Applying for JoSAA Counselling 2024? Know restrictions in academic programmes at IITs
Vagisha Kaushik | June 11, 2024 | 06:29 PM IST | 1 min read
JoSAA 2024 registration, choice-filling has started at josaa.nic.in. The last date to register and fill choices is June 18.
Explore JEE Advanced chapter-wise weightage to identify high-scoring topics in Physics, Chemistry & Maths. Plan smarter and boost your exam preparation.
Download EBookNEW DELHI: The registration and choice-filling facility for the Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA) counselling 2024 has already started for admission to engineering programmes at the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), National Institutes of Technology (NITs), Indian Institutes of Information Technology (IIITs) and others. Candidates who qualified and secured ranks in the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) Main 2024 and JEE Advanced 2024 are eligible to apply.
Latest: Free All-India JEE Main 2026 Mock Test - Attempt Now
JEE Advanced Prep: Syllabus | Preparation Tips | Chapter-Wise Weightage | AAT-Syllabus
JEE Advanced QP's & SP's: QP's 2025 | SP's 2026 | Paper 1 and 2 Analysis 2025
As per the JoSAA 2024 counselling schedule, the last date to register and fill choices for the BTech counselling is June 18. The seat allocation for round 1 will be announced on June 20. Meanwhile, the physical verification of candidates claiming Persons with Disabilities (PwD) category has started.
Moreover, the counselling body has issued a list of restrictions imposed on certain academic programmes in IITs, NITs, and IIITs. Applicants are advised to read the restrictions before filling in their choices.
JoSAA Counselling 2024: IIT admissions
The restrictions in admission to academic programmes at IITs are given below.
|
Name of institute |
Academic programme |
Restrictions |
|
IIT Kharagpur |
BTech in Mining engineering |
PwD candidates, candidates with colour-blindness and/or one-eyed vision are also not eligible. |
|
IIT Kharagpur |
BS in Applied Geology
|
Candidates with colour-blindness are not eligible. Remarks: Following popup message will be shown only to PwD=’Yes’ candidates during choice addition. If candidate ‘Agree’ then these choices will be added in their preference list. “PwD Candidate with locomotor disability is not eligible for this program |
|
IIT Kharagpur |
BArch |
Candidates who fail in AAT are not eligible. |
|
IIT (ISM) Dhanbad |
BTech in Mining Engineering
|
Not given to colour-blindness, one-eyed vision, and PwD candidates |
|
IIT (ISM) Dhanbad |
5-year Integrated MTech in Applied Geology
|
Not given to colour-blindness and PwD Candidates |
|
IIT Roorkee |
BArch |
Not given to AAT failed candidates |
|
IIT-Banaras Hindu University (BHU) |
BTech in Mining Engineering
|
Not given to colour-blindness, one-eyed vision, and PwD candidates |
|
IIT BHU |
BArch |
Not given to AAT failed candidates |
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- UPSC, SSC Exams: Government job seekers demand students’ panel, tight monitoring in appeal to commission, DoPT
- Viksit Bharat Shiksha Adhishthan Bill centre’s ‘total power’ grab over higher edu, say MPs; draft goes to JPC
- 51 FIRs over fake NCERT books; over 5 lakh copies seized: Education ministry
- Decoding Viksit Bharat Shiksha Adhishthan Bill: Honorary chair, no teacher reps, external accreditation, fines
- HECI Bill 2025 to bring standalone teacher training institutes under accreditation framework: NCTE chief
- Tamil Nadu universities in ‘slow decay’ as VC vacancies drain funds, talent, stall academic functioning
- AIMA DG: ‘MAT exam now skill-focused; online MBA widens access as employers look for skills, not degrees’
- Fill AIIMS Delhi, NIMHANS Bangalore vacancies; use population as basis for new medical colleges: Panel
- Making Future Founders: Incubation centres, govt schemes are boosting startups, student entrepreneurship
- FORE Delhi director: ‘Indian B-schools have become overtly placement-driven’