Engineering in general, at the undergraduate level is not really focused on research. If you are interested in research, go for an M.Sc degree - Engineering courses only teach you practical skills and not the real conceptual knowledge required to perform research (They teach everything but it is kinda condensed).
So, it doesn't matter much whether you get admission in a government or private college with regards to this. However, do choose a college with a good reputation and good placements so that you get started with a job quite early.
---------- Post added at 05:22 AM ---------- Previous post was at 05:18 AM ----------
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We engineering aspirants drops one year takes coachin and studies to get admission in good colleges. How much is this study related to our bachelor course specially in computer technology?
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Especially when talking about computer technology, I would say not related at all. Engineering is a different education, and your knowledge of physics, chemistry and maths at IIT-JEE/AIEEE level will not help too much (except maths, which is useful......if you know things like Discrete Mathematics, Graph Theory, etc. all this comes in computer engineering).
IMO, the performance of a student in phy, chem, maths in 12th/AIEEE/JEE has NOTHING to do with his engineering education - I have seen quite a few student with remarkably decent PCM marks doing badly in engineering, and I have seen people with very poor (50-70%) maths marks topping the computer programming subjects.......
In short, in engineering your 12th education is *almost* worthless (except in streams like mechanical, chemical or biomedical engineering). Those who were good at it already will shine.......others may have to spend time adjusting.