28 Jun 2020|Noida | Amity University, Noida
Chemistry Advance Tips for Success in JEE and Competitive Exams
A webinar on ‘Chemistry Advance Tips for Success in JEE and Competitive Exams’ was conducted by Mr. Dinesh Shukla - Director - Chemistry Catalyst, Gwalior focusing on enhancing the skills of the students in the area of Chemistry for success in JEE and other Competitive Exams. Concentrating on fundamentals and practice done by students gives them confidence. It was shared that Chemistry requires a constant touch with concepts and a Guru in whom one has confidence. Students themselves have to put in the hard-work and set in realistic goals. Mr. Shukla advised that students can score more in Chemistry as compared to other subjects and plays a very important role in competitive exams. Inorganic, Physical and organic chemistry have to be studied applying different approaches. Inorganic chemistry requires focus on periodic tables and try to solve questions based on them. He also advised students to revise the periodic table based on trends in atomic size. Further paying attention to NCERT Books, Previous exams papers and guides will help students succeed and crack the competitive exams. Students were suggested to have strong command over electron configuration to be able to answer questions at any point of time. Mr. Shukla also gave a number of examples in the form of sample questions and related them to the fundamentals making it easy to revise and respond.
A lecture by Mr Ashutosh Ghade, Advocate on Record, Supreme Court of India; Mr. Sumit Prasar, Additional Civil Judge, UP; Ms Harshita Khurana, Senior Associate, Khaitan & Co. and Mr Saurabh Mishra, Assistant Legal Advisor, Manager, RMS Ltd. was delivered on ‘Career Opportunities after Law’. Mr Ashutosh Ghade asked students to grab every opportunity they get and not measure pros and cons all the time as struggles in the path will give them success. He suggested students to do internship in the field of litigation and see whether they fit in this area or not as it is important to know what are the demands, requirement and the nature of litigation. He further averred that litigation in today’s times has gone diverse and as arbitration work is growing in the country so litigation lawyers do arbitration work also as an additional job. In the initial period litigation job has a lot of struggles to build a decent name and the best way to start litigation is from high court. He shared that fundamental understanding along with sincerity and honesty is very important in this field.
Ms Harshita Khurana said that Law has evolved in the last few years and advised students to seek their interest before looking for pros and cons. She asked her listeners to make use of the platform their college provides them and do internship to make an informed choice. She stated that competition has increased and nepotism is not only in Bollywood but also in the field of law. “Having your correct profile or resume is important. Read things going on in market, see how the field is working,” said Ms Khurana. She advised students to write papers, do research, work with their professor and speak to their seniors.
Mr Saurabh Mishra said that focus should always be on basics of the law and try to inculcate interest in a particular branch of law. “Keep your eyes and ears open and participate in extra-curricular activities, which is very important part. Keep yourself updated and try to learn more about yourself, try and find answers for questions like describe yourself, your strength, your weakness, why did you choose to do law etc,” stated Mr. Mishra. He also added that there are many encouraging points related to the law field like financial security, excellent perks, medical benefit, healthy work life balance and one can switch to other professional if required. Managerial job, repetitive work and bureaucratic in nature are the some discouraging factor which are related to law filed.
A lecture by Mr Rahul Malhotra, Business Consulting Sr. Director, Banking & Capital Markets Practice, NTT Data Services was delivered on ‘Future of Banking Post COVID-19 World’. While addressing Mr Rahul said that the whole banking ecosystem is disturbed. Most banks have addressed the immediate challenges presented by the Covid 19 crisis by protecting staff, moving to remote working and providing much needed services to customers. Unlike financial crisis of 2008-2009 when banks were portrayed villains, the current pandemic provides an opportunity for banks to be active and positive participants, helping both customers and business weather the economic storm. Doing it well with empathy, personalization, but also appropriate risk management could create stronger, enduring relationships that will be a foundation for future success. Covid 19 has already dramatically accelerated the need for incumbent firms to digitize. Post pandemic, financial services firms will learn valuable lessons about what their customer wants, their own business resilience and how to compete in a digital first market. The change in the way people bank, the future of work, the use of modern technology and the value of brands will all depend greatly on the time it takes to settle on a new normal. Banking industry is treading uncharted coronavirus waters decline in branch visits, jump in virtual interactions, digital payments on the rise. World Health Organization recommends contact less payments versus cash, as a way to limit the spread of the virus that may linger on paper currency.