Medicine Entrance Exam
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New answer posted
5 years ago
Contributor-Level 10
When only 4 months are there for the exam, all I would say not to start anything new. Along with the NEET preparation, be focused to your boards and after that revise concepts of 11th. Coming to the NEET Preparation strategy now-
Keep on revising inorganic. Do not skip test series of coaching. If you are not a coaching student please solve queries from standard books. Revise 12th board books along with your coaching notes. Revise concepts of 11th the same way. Solve questions which you must have marked for review. Solve Sheet and DPPs of coaching material. Thanks and best of luck.
New question posted
5 years agoNew answer posted
5 years ago
Contributor-Level 9
it is high for revision and refining all the concepts, be speedy and enthusiastic, Be clear you are going to revise, not to start anything from zero. So here is the strategy
January-
By this time syllabus ends in coaching so now you have to cover it. Now dive in the syllabus for this month and mark the left over chapters. Do not think you cant do it and do not get depressed. February-
Must do MCQs of all chapters of 11th
Class notes, specially for topics you are weak at. It will create a base of 12th concepts which will be asked in boards. Complete the leftover chapters. Revise concepts of 11th class before boards. Mar
New answer posted
5 years ago
Contributor-Level 7
When there are only 4 months you have so must put your best efforts, here I will share the strategy with you. Time Management
Bio- 3 hours
Chemistry- 2.5- 3 hours
Physics- 2.5 -3 hours
Select best sources-
Physics-
Cover basics from NCERT
Practice from DC pandey
Solve modules of coaching
Bio- NCERT, Truemans Bio or Allen / akash module, MTG NCERT at your fingertips
Chemistry-
Physical- NCERT
IOC- NCERT (be thorough it including diagrams, chart, text boxes and make ncert one liners), further you may refer GRB guide. Organic- NCERT for basics and solve the illustrations.
Physical- go for nCERT just to revise basics and make a for
New answer posted
5 years ago
Contributor-Level 10
To score 600 marks in NEET you need to aggregate at least 320 in biology, 160 in chemistry and 120 in physics. This should be your target score at least. On the exam day :Check that you have carried all necessary things with you and be on time. Comfort yourself in examination hall. Keep calm. Time Management is the most important thing in the examination hall. Time distribution for each section : Biology - 40 minds, Chemistry - 40 minds, Physics - 60 minds. Keep 40 minds in your hand to revisit the doubtful questions. Now from which section should you start first: a) Candidates whose physics is average - Then you should start wit
New answer posted
5 years ago
Contributor-Level 9
1. Start from basics first and then go to advanced level questions for physics and chemistry ( nowadays if you only practice basics, it will be far more than enough, provided you cover all lessons)
2. Try to cover at least 2 lessons ahead of NEET SYLLABUS http://bit.ly/2FUgVQA what is told in class.
3. REVISE AS MANY TIMES AS YOU CAN!
4. Beware! Your coaching institute will try to cover entire lessons in 2 to 3 days. Be prepared for that.
5. Stop doing many books at the same time. You will get less time to revise all of them. Best of luck!
New answer posted
5 years ago
Contributor-Level 9
The very thing that any entrance exam requires is Dedication and smart work. Study as per the time span you are left with, along with this first cover the topics having high marking weight age of the NEET Syllabus. For chemistry, revise the things as much as you can (for IOC), coming to organic chemistry visualization and mind mapping is the key. As far as physical chemistry is concerned, likewise physics concepts will be cleared by practicing questions only. For physics, only practicing variety of questions will make your concepts clear. More than 85% of Biology will be asked from NCERT only, so follow it religiou
New answer posted
5 years ago
Contributor-Level 10
Be clear with the fact that you are starting late so you have to put you best to make the best out of it. 12-14 ours religious study, 6-7 hours sleep and 3 hours for daily routine and other things. For Chemistry-
I would say better leave physical chemistry if you are not good at calculations or have a very less time. If you want to do it then know the concept (derivation), practice the same for 5 times without peeing in register and then solve questions on and on. For IOC only revision is the key and for or
New answer posted
5 years ago
Scholar-Level 16
You can do B.Sc in bio/biotech/physics/chem/life Science/nursing/pharma
or opt for B.A. (hons) in any subject or pursue law or do a 5 year integrated MBA from IPM (excellent packages) or animation etc.
New question posted
5 years agoTaking an Exam? Selecting a College?
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