The NEET CBSE 2018 results can be accessed on cbseneet.nic.in and cbseresults.nic.in.
However, Tamil Nadu fared relatively poorly, with just 45,336 candidates among the 1,14,602 (close to 39.6%) who appeared making the cut. Maharashtra also had a poor qualification rate (39.6%).
Rajasthan accounted for the highest qualification rate with 58,738 candidates from among 79,057 clearing it.
Kerala’s qualification rate was 66.74% and Andhra Pradesh’s was 72.55%. In Delhi, 73.5% of candidates made the cut
AIIMS, JIPMER excluded
Candidates for admission to all medical programmes in private and government Medical Colleges, barring AIIMS and JIPMER, Puducherry, are selected through NEET. Among the top 50 are eight candidates from Delhi, seven from Gujarat, five from Andhra Pradesh, four from Uttar Pradesh, three from Punjab, two from Telangana, and one from Tamil Nadu.While 79.96-% of the candidates wrote the exam in English, 11.04% did so in Hindi, 4.31% in Gujarati, 3.02% in Bengali, 2.06% in Kannada, 1.86% in Tamil and 0.13% in Urdu.
Cut-offs
Helped by a drop in cutoff marks, as many as 7,14,298 students cleared the test this year, up from 6,11,739 in 2017. This means over one lakh more candidates will have a chance of getting an MBBS seat this year
The cut-off percentile – a method of knowing what percentage of candidates a particular candidate has done better than — for the general category is the 50th percentile and that for OBC, SC and ST candidates is the 40th percentile.
As for cutoff scores, the cut-off for general category is 691-119 and that for OBCs, SCs and STs is 118-96.
A total of 6,34,897 general category candidates are above the cut-off percentile. The numbers for OBCs, SCs and STs are 54653, 17209 and 7446, respectively.
With a perfect score in biology (botany and zoology), Kalpana Kumari from Sheohar in Bihar has emerged as the all-India topper.
She secured 691 marks out of 720, securing 360 out of 360 in biology (botany and zoology), 171 out of 180 in physics and 160 out of 180 in chemistry.
“She studied so hard that she even skipped meals, and we had to tell her not to study so much,” her father Rakesh Mishra, a lecturer at the District Institute of Education and Training at Sitamarhi, told
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