can u say me the cutoffs of BMM in sies college
You can go to that college website to view college admission scores. For example you could go to the official website of Yale, to view the Yale college admission scores.
You could get admission in IIT roorkee or IIT Guwahati.
College or institute must be mentioned. Nevertheless you could contact the college you want to get admission in.
This will depend upon what your admission to college was dependent upon - this would have been stated in your acceptance letter. If your GPA dropped low enough to not meet admission standards, yes a single bad grade in a non-required class could result in your admission to college being rescinded.
Does school all over again
I don't think that you could change your department on M.Tech, but could choose a lot of fields related to your stream in B.Tech. Suppose you are a student of CSE in B.Tech then you can choose in M.Tech field as: . M.Tech. Computer Science and Engineering . M.Tech. Software Engineering . M.Tech. Information Technology So, you should pursue your PG course in same field. You could look for admission in one of the better universities like: JNU, Jamia Millia, BITS, Lovely Professional University, NIT..........; which conduct their own test also (for admission) and where you could also get quality education.
14 of the top 15 highest paying jobs out of college are science, take your pick in whichever field. http://finance.yahoo.com/college-education/article/107402/most-lucrative-college-degrees.html?mod=edu-collegeprep
You could begin applying your senior year in college. Your admission might be dependent on your last semester's grades. And you should take the LSAT between your junior and senior year.
Sports announcers usually were sports players in college. Therefore, they could have taken any thing from political science to education.
You could get admission in the NITs
ye3s of course you do UNLESS a parent is a professor there, then you get to go there for free or you could to any Pennsylvania college for half price. CHRISTIAN GIRTON
As a college student, Barrett was very much interested in how pure science could become applied science. At the age of 26, he earned a doctorate at Stanford University in materials science.