Optimize Your Time For
IIT JEE Preparation with IIT JEE Toppers Notes
I have often been asked how many
hours one should study each day to crack the IIT examination. Again there is no one answered me. Different
people have different styles so what I am going to describe may not be
applicable to you. You are free to explore your routine and discover what work
best for you Take this as a guideline and experiment with it till you find the
right schedule for yourself. So I am preparing examination of IIT JEE with IIT JEE
Toppers Notes and IIT JEE Hand Written Toppers Notes.
I had a simple schedule, ten
problems per subject per day for whole week. These ten problems would be from
the topics that were currently being taught in school or the in
coaching classes. As I progressed through the topic, I made sure that these ten
problems become tougher and required the application of concepts I had learnt
over the past few weeks. Thankfully, a lot of books are structured so that the
problems get harder as you move ahead in the topic and they
require greater mental application of combination of different concepts. This method
worked for me as it helped me cement new concepts that I learnt I learnt every
day and revise the concepts that I had learnt over the previous weeks. Also,
solving problems from every subject meant that I was comfortable with what was
going on in both school and coaching class and was never out of sync with any
subject. This is particularly important, because if you lose track of a few
classes, chances are that you will never be able to catch up, at least in that
particular topic. So you can make a schedule of preparation with IIT JEE
Hand Written Toppers Notes.
The weekends were reserved for
the star-marked question (I am referring here to a problem-difficulty grading technique,
about which I will talk a little later) from all the previous topics and especially
the topics where I was weak. This meant that in week 10, I would have looked at
all the star-marked problems over the past nine weeks for each of the three subjects.
This is where the real beauty of the star
mark-grading scheme lies. I could revise topics covered over the previous three
months in a single weekend. It made sure that I was always ready to take a test
from any of the topics that were covered in class over the past few months. It
helped me keep the concepts at my fingertips and slowly but surely made them a
part of my system. I understand that as you will cover more topics, it will
become difficult and more time-consuming to revise all the topics in one
weekend. So, if you find it tough to cover all the topics that you want to
revise and go on in a cyclical manner so that month you have had at least one
look at all the topics for each of three subjects ( believe me, it’ s not
impossible once you start following the star mark approach).
In
class twelve, make sure that each weekend you pick up at least two topics per
subject from class eleven and revisit the star-marked problems. This will
ensure that you are still comfortable with what you studied the previous year. IIT JEE tests you on concepts across the two years and you can’t afford to
forget
what you learnt in class eleven. So by this way you can measure yourself at the
end of the week that what you have got by IIT JEE Toppers Handwritten Notes.
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