
YouTube Taught Student Who Ranked 77 in JEE Main Exam
An Indian student cracked one of the world's toughest exams using only free YouTube videos, landing at IIT Madras without paying for coaching. His journey proves that talent and determination can overcome expensive barriers to education.
A Chennai teenager proved that you don't need expensive coaching to crack India's toughest engineering exam. Mith R Jain taught himself through free YouTube videos and secured an All India Rank of 77 in JEE Main, earning his spot at the prestigious Indian Institute of Technology Madras.
While most JEE aspirants pay thousands of dollars for coaching classes, Jain stumbled upon free math lectures while browsing online. What started as casual curiosity turned into serious preparation, all from his bedroom.
The biggest challenge wasn't the content. It was the loneliness of learning alone without classmates or mentors to clear doubts. But Jain stayed consistent, finishing Class 12 with 99.8 percent and becoming Tamil Nadu's top scorer.
In 2022, he secured rank 579 in JEE Advanced and joined IIT Madras. Coming from a Jain family with dietary restrictions, he worried about finding suitable food options. The campus had a dedicated Jain food section, making his transition easier.
Jain threw himself into campus life from day one. He joined multiple clubs, worked with the AI and Programming Club, and eventually became the institute's co-curricular affairs secretary. He even spent four years with Shaastra, IIT Madras's annual tech festival.

Why This Inspires
Jain's story matters because it challenges the assumption that success requires expensive resources. In India, JEE coaching has become a multi-billion dollar industry, with families spending their savings on preparation classes. His YouTube-powered journey proves that free, quality education can level the playing field.
His approach also highlights how self-directed learning builds resilience. Without a structured coaching environment, Jain developed problem-solving skills that extended beyond textbooks. At IIT, he learned to embrace mistakes and ask questions without fear.
Now in his fourth year studying Computer Science, Jain has already secured a pre-placement job offer. He credits IIT with transforming him from an introverted student into a confident leader surrounded by brilliant minds.
His biggest lesson? Never assume you know enough, and every person around you has something valuable to teach. It's advice that served him well from his solitary YouTube study sessions to the collaborative halls of IIT Madras.
The young engineer's journey reminds us that barriers to quality education are crumbling in the digital age. When talent meets determination and free resources, extraordinary things become possible for anyone with an internet connection.
Based on reporting by Indian Express
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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