Aieee 2012 Results To Be Declared Today

AIEEE Results 2012 are expected to be declared today (1 June), ending the anxious wait by over 11 lakh students who took the prestigious exam this year.

Candidates are able to take admission into NITs, Private Technical Institutions, Delhi Technical University and other Government founded institutions on the basis of All India Engineering Entrance Examination results 2012.

Earlier, it was confirmed that AIEEE 2012 results would be released by May 28. The date too was confirmed by various news sources. Later, there was a new date for declaring AIEEE result 2012 - June 15. But now, the speculation is being done for JUNE 1.

AIEEE 2012 results will be announced by Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE). All India Engineering Entrance Examination Offline Mode was conducted on April 29th 2012. Online mode of AIEEE exam was conducted on May 7, 12, 19 and 26, 2012. AIEEE 2012 results would be released for both exams - online mode and offline mode.

Successful candidates through AIEEE result 2012 will be able to take admission into B.E, B. Tech, B. Arch or B. Planning courses on the basis of AIEEE ranks.


Though engineering aspirants still flock to the south, the scenario is gradually changing with new colleges coming up in other parts of the country.

In an era of choices, engineering still dominates as a favoured discipline. There are 3393 engineering colleges in India with a capacity of 14.85 lakh seats across 36 courses approved by the All India Council of Technical Education (AICTE). Of the total number of colleges, 65% are in the south and 35% in the north.

With the government adding new Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT) and National Institutes of Technology (NIT) to the existing list in tier II cities, and with the birth of more private institutes, are we witnessing the emergence of newer centres of engineering excellence in cities such as Indore, Jodhpur, Jaipur and Bhopal? Also, with newer streams like biomedical engineering, bioinformatics and environmental engineering being offered, are these unconventional combinations gaining in popularity?

RK Shevgaonkar, director, IIT Delhi, responds: "Actually, there are not too many new hubs in engineering education. When you look at non-IIT colleges, there are mainly cities like Bangalore, Pune and Ahmedabad, which have clusters of engineering colleges. The situation is driven by demand and supply. These are IT hubs and, therefore, have many engineering colleges."

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