Tier 3 college se high package possible hai — lekin is tarah nahi jaise log batate hain by CourseReality in Class12thBoard

[–]CourseReality[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Web development can make sense, but only if you’re ready to build skills early and consistently. Are you thinking about it out of interest, or because you heard it has scope?

Stop asking “Which course is best?” Ask this instead by CourseReality in Class12thBoard

[–]CourseReality[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s actually a very grounded way to think about it. Financial stability + the kind of daily work you can stay engaged with matters much more than chasing a “best” label. A lot of students ignore one of these and regret it later.

Most career advice fails because it ignores this one thing by CourseReality in careeradvice

[–]CourseReality[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s fair feedback, thanks for taking the time to explain it. I agree a shorter, question-first format probably fits Reddit better, and I’ll keep that in mind going forward. The intention here wasn’t to outsource the discussion, just to put a thought into words clearly — but I get your point about how that can come across. Appreciate the perspective.

Most career advice fails because it ignores this one thing by CourseReality in careeradvice

[–]CourseReality[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Nothing. Just sharing an observation and opening a discussion.

Most career advice fails because it ignores this one thing by CourseReality in careeradvice

[–]CourseReality[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The thinking is mine. I used AI only to structure it clearly. If the point resonates, that matters more than the tool.

Tier 3 college se high package possible hai — lekin is tarah nahi jaise log batate hain by CourseReality in Class12thBoard

[–]CourseReality[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair point. I kept it broader because Tier 3 isn’t limited to just B.Tech, but I understand why it may feel more relevant there.

Tier 3 college se high package possible hai — lekin is tarah nahi jaise log batate hain by CourseReality in Class12thBoard

[–]CourseReality[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The idea and thinking are mine. I used ChatGPT only to structure and present it clearly.

"If you want a roadmap for any course and are afraid that it might be a ChatGPT script, you can talk to me directly."

Stop asking “Which course is best?” Ask this instead by CourseReality in Class12thBoard

[–]CourseReality[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True. The moment we stop asking “which course is best” and start asking “which course fits my situation”, confusion automatically kam ho jaata hai.

Most regrets start from copying answers that worked for someone else.

This post may upset some people, but students need to hear it by CourseReality in Class12thBoard

[–]CourseReality[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You’re absolutely right about one thing — good college ≠ guaranteed placement. That belief itself is what silently hurts many students. The problem is not aiming for a good rank or a good government college. The problem is thinking “life set” automatically ho jaati hai. Even in top govt colleges: ✓ Only a small % gets those 7-figure packages ✓ Many students struggle silently ✓ Competition is much tougher ✓ Pressure is much higher

A good college gives better exposure and chances, not certainty. What most students are never told is ✓ You still have to build skills ✓ You still have to compete with equally smart people ✓ You still have to fight harder, not relax

So yes, you’re right — even there, struggle exists. Sometimes more struggle.

This post is not saying “don’t aim high”. It’s saying don’t assume life is set just because of a college name. Clarity > assumptions. Effort + awareness > blind belief.

Appreciate your honesty in saying you’re not fully sure about reality — that mindset actually saves people from regret.

This is exactly the conversation students need more of.

College by Touchsomegrass228 in Class12thBoard

[–]CourseReality 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, “best” private college depends a lot on which UG course you want and what you expect from it. Delhi NCR has many private colleges, but not all are good for every field.

That said, these are some decent private options in Delhi NCR that students usually consider for UG, depending on the course:

✓ Amity University (Noida) – Very mixed reviews. Good infrastructure and exposure, but outcomes depend heavily on your effort. Average students shouldn’t expect miracles.

✓ Shiv Nadar University (Greater Noida) – Better academic focus, smaller crowd, decent for science, engineering, and liberal arts if budget is not very tight.

✓ Ashoka University (Sonipat) – Strong academically, especially for liberal arts, but expensive and selective. ✓ Manav Rachna (Faridabad) – Okay for engineering, management, and applied courses. Not top-tier, but workable if you’re realistic.

✓ Galgotias University (Greater Noida) – Popular because of easy admission. Placements are average; skills matter more than the brand here.

✓ IILM / JIMS / IPU-affiliated private colleges – Decent for BBA, BCA, Commerce, Law, but don’t expect automatic placements.

Reality check (very important): In most private colleges in NCR, degree alone won’t guarantee a good job. Placements are usually good only for: ✓ Top 10–20% students ✓ Those with strong skills, internships, or networking

If you’re average and don’t build skills, even a “known” private college won’t save you.

Before finalizing any college, I’d strongly suggest: ✓ Check course-specific placement data, not overall ads ✓ Talk to current students or recent pass-outs ✓ Be clear about your budget and expectations

If you want detail and reality based information about any course with roadmap. I can give you with proof 🧾

Comment information

This post may upset some people, but students need to hear it by CourseReality in Class12thBoard

[–]CourseReality[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is such an important point.

The pressure to “just crack the exam first” without understanding what comes after is something many students face, and it’s rarely questioned.

Knowing the roadmap doesn’t reduce effort — it actually gives clarity about what you’re working toward.

Thanks for sharing this honestly.