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This draft pertains to the entry titled "AIEEE (old)", which falls within the cohort of entrance examinations in India. The abbreviation AIEEE has been commonly associated with a national-level entrance examination once used for admissions to undergraduate engineering and architecture programmes at certain centrally funded technical institutions, state-level institutions and other participating bodies in India. The qualifier "(old)" in the article title suggests that the entry is intended to document the examination as it existed prior to subsequent reorganisation or replacement by a successor examination framework. Editors should treat this draft as a scaffold only: while the general subject area is well known to Indian readers, the specific operational details, governance arrangements, syllabus structure, paper patterns, eligibility norms, counselling processes and historical milestones must each be verified against authoritative primary sources before publication. This overview does not attempt to enumerate dates, conducting bodies, participating institutes or numerical statistics, since such items require careful sourcing. The purpose here is to provide a neutral and cautious starting point for human editors who will rewrite, expand and verify the article in conformance with IndiaWiki standards on reliable sourcing, neutrality, and verifiability of facts pertaining to public examinations.
Entrance examinations have long served as a gatekeeping mechanism for admission into India's higher education system, particularly in technical and professional streams where seat capacity is limited relative to applicant demand. Within this broader landscape, AIEEE was historically positioned as a national-level test intended to standardise admission criteria across multiple participating institutions, thereby reducing the burden on candidates of sitting for many separate examinations. The exam is generally remembered in public discourse as one of the principal pathways for aspirants seeking undergraduate engineering admissions outside of the older institute-specific testing routes. Its scope, conducting authority, structure and relationship with state-level counselling processes evolved over the period during which it was administered. The "(old)" suffix in the article title indicates that this entry should focus on the examination as it operated before any subsequent restructuring, rebranding or merger into a successor examination system. Editors should research and document this background carefully, drawing on official notifications, gazette entries, government communications, contemporaneous press coverage and academic commentary. Specific founding dates, nomenclature changes, administrative transitions and the eventual conclusion or transformation of the examination should each be supported by citations rather than inferred from general memory.
The significance of an entrance examination such as AIEEE (old) for an Indian general-reference encyclopaedia lies in its role within the country's educational and social fabric. Examinations of this nature have shaped the academic trajectories of large numbers of students, influenced the coaching and test-preparation industry, affected family decision-making around schooling, and contributed to ongoing public debates about access, equity and meritocracy in Indian higher education. A well-written article on the subject can serve as a useful reference for students, parents, education researchers, policy analysts and historians of Indian education. It can also help readers understand the lineage of present-day entrance examinations, since contemporary systems often build upon or react to prior frameworks. Editors are encouraged to treat the topic with the seriousness due to a public institution that has affected many lives, while avoiding both nostalgia and polemic. The article should explain why the examination mattered without overstating any particular claim, and should situate the subject within wider conversations about standardised testing, federal-state coordination in education, and the role of central agencies in administering large-scale assessments. All evaluative statements must be attributed to identifiable sources.
The following checklist is offered to assist editors in systematically verifying claims before any are introduced into the article body. Each item should be confirmed against at least one authoritative source, and ideally against multiple independent sources where possible.
Editors are reminded that figures, dates and proper names should never be approximated. Where a reliable source cannot be located, the safer course is to omit the claim rather than to include an unverified version.
For consistency with similar entries on Indian entrance examinations, the final article may be organised under the following indicative headings, which editors are free to adapt:
Each section should be kept proportionate to the available reliable sourcing, and speculative material should be excluded.
This draft has been prepared deliberately without specific dates, names of officials, institutional lists, fee structures, candidate counts or other particulars, because such details require source-based verification that cannot be performed responsibly within this scaffold. Editors taking this draft forward are requested to: (a) consult primary documents such as official notifications, prospectuses and government circulars; (b) corroborate claims with reputable secondary sources such as established newspapers, academic publications and policy reports; (c) avoid relying on coaching-industry websites, forum posts or other user-generated content for factual claims; (d) maintain a neutral tone, particularly when discussing controversies; and (e) ensure that any comparative statements regarding successor examinations are clearly attributed and not presented as the encyclopaedia's own assessment. Where sources conflict, the article should acknowledge the disagreement rather than silently adopt one view. Editors should also consider the article's accessibility for readers unfamiliar with the Indian education system, providing brief contextual explanations where technical terms or institutional categories first appear. Finally, this draft is not suitable for publication in its present form and should be substantially rewritten before being moved to live status.
No references are cited in this draft, as it intentionally avoids specific factual claims that would require sourcing. Editors preparing the article for publication should add citations to authoritative sources for every substantive statement, including official government notifications, conducting-authority publications, parliamentary or ministerial communications, established Indian newspapers of record, peer-reviewed academic literature on Indian education policy, and reputable archival materials. A consistent citation style should be adopted throughout, and dead links should be replaced or supplemented with archived versions where feasible.