![638 TSWREIS students qualify for JEE Advanced exam this year](https://www.thehindu.com/static/theme/default/base/img/og-image.jpg)
638 TSWREIS students qualify for JEE Advanced exam this year
The Hindu
Telangana Social Welfare Residential Educational Institutions Society (TSWREIS) has created a record with 638 students securing top marks and qualified for JEE (Advanced) 2021. Among them, 44 students
Telangana Social Welfare Residential Educational Institutions Society (TSWREIS) has created a record with 638 students securing top marks and qualified for JEE (Advanced) 2021. Among them, 44 students secured above 90 percentile in JEE (Mains), and these children hail from the most disadvantaged and poor sections of the society with most parents involved in physical labour, said a press release on Thursday.
J. Gayatri, Social Welfare Residential Gowlidoddi College, who secured 96.1 percentile, said: “I lost my father at a young age and my mother works as a labourer. I am from a Scheduled Caste (SC) community from Parkala village, Hanamkonda (dist). My goal is to secure a seat in IIT and pursue computer science course. My ultimate aim is to become an IAS officer and serve poor people”.
Another topper is E Kavya, also from the same college who secured 97.2 percentile. “Thanks to the government for providing free coaching for a poor girl like me. My father is a farmer and could not have afforded exorbitant amounts for private coaching. My aim is to become an IAS officer. I will dedicate my life for the empowerment of poor women from marginalised communities. I belong to BC community”.
![](/newspic/picid-1269750-20250217064624.jpg)
When fed into Latin, pusilla comes out denoting “very small”. The Baillon’s crake can be missed in the field, when it is at a distance, as the magnification of the human eye is woefully short of what it takes to pick up this tiny creature. The other factor is the Baillon’s crake’s predisposition to present less of itself: it moves about furtively and slides into the reeds at the slightest suspicion of being noticed. But if you are keen on observing the Baillon’s crake or the ruddy breasted crake in the field, in Chennai, this would be the best time to put in efforts towards that end. These birds live amidst reeds, the bulrushes, which are likely to lose their density now as they would shrivel and go brown, leaving wide gaps, thereby reducing the cover for these tiddly birds to stay inscrutable.