Kota, often dubbed India's coaching capital, claimed four of the top ten ranks in the JEE Advanced results announced last week. As photos of the toppers flood city banners and the media celebrates them with interviews, a large section of city's students — those who didn't make it through the country's toughest engineering entrance exam — are left crestfallen, confused and conflicted. The Hindu spoke to three generations of Kota students who couldn't realise the IIT dream, to understand how life unfolded for them beyond the JEE ranks. For K. Seema, who gave up her passion for writing short stories to devote herself entirely to the exam this year, it was a rude shock to find she missed the cut-off by two marks. A native of Jaipur, she lived in a hostel affiliated with her coaching centre in Kota. Her performance at the weekly tests were so good that she started dreaming of a settled life in half a decade. 'It was the only way out for our family to escape poverty. My parents are blue-collared workers, and as a family, we firmly believed that an IIT seat and a good job would help us move up the economic ladder,' she said. There are options — going to IIIT, MIT or even taking a gap year, often called the '13th batch' in Kota dictionary. But confused and derailed by the near miss, students like Seema slip into a state of despair. Seema has not been answering the calls from her friends and relatives and is currently uncertain about her future. 'Should I try again this year for a rank or settle for a private engineering college in Jaipur? What if I don't get it next year? I would have wasted lakhs of money for my family, who saved it by sacrificing their basic needs,' she said. On average, 15–20% of JEE–Advanced qualifiers in recent years have reportedly trained in Kota. Though many who don't make it fall into despair and take years to recover, some do see the positives in the intense training and dedication they learned here. If present trends are any indication, however, Kota culture may have run its course. According to industry experts, student enrolment in Kota fell sharply in 2024, with numbers ranging between 85,000 and 1 lakh. This marked a significant decline from the usual annual intake of 2 to 2.5 lakh students in previous years. The reason is largely attributed to the charged ecosystem and what it does to students, especially ones who don't make the cut in JEE Advanced and Mains. Beyond the IIT dream In Kota, for every student who cracks the JEE, there are dozens who don't. Behind the banners of toppers and celebration lies a quieter, heavier reality—of far more students grappling with disappointment than with success. In a city obsessed with ranks, the struggles of those who didn't make it remain unheard and unseen. Alumni of these coaching centres who didn't crack the exam know there's a world beyond the IIT dream. Having internalised discipline and grit during their time in Kota, many have upskilled through college and work and some have gone on to outshine even the IITians. Nishant Soni stayed away from playing keyboard for two years when he was studying for more than ten hours a day to crack the JEE exam in 2012. 'I joined the coaching centre in 2010 with a dream of becoming an IITian as my father is a professor in Physics. I have been exposed to an educational upbringing and I wanted to honour him,' Nishant said. When he got a rank of 1.2 lakh, he was so demotivated that he did not want to talk to anyone. He received no support from the coaching centre and the professors, as they were busy celebrating the toppers. 'They are focussed on their marketing with successful students. Coaching centres do not bat an eye to the students who do not make it,' Nishant added. These coaching centres, however, helped Nishant build discipline and understand the true value of hard work; he is now working as a Senior DevOps Engineer and consultant in a Canadian multinational company named Telus. 'I reconciled to the idea that it is not my potential to get into an IIT. Everyone is not meant to crack IIT,' he said, adding, 'Cracking IIT is not the only way to become successful. Though mediocre in my academics throughout my life , I am earning almost equal to what IITians are earning today. So the whole point is to become successful in life and not just successful in cracking an exam.' In reality, many of these students succeed. 'Many students who didn't crack the exams come back after a few years having found meaningful careers in completely different fields – film, entrepreneurship, teaching, design, public service and more. They talk about how stepping away from the rigid coaching system helped them rediscover their real interests. But unfortunately, these stories are rarely highlighted because they don't fit the conventional definition of success,' Dr Ghasi Ram Choudhary, former Head of the Political Science Department at Government College, University of Rajasthan, said. The blame game Rahul Sharma, another Kota product who gave the exam twice, 25 years ago, says that the coaching centres always project the JEE as a do or die situation. 'In the second attempt, I secured 4,600th rank. But, at that time, there were only 3,000 positions and I did not make it to IIT,' Rahul Sharma, who has launched a tech startup, said. A native of Kota, he was under the pressure from his childhood to bag the rank. His days would start with going to the school and end with finishing the assignments given by the coaching centres. 'For more than 12 hours a day, we would study. Even CBSE schools in Kota were not strict; they used to allow us to go to coaching centres from the afternoon. Basically, students would choose such schools,' Rahul said. When he found out he did not make it even in the second attempt, Rahul Sharma was heartbroken. 'You feel the sting when toppers are celebrated. I have put in all my efforts and no one appreciated it,' Rahul said. Empathy from coaching centres A scientific paper titled EPH270 Kota: The Emerging Suicide City of India said that the culture of competition has been generating excessive stress and anxiety among students, proving detrimental to their mental health. 'Recent statistics reveal that the suicide rate among coaching students is on rise with 32 suicides officially recorded in 2023 and 17 suicides officially recorded in Kota till May 2024,' the paper said, adding that the coaching institutes are developing effective counseling module/intervention strategy for students to overcome stress and stop resorting to suicide. Institutes such as Allen Career Institute, Resonance, and Motion have collaborated with platforms like YourDOST to provide counseling to students. 'After the Rajasthan government issued guidelines a year and a half ago, most centres appointed therapists—something that was earlier handled by teachers. There is one therapist for every 500–600 students in our institute. We also offer regular motivational sessions to support students, and every teacher acts as a mentor for a batch of about forty students, who can reach out to her to share any of their problems,' said a faculty member from a reputed coaching centre, seeking anonymity. Then, why are students still dying by suicide? In May 2025, the Supreme Court sharply reprimanded the Rajasthan government and Kota police, asking, 'Why are these children dying by suicide, and only in Kota?' — describing the situation as 'serious' and demanding accountability for the rising student deaths. Coaching centres attribute the suicides to constant pressure from families, peers, and society. 'Most of the pressure comes from parents, and it's very negative. Many of them come from humble backgrounds. In the advanced batch, which is segregated with the cream of intelligent students, 90 percent make it to IIT. However, in the bottom-tier batches, none of them do. Yet they come here and spend two years only to succumb to parental pressure,' the faculty member added. However, such measures in Kota are too little, too late. In most of the centres, teachers are hired and trained for their academic knowledge, not for their ability to offer emotional support or career advice. 'Students are not encouraged to talk about failure or alternatives beyond engineering and medicine. These conversations are either avoided or treated as distractions. There's a pressing need to train educators to engage with students more holistically,' says Dr Ghasi Ram Choudhary. Nishant, however, gives the parting shot. He says though he didn't go to an IIT, his startup employs IITians.

