JEE Main 2023 session 2 answer key soon; result updates, NTA's tie-breaking method
Vagisha Kaushik | April 16, 2023 | 08:02 PM IST | 3 mins read
JEE Main 2023 provisional answer key for session 2 held from April 6 to April 15 will be released at jeemain.nta.nic.in.
Discover your college admission chances with the JEE Main 2026 College Predictor. Explore NITs, IIITs, CFTIs and other institutes based on your percentile, rank, and details.
try now testNEW DELHI : The National Testing Agency (NTA) conducted the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE Main) 2023 session 2 between April 6 and 15 for paper 1 (BE, Btech), paper 2A (BArch) and paper 2B (BPlanning). JEE Main 2023 session 2 provisional answer key will be released soon on the official website -- jeemain.nta.nic.in.
ljk welkrj ljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrjljk welkrj
NTA will allow candidates challenge the provisional answer key within a fixed time period and will release the JEE Main 2023 session 2 final answer key. The JEE Main 2023 result will be based on the final answer key.
Also Read | JEE Main 2023 answer key expected soon; download steps, marking scheme
To determine results, NTA will be using the normalisation process where the raw marks obtained by the candidates will be converted into percentile scores. In case candidates obtain equal NTA scores, the testing agency will use a tie-breaking method to resolve them.
JEE Main 2023: Tie-breaking method for paper 1
Tie between candidates obtaining equal Total NTA scores in Paper 1 (BE, BTech) will be resolved in the following manner in descending order:
- NTA score in mathematics, followed by
- NTA score in physics, followed by
- NTA score in chemistry, followed by
- Candidate with less proportion of a number of attempted incorrect answers and correct answers in all the subjects in the test, followed by
- Candidate with less proportion of a number of attempted incorrect answers and correct answers in mathematics in the test, followed by
- Candidate with less proportion of a number of attempted incorrect answers and correct answers in physics in the test, followed by
- Candidate with less proportion of a number of attempted incorrect answers and correct answers in chemistry in the test followed by
- Older in Age followed by
- Application number in ascending order
Also Read | JEE Main 2023 session 2 exam ends; overall difficulty level, expected cut-off
JEE Main 2023: Tie-breaking policy for paper 2
Tie between candidates obtaining equal Total NTA scores in Paper 2A (BArch) will be resolved in the following manner:
- NTA score in mathematics, followed by
- NTA score in aptitude test, followed by
- NTA score in drawing test, followed by
- Candidate with less proportion of a number of attempted incorrect answers and correct answers in all the subjects in the Test, followed by
- Candidate with less proportion of a number of attempted incorrect answers and correct answers in mathematics (art-I) in the test, followed by
- Candidate with less proportion of a number of attempted incorrect answers and correct answers in aptitude test (part-II) in the test followed by
- Older in age followed by
- Application number in ascending order
JEE Main 2023: Method of resolving ties in paper 2B
Tie between candidates obtaining equal Total NTA scores in BPlanning will be resolved in the following manner:
- NTA score in mathematics, followed by
- NTA score in aptitude test, followed by
- NTA score in planning based questions, followed by
- Candidate with less proportion of a number of attempted incorrect answers and correct answers in all the subjects in the Test, followed by
- Candidate with less proportion of a number of attempted incorrect answers and correct answers in mathematics (part-I) in the test, followed by
- Candidate with less proportion of a number of attempted incorrect answers and correct answers in aptitude test (part-II) in the test, followed by
- Candidate with less proportion of a number of attempted incorrect answers and correct answers in planning based questions (part-III) in the test followed by
- Older in age followed by
- Application number in ascending order
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
]Class 12 board exams twice; 8 ‘curricular areas’ replace streams; 20% local content: Draft NCF
The draft National Curriculum Framework (NCF 2023) proposes restructuring Class 10, 12 board exams, replacing humanities, science, commerce streams with broader ‘curricular areas’.
Atul Krishna | 3 mins readFeatured News
]- Experts propose 7 spots for university townships in education ministry’s post-budget webinar
- Primary school teachers in Karnataka must serve 12 years before promotion, say new recruitment rules
- JNU, TISS Mumbai, BHU: Student unions vanish from universities with elections scrapped, councils taking over
- Students in University of Aberdeen, Mumbai, get credential exactly the same they’d get in Scotland: COO
- ‘IIMC to upgrade all journalism and mass communication courses to MA degrees, phase out PG diplomas’: VC
- Rebuilding Calcutta University: VC Ashutosh Ghosh’s priorities are recruitment, fixing finances, reforms
- PARAKH’s Foundational Learning Study 2026 to cover 1 lakh Class 3 students across 10,000 schools
- Telangana: Government Degree College Vikarabad moves out of school and into DIET campus
- ‘Shouldn’t open universities like shops’: Odisha higher education expands but students rue plummeting quality
- Dual degrees, faculty exchange: States bet on foreign university tie-ups, but fine print tells another story