
Some results stop you in your tracks. When the JEE Mains 2026 scores came in, that is exactly what happened here at Sparsh International.
Ayush Kumar scored 99.976. Alok Yadav scored 99.94. Aryan Sikarwar scored 99.15. Three students. Three scores that sit in the topmost bracket of a national examination that nearly a million students appear for every year.
We will be honest — even when you believe in your students, a result like this catches you off guard. Not because it is unexpected, but because seeing it written down, as a number, makes the years of work behind it suddenly very real.
This blog is our way of marking this moment. For Ayush, Alok and Aryan. For their families. And for the parents reading this who are wondering what is possible for their own child.
The short answer is — a great deal.
The Three Achievers
Let the numbers speak first.
• Ayush Kumar — NTA Score 99.976. To put this in perspective, an NTA Score of 99.976 means Ayush performed better than 99.976% of all students who appeared for JEE Mains 2026. This is not a score you stumble onto. It is the result of absolute conceptual clarity, rigorous practice and the ability to stay sharp under pressure for three hours.
• Alok Yadav — NTA Score 99.94. Crossing 99.9 in JEE Mains is a threshold that only a handful of students reach nationally. Alok did it. That says everything about the consistency he brought to two years of senior school preparation.
• Aryan Sikarwar — NTA Score 99.15. A score of 99.15 puts Aryan firmly in the bracket of students who will have strong choices at the country's top engineering institutions. His result is a well-earned reward for preparation that was clearly thorough and targeted.
Three different students. Three very different journeys. One shared outcome — results that reflect genuine excellence.
Parents ask us this quite often. The question usually comes in different forms — 'What did they do differently?' or 'Was it the coaching?' or simply, 'How?'
From what we have seen working with students over the years, the students who reach the very top percentiles share certain patterns. They do not cram. They understand. There is a difference and Physics in particular will expose it every time. A student who has memorised formulae will hit a wall in JEE. A student who knows why those formulae exist will navigate even unfamiliar problems.
The second pattern is consistency over intensity. We have seen students burn themselves out in Class XII with 14-hour study days, only to underperform on the day. Ayush, Alok and Aryan each prepared steadily, across months, without the kind of last-minute panic that derails so many capable students.
The third pattern — and this one is harder to teach — is trust in the process. These students trusted that the foundation they had built would hold on exam day. It did.
What SI Built — and When
We want to be clear about something. The preparation for these JEE results did not begin in Class XI. It began earlier, in the years when these students were in Classes IX and X, working through Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry at a depth that goes beyond what a standard board examination requires.
This is what our SYNCHRO Programme is designed to do. It is an in-house initiative at SI that prepares students for competitive examinations — Olympiads, JEE, NEET, CUET — within the school timetable, starting from Class IX. The CBSE curriculum and competitive preparation are not treated as two separate things. They run in alignment, so that every concept taught in class is taught at the depth that will serve the student years later in an entrance examination hall.
Sparsh International School, formerly known as J.P. International School, has built its academic framework around exactly this kind of forward-looking preparation. The school's Evaluation Methodology ensures that understanding is tested regularly and gaps are caught early. Smart Classes make abstract concepts in Physics and Chemistry easier to grasp. The Atal Tinkering Lab builds the kind of applied, problem-solving thinking that JEE rewards. And the Career Guidance team works with students in senior school to ensure preparation is targeted, not scattered.
None of this is accidental. It is the result of a deliberate school design.
If your child is in Class VI, VII, VIII or IX, these results matter to you—not as pressure, but as context, especially when choosing the right CBSE School in Greater Noida.
JEE is a Mathematics and Science examination at its core. The way subjects are taught in the middle school years—particularly in a strong CBSE School in Greater Noida—decides how much room a student has to build on in senior school. A student who arrives in Class XI with shaky foundations in Algebra, Mechanics, or Organic Chemistry is already fighting a tough battle. A student who arrives with genuine understanding has a head start that no amount of Class XII coaching can fully replicate.
The time to think about JEE readiness is not when the Class XI syllabus begins. It is now—and it begins with choosing the right CBSE School in Greater Noida that builds strong fundamentals early on.
To Ayush Kumar, Alok Yadav and Aryan Sikarwar — well done. Sincerely and without reservation. You have earned this.
To their families — thank you for trusting us with years of your child's education. Moments like this are a shared achievement and we do not take that lightly.
At Sparsh International School, Greater Noida, we will keep doing what we have always done — build the kind of academic foundation that gives every student the best possible chance at the best possible result. Admissions for the 2026-27 session are open for Nursery to Class IX and Class XI. We welcome the opportunity to show you what that looks like in practice.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. My child is in Class IX and wants to target JEE. Is this the right time to start, and what should we focus on?
Class IX is genuinely the right time — not early, not premature. The topics introduced in Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry at this stage form the core of what JEE will test. The focus right now should be on understanding rather than on problem volume. A student who truly understands the 'why' behind a concept in Class IX will find Class XI and XII significantly less daunting. At SI, the SYNCHRO Programme ensures this depth is built as part of regular classroom learning, so students are not carrying two separate workloads.
Q2. How is SI's preparation different from sending a child to an external coaching centre for JEE?
External coaching and school preparation are not inherently opposed, but they serve different purposes. Coaching centres offer intensive, exam-pattern practice. What a school like SI offers is something coaching cannot replicate — years of subject depth, built progressively, by teachers who know each student individually. The SYNCHRO Programme at SI does carry competitive-level preparation into the school timetable. For many students, this means the need for heavy external coaching in Class XI and XII is significantly reduced. The JEE Mains 2026 results are a practical demonstration of what that approach produces.