Skip to content
JK

Jeevesh kumarVerified admin

@jeevesh

FacultystudentNFSU-GN
NFSU Gandhinagar CampusJoined
Mocks done
1
Questions
0
Answers
2
0 accepted
Approved uploads
2

Subjects

crime scene management

Targeting

ugc net

Recent answers

  • Forensic science

    Honestly, the best way to look at it is that you aren't just stuck waiting for slow, painful government exams anymore. If you go to a college that actually has a decent placement cell, they're building direct pipelines into the system through tie-ups, landing graduates right into contract or project roles inside Central and State FSLs, or even agencies like the CBI and CID. But honestly, the real game-changer right now is the private sector—it's absolutely exploding with jobs that general science grads can't touch because they don't have the specific tech or legal training. The "Big Four" consulting firms (Deloitte, KPMG, EY, PwC), corporate banks, tech companies, and private labs like Truth Labs are actively hunting for forensic grads to do cybersecurity, digital forensics, corporate fraud detection, and insurance scam tracking. The money is way better on that side too; while entry-level government lab salaries are pretty modest, private tech and cyber-forensic roles routinely start around ₹6 to ₹12 LPA and shoot up fast with experience. So yeah, while standard government job notifications are still stuck in the dark ages, getting a specialized forensic degree from a well-connected college gives you a massive shortcut into both high-paying corporate jobs and modern law enforcement.

  • Forensic science

    Honestly, you’re totally right about the current system being messed up, but things are actually changing fast for three big reasons. First, with institutions like NFSU getting massive government backing, big agencies like the Delhi Police are now doing direct campus placements because they want people who specifically know forensic protocols from day one. Second, under India’s new criminal laws, forensics is now mandatory for any major crime carrying a 7+ year sentence, which is forcing a massive hiring spree for crime-scene officers across every district—and general science grads just don't have the training to do that without starting from scratch. Finally, it comes down to lab skills versus court skills; a chemistry grad knows how to run a machine, but a forensic grad knows how to find trace evidence, protect the chain of custody, and defend it in front of a judge without ruining the case. The old government hiring rules are definitely slow to change, but if you want to play it safe, the smartest move right now is doing a B.Sc. in a core science like Chemistry or IT to keep your options open, and then doing your Master's in Forensics so you're completely bulletproof.