Joint Seat Allocation Authority Mock Seat Allotment Released, Check Here
Joint Seat Allocation Authority Mock Seat Allotment Released, Check Here

NDTV

time7 hours ago

  • NDTV

Joint Seat Allocation Authority Mock Seat Allotment Released, Check Here

JoSAA Mock Seat Allotment 2025: The Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA) released the first mock seat allotment for JoSAA Counselling 2025 today, June 9, 2025. Candidates who filled in the choices can check the seat allocation on the official website, Candidates were allotted seats based on their JEE Mains or JEE Advanced scores. The JoSAA mock seat allotment helps students understand what seat they could get allotted based on the choices filled by them. This helps student rearrange/edit/delete/add the choices for seat allocation process. JoSAA Mock Seat Allotment 2025: How To Download JoSAA Mock Seat Allotment ? Visit the official website, Under the candidate activity board, click on "View-Mock Seat Allocation-1 based on the choices filled-in by the candidates". You will be redirected to a new page. Enter your login credentials of application number and password. Click on "Login" button. The mock seat allocation list will be downloaded. Save it for future reference. Candidates can refill (if they wish to) their choices for the seat allocation and accordingly, the JoSAA will prepare the mock seat allotment-2 and release it on June 11, 2025 at 12:30 PM, as per the official schedule shared by the JoSAA. The last date to fill choices for academic programs under JoSAA is June 12, 2025 (5 PM). The official seat allocation list for round 1 is scheduled to be released on June 14, 2025.

JoSAA mock seat allotment result 2025 for round 1 released at josaa.nic.in: Check direct link to download here
JoSAA mock seat allotment result 2025 for round 1 released at josaa.nic.in: Check direct link to download here

Time of India

time10 hours ago

  • Time of India

JoSAA mock seat allotment result 2025 for round 1 released at josaa.nic.in: Check direct link to download here

The Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA) has released the Mock Seat Allotment Result 2025 for Round 1 on its official website, This mock allotment provides candidates with a tentative idea of the seats they might be allotted in premier institutes such as IITs, NITs, IIITs, and GFTIs based on their current choices and JEE ranks. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now It allows aspirants to review their preferences and make any necessary changes before the final seat allocation process begins. The mock result is purely indicative and helps students make informed decisions ahead of the actual Round 1 allotment scheduled for June 14. Candidates are advised to log in, check their allotment status, and revise their choices before the final locking deadline on June 12, 2025. How to check JoSAA mock seat allotment ? The mock seat allotment result for JoSAA counselling round 1 is now available to check on the official website. Here is how candidates can access the mock results: Visit the official portal: Click on Mock Seat Allocation‑1 Result Log in using your JEE Main or JEE Advanced credentials View and download the PDF/allotment letter Print a hard copy for reference JoSAA counselling calendar ahead Candidates participating in JoSAA counselling 2025 may check the upcoming important dates as per the schedule below: Event Date and Time Mock Seat Allotment 1 June 9, 2025, 2 PM Mock Seat Allotment 2 June 11, 2025, 12:30 PM Deadline for Choice Filling June 12, 2025, by 5 PM Data Reconciliation & Validation June 13, 2025 Round 1 Seat Allotment June 14, 2025 at 10 AM Round 1 Online Reporting & Fee June 14 to 18, 2025 Round 2 Seat Allotment June 21, 2025, 5 PM Round 2 Online Reporting & Fee June 21 to 25, 2025 Round 3 Seat Allotment June 28, 2025, 5 PM Round 3 Online Reporting & Fee June 28 to July 2, 2025 Round 4 Seat Allotment July 4, 2025, 5 PM Round 4 Online Reporting & Fee July 4 to 8, 2025 Round 5 Seat Allotment July 10, 2025, 5 PM Round 5 Online Reporting & Fee July 10 to 14, 2025 Round 6 Seat Allotment July 16, 2025, 5 PM Round 6 Online Reporting & Fee July 16 to 21, 2025 What's next? After checking their JoSAA mock seat allotment results for round 1, students are advised to go through the following steps: Evaluate your allotment. The result is provisional and can be modified. Revise your choices, if needed, before the June 12 deadline. Keep track of mock allotment 2 (June 11) and final Round 1 seat allotment (June 14). For more details about JoSAA counselling 2025, candidates are advised to visit .

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store