How the orientation worksA way to look, taken one calm step at a time
Get a sense of your interests and strengths, see real careers laid out concretely, talk it through with a counsellor and your family, and check which scholarships and exams matter — at a pace that fits a household, not an exam clock.
1
Get a sense of yourself
A staged set of orientation activities — interests, aptitude, work-style, personality — taken over several short sittings, not one long one. It is built to start a conversation about you, not to label you.
2
See careers concretely
A library of careers laid out plainly: the path to enter, a day in the life, the years and rupees it really takes, and an honest pay range. It includes work a student in a small town rarely gets to see named.
3
Talk it through, together
A counsellor sits with the student and the family at one table — three chairs — to weigh options without pressure. The guardian is part of the conversation by design, because in our homes the decision is made together.
4
Check the doors that are open
See which scholarships fit, what they pay and when they close, and which entrance exams matter for a chosen path — with the documents and dates laid out, so a deadline does not pass a family by.