AIEEE
2007 Analysis
This year students had it relatively easy in the AIEEE. While the
basic format of a single paper test was retained, there were significant
departures in the pattern as compared to the 2006 paper. There were 40
questions in each of the three subjects of Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry
as compared to the last year’s distribution of 40 questions in Mathematics
and 55 questions each in Physics and Chemistry. Thus, making it a total of 120
questions this year instead of the 150 questions in the last year. The second
departure this year was the uniform marking scheme as compared to the
differential scheme last year. Each question, irrespective of the subject,
carried 3rd marks. The negative marking was 1/3 . Total marks were 360. Coming
to the level of difficulty, about 50% questions in Mathematics and Physics
were fairly simple or straightforward requiring direct use of formula/result
or law. For Chemistry this number was about 30%. About 60% of the Chemistry
part comprised of questions that either were not direct or required a little
time to arrive at the answer.
The surprising thing was that there were some errors in the question paper. A
question in Physics α which should have been α R . Similarly, in
Mathematics there are talks of a certain distance as R three questions with
errors. Two of these have wrong or ambiguous options, while one question is
incorrect. This is surprising because such errors have hardly happened in past
question papers. The strategy lied in keeping cool and identifying the simpler
questions to attempt first before moving to the more difficult questions,
which weren’t many. As usual, better utilization of time would result in
better marks. So, the constraining factor was once again time, and not level
of difficulty. The topic-wise breakup for each subject is given below